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Jack Smith

'Better than Mark Meadows': Aide by Trump's side on Jan. 6 could be key Jack Smith witness

A little-known Donald Trump aide could provide a major boost to special counsel Jack Smith in his investigation of the former president’s efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, a legal expert said Thursday.

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said during an appearance on “Alex Wagner Tonight” that William Russell, who testified before Smith’s grand jury on Thursday, could provide Smith more details than some of the more high-profile witnesses.

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Conspiracy, obstruction, fraud: the potential charges facing Trump

Washington (AFP) - As special counsel Jack Smith winds down his high-stakes investigation of Donald Trump's alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, the former US president faces a slew of potential charges. The 77-year-old Trump said Tuesday he had received a letter from Smith confirming he was a target of the probe and added that he expected to be arrested and indicted soon. The special counsel, who was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland in November, declined to comment, but US media reports said the letter cited three federal criminal statutes: conspiracy to defraud...

Legal experts unpack 'surprise' as Trump could be charged under 19th-century anti-racism law

The target letter from special counsel Jack Smith to former President Donald Trump signifying a likely indictment under the January 6 investigation contains possible charges that many legal experts were predicting: namely, conspiracy to defraud the United States and obstruction of an official proceeding.

But the letter also included a third statute that experts weren't expecting: 18 U.S.C. § 241, or conspiracy to deprive people of rights — a 19th-century law used to prevent racist subjugation of emancipated slaves. Writing for Slate, legal experts Norm Eisen, Ryan Goodman, Joshua Kolb, and Jacob Gaba outlined how this unexpected "surprise" charge actually makes a lot of sense.

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Ex-prosecutor explains what would keep him up at night if he were charging Trump

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney and Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann on Thursday said that, despite the strong case special counsel Jack Smith has built against Donald Trump, he’s concerned a rogue juror could blow up the proceedings.

And Weissmann said he is especially concerned because high-profile cases such as the one against the former president tend to be magnets for such wayward jurors.

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'The smoking gun' is how many people begged Trump to stop the Capitol attack: Nicolle Wallace

Donald Trump was handed a target letter on Sunday informing him that he was likely to be charged with violating several statutes around the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Addressing the issue on Thursday, MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace aired clips of the House Select Committee hearings that uncovered enormous evidence around the goings on in the White House on Jan. 6.

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'It's going to happen': Jamie Gangel's sources say DOJ has 'very strong' evidence to indict Trump

Former President Donald Trump has already received a target letter from special counsel Jack Smith, triggering a wave of speculation over whether or not he will be indicted in the January 6 investigation.

But there is no need to speculate, argued correspondent Jamie Gangel on CNN Thursday. She argued the letter means an indictment of the former president is all but guaranteed.

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Trump-appointed judge orders marshals to 'fetch' Jack Smith's staff after lawyer was late to court

One of Donald Trump's appointed judges, Trevor N. McFadden in Washington, D.C., was so miffed over a lawyer being late that he demanded special counsel Jack Smith explain himself, MSNBC reported.

The incident began when lawyer Stan Woodward, who is paid by Donald Trump's PAC, turned up late to court for a Jan. 6 insurrectionist hearing. Woodward is also representing Trump's former aide Will Russell, who was asked to appear before the grand jury on Thursday, Politico's Kyle Cheney tweeted.

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Trump-loving ex-CEO claims to have 'naughty' evidence against Jack Smith

Former Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne claims to have material that could be used against special counsel Jack Smith.

The right-wing former tech mogul responded to Donald Trump's revelation that he had received a target letter in the Jan. 6 investigation by suggesting he had damning video involving Smith, who has twice served posts to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, reported Newsweek.

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Biden and his campaign are treating the Trump indictments 'like Voldemort': NYT

President Joe Biden is keeping his lips sealed when it comes to talking about the criminal indictments of his prospective Republican rival, former President Donald Trump.

And the New York Times reports that's no accident, as Biden and his campaign are treating the criminal charges against Trump "like Voldemort — avoiding, at all costs, any mention of the indictments that must not be named."

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Trump aide who spent Jan. 6 with former president to appear before grand jury

An aide who spent much of Jan. 6, 2021, with Donald Trump will testify again before a federal grand jury.

The grand jury considering charges against the former president will hear new testimony Thursday from former White House aide William Russell, who now works for Trump's presidential campaign, as part of an ongoing investigation of the U.S. Capitol riot and efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results, reported NBC News.

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Arizona fake Trump elector turns on Trump and founds group attacking him for being too soft

Jim Lamon was a big backer of former President Donald Trump in Arizona. He was even one of the fake "electors" signing forged paperwork claiming that Trump won the state and trying to fraudulently be counted by then-Vice President Mike Pence on January 6.

But times have changed. According to Newsweek, Lamon, who also ran unsuccessfully for the GOP Arizona Senate nomination in 2022, has now founded a right-wing organization attacking Trump — for not being MAGA enough.

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'You told Trump he could keep the documents': Judicial Watch leader's new legal strategy brutally mocked

Judicial Watch leader Tom Fitton, the non-lawyer whose legal advice to Donald Trump led to the former president's indictment, came out with a new scheme to help Trump avoid jail time on Thursday.

In a new video he posted to his Twitter account, Fitton argued that special counsel Jack Smith cannot prosecute former President Donald Trump on the grounds that he was not confirmed as a United States attorney by the Senate.

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Law professor: Trump indictments may be last chance to save 'American democracy' from authoritarian takeover

On July 17, the New York Times published a disturbing article by Jonathan Swan, Charlie Savage and Maggie Haberman that details former President Donald Trump and his allies' plans to give the U.S. federal government a major makeover if he wins the 2024 election. The journalists reported that the Trump campaign envisions a "sweeping expansion of presidential power over the machinery of government" that would greatly undermine the United States' system of checks and balances in 2025.

The Times' report came at a time when Trump is facing two criminal indictments: a 37-count prosecution by special counsel Jack Smith and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and a 34-count New York State prosecution by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jr. And more indictments may be coming soon: Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election results are the focus of criminal investigations by Smith for DOJ and Fulton County DA Fani Willis for the State of Georgia.

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