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Jack Smith

DOJ 'likely' to indict Trump’s 'whole criminal gang' for conspiracy to 'overthrow the government': legal expert

Special Counsel Jack Smith is “likely” to indict Donald Trump and those who assisted him in conspiring “to overturn the presidential election and overthrow the government,” according to noted Harvard University Professor Emeritus Laurence Tribe.

Professor Tribe made his remarks Tuesday morning in response to a tweet promoting a Monday evening Washington Post report that reveals for the first time investigators from the Special Counsel’s office will travel to Atlanta on Wednesday to interview Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Trump infamously in a recorded telephone call had pressured the top Georgia elections official to “find” him 11,780 votes, so he could “win” the state’s 16 Electoral College votes.

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Jack Smith has email from top Trump aide calling stolen election claims 'BS'

Even Donald Trump’s inner circle didn’t buy the former president's claims that the 2020 election was rigged, according to a mountain of evidence built by Special Prosecutor Jack Smith.

Emails and interviews gathered from multiple members of Trump’s team suggest that many knew the election fraud claims were a lie even as they pushed them, a Washington Post report on Smith's investigation into efforts to overturn President Joe Biden's election revealed.

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Manhattan DA seeks Melania Trump emails in hush money case

Between special counsel Jack Smith's 37-count federal prosecution for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr.'s 34-count prosecution for New York State, former President Donald Trump is facing 71 felony counts. And his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results are the focus of two separate criminal investigations: one by Smith and DOJ, the other by Fulton County, Georgia DA Fani Willis.

According to Associated Press reporter Michael R. Sisak, the Manhattan DA's Office is seeking "e-mails exchanged among Trump Organization employees and the White House" as well as "e-mails between Trump's wife, Melania, and Rhona Graff, a longtime company executive."

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'It's not looking good' for John Eastman at disbarment hearing: report

Attorney John Eastman, the author of the infamous so-called "coup memo" that pushed for then-Vice President Mike Pence to reject certified election results, is currently fighting to retain his law license in the state of California.

The Daily Beast's Jose Pagliery reports that "it's not looking good" for Eastman's chances of avoiding disbarment right now, as the former Trump lawyer's past statements have come back to haunt him.

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'We're electing idiots': Liz Cheney pinpoints the biggest problem in American politics

Outspoken Donald Trump critic and former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) summed up the problem with U.S. politics Monday night: "We're electing idiots."

The ex-Jan. 6 committee Vice Chair and daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney was speaking about "the future of bipartisanship" at an event at New York City's 92nd Street Y.

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Kevin McCarthy is 'motivated by fear' of 'the circus wing of his party': MSNBC's Jen Psaki

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) is being held hostage by fear of his own caucus, former White House Press Secretary and MSNBC host Jen Psaki argued on Tuesday.

She offered her analysis in a segment discussing McCarthy's endorsement of a far-right resolution that would purportedly "expunge" the two impeachments of former President Donald Trump.

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Brad Raffensperger pushes to ramp up jail time for tampering in state's elections

Election interference in Georgia should come with a minimum 10-year prison sentence, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger told lawmakers in a letter Tuesday.

“Current Georgia law provides that these infractions constitute a felony but with inadequate minimum sentences and fines, which is not sufficient justice for those who attempt to interfere with our democracy,” he wrote, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

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Trump starts morning with all-caps tirade against 'deranged Jack Smith' and 'Joe Bidden'

Former President Donald Trump started his Tuesday morning with an all-caps Truth Social tirade attacking both special counsel Jack Smith and President Joe "Bidden" (sic).

"COULD SOMEBODY PLEASE EXPLAIN TO THE DERANGED, TRUMP HATING JACK SMITH, HIS FAMILY, AND HIS FRIENDS, THAT AS PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, I COME UNDER THE PRESIDENTIAL RECORDS ACT, AS AFFIRMED BY THE CLINTON SOCKS CASE, NOT BY THIS PSYCHOS’ FANTASY OF THE NEVER USED BEFORE ESPIONAGE ACT OF 1917," Trump's post began.

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'An exoneration': Furious Trump claims 'leaked' classified doc recording proves his innocence

A furious Donald Trump reacted late Monday to an audio tape released by CNN that caught the former president discussing a highly classified document in his possession – and laughing about how he no longer had the power to declassify it.

The recording has him describing a "big pile of paper" to two unnamed people at his Bedminster, N.J., golf club.

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'Illegal and dangerous': Trump's former defense sec says he's not telling truth about Iran docs on tape

Former President Donald Trump's purported audio tape on which he bragged about improperly possessing high-level defense information to Bedminster patrons in 2021 was revealed by CNN on Monday evening — revealing damning new details that special counsel Jack Smith had not made public previously.

Speaking to CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins, Trump's former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper outlined how serious a breach of national security Trump's behavior was — and beyond that, how dishonestly he was framing the documents he shared, like his claims that former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mark Milley was the driving force behind a plan to invade Iran.

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'Game over' for Trump: Mueller prosecutor says all that is left is for jury to do is follow the law

The two legal analysts that started off Lawrence O'Donnell's Monday night show agreed that the tape of Donald Trump showing classified documents to people is all that is needed to sink him legally.

Andrew Weissmann, the former senior prosecutor for Robert Mueller, said that a key point to remember is that this tape has been in the hands of the Justice Department and possibly even Donald Trump for quite a while. It means Trump knew what was heard and lied in all of the interviews he's given where he tried to claim the documents weren't classified.

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Former prosecutor tells Maddow how newly released tape will be used during Trump's trial

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow began her Monday show by doing her own dramatic reading of Donald Trump's audio tape that was revealed by CNN. After listening to the tape, she explained that so much is left out in transcripts, like the cadence and inflection that makes it clear that Trump is handing a classified document to someone.

"I mean, let's just draw down on the specifics of this for a second. In Jack Smith bringing charges against Donald Trump, the sort of crux of the case, right?" said Maddow. "Is that the prosecution has to be able to prove that Trump had classified documents in his possession after he left the presidency, right? That's the illegal activity alleged in the indictment. And here in this part of the tape is Donald Trump saying he had possession of classified information after leaving the presidency."

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DOJ readies to interview Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger for the first time

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger will be interviewed later this week for the first time by the Department of Justice, The Washington Post reports.

The interview is part of special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation of allegations that former President Donald Trump tried to interfere with the 2020 election.

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