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Jack Smith

'They give them back': Ex-prosecutor disassembles Trump’s deflection to Biden and Pence documents

Former Manhattan District Attorney Special Narcotics Prosecutor and MSNBC Deadline: Legal Blog author Jordan S. Rubin appeared on Sunday's edition of Ayman and discussed the nexus of why United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith charged ex-President Donald Trump with thirty-seven federal felonies last week.

Smith in his forty-four-page criminal complaint alleged that Trump "endeavored to obstruct" the Federal Bureau of Investigation and "grand jury investigations and conceal his continued retention of classified documents" using five illegal maneuvers:

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Prosecuting a former president is not an easy decision — a criminal law professor explains why

The question of whether to indict a former U.S. president is a difficult one.

And yet, a state prosecutor has charged Donald Trump with violating New York business laws. And a federal prosecutor has charged Trump with violating national security laws as well.

On one hand, the U.S. judiciary system is based on a basic principle of English law that dates back to the early 1200s, that no one is above the law. As medieval jurist Henry de Bracton explained in “On the Laws and Customs of England,” the law makes the king, and thus, the king must be subject to the law.

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National security lawyer thinks Trump is too scared to have cameras show his trial

National security lawyer Bradly Moss doesn't think that former President Donald Trump wants any of his federal trial to be public. Typically there are no cameras in federal courts, and to get them would take a willingness from both sides to petition the Supreme Court.

MSNBC host Yasmin Vossoughian said that there is a lot of distrust in the justice system. Already, Republicans are demanding the firing of FBI Director Christopher Wray, a Trump appointee, and Attorney General Merrick Garland. At the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court is at its lowest approval rating in history, in part, due to a lack of transparency. The Supreme Court has fought cameras in courts from the beginning.

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Reality Winner prosecutor provides roadmap for speeding up Trump's espionage trial

Deep in a report on the roadblocks the Department of Justice will face prosecuting Donald Trump for violations of the Espionage Act, the lead prosecutor who sent former NSA translator Reality Winner to prison for unauthorized release of government information pointed the way to expediting the former president's trial.

According to a report from the Washington Post, trials involving top secret documents face a massive amount of hurdles because of potential exposure of what is contained in the documents at the center of the indictment.

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Trump warned 'Jack Smith is just getting warmed up'

During an early morning appearance on MSNBC, former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner stated that Donald Trump needs to be aware that special counsel Jack Smith will be relentless in his investigations, and that he should expect more federal indictments to be forthcoming

Speaking with host Katie Phang, Kirscher claimed that, after the 37-count indictment submitted in a Florida courtroom this past week, "Jack Smith is just getting warmed up."

"We saw information about some of Donald Trump's mishandling of classified information in the potentially national defense information which gives rise to charges under our nation's espionage laws," he claimed.

"Up in Bedminster, in New Jersey, showing military maps to people from his PAC. He is sharing information about plans for a possible military strike against a foreign country — he's doing that in New Jersey," he continued. "What does that tell us? That tells us charges for those crimes could properly brought in federal court in New Jersey."

"I don't think Jack Smith is prepared to let go of those crimes because he has already indicted Donald Trump in another jurisdiction in Florida for the crimes that he committed in that state," he explained before adding, "So if I had to bet one dollar, that's my betting limit, I'm not a high-roller, I would bet a buck that we are going to see a federal indictment in New Jersey."

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'Foolish': How Trump may regret bid for a hung jury in Espionage Act trial

During an MSNBC panel on reports that lawyers for Donald Trump had urged him to take a plea deal before special counsel Jack Smith slammed him with 37 federal felony charges that could lead to prison time, former prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks suggested the former president will regret wanting to take a chance on a jury trial.

Speaking with MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin, Wine-Banks claimed that it appears to her that the former president is banking on one juror balking at voting for a conviction in a federal trial that requires a unanimous verdict.

However, she noted, that could just lead to the DOJ re-trying him over and over again.

"One of Trump's attorneys suggested proposing a settlement over the classified documents case that would preclude charges," the MSNBC host began. "This is just one of many instances in which Trump's legal team has urged him to cooperate, to avoid in this case a federal criminal indictment that ended up being 37 counts against him. But it seems that Trump wasn't interested in negotiating a settlement. What do you make of that?"

RELATED: 'Trump looks like an idiot' for blowing chances to avoid indictment: Morning Joe panel

'"That he is foolish," Wine -Banks replied. "That he should have followed his lawyer's advice."

"If you look at the statistics and convictions in these kinds of cases, he has a very poor chance of surviving without being found guilty," she added. "I know he's counting on 'I will have one supporter on the jury and it will be a hung jury.' That just means he'll get tried again."

"So, he should have followed the advice, and he should have pursued a possible plea deal," she continued. "That's what Vice President [Spiro] Agnew did. He got a deal so that he would have a better outcome than if he had gone to trial on the bribery charges that he was facing."

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'Where did he go to law school?' Lindsey Graham's Trump stolen docs defense dismantled by prosecutor

Reacting to Sen. Lindsey Graham's attempt to dismiss the charges filed by special counsel Jack Smith against Donald Trump based upon the Espionage Act, one Florida prosecutor questioned the South Carolina Republican's grasp of the statute and his legal acumen.

Appearing on MSNBC with host Ayman Mohyeldin, Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg slapped aside Graham's defense of Trump who is now under the cloud of a 37-count federal indictment in a Florida courtroom.

"It's crazy to see, Dave, that Republicans are running to Trump's defense and making all kinds of excuses," the MSNBC host prompted. "They are saying that, although he is charged with the Espionage Act, he is not actually accused of spying or hurting the United States. That's how low the bar has become for Republicans."

"Amen," attorney Aronberg laughed. "It's also important to know that Donald Trump is not being charged with the documents that he kept that he gave back. So, the charges are all of the stuff that he refused to give back. So, that's why they didn't charge Mike Pence."

ALSO IN THE NEWS: 'They literally lack all substance': Boebert and MTG buried by Dem over committee antics

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'Astonishing': Ex-federal prosecutor stunned Judge Aileen Cannon won't recuse herself

It is "astonishing" that Judge Aileen Cannon has apparently decided not to recuse herself from the criminal case against Donald Trump, a former federal prosecutor said on Saturday.

Former prosecutor Glenn Kirschner appeared on The Legal Breakdown with Brian Tyler Cohen, and was asked about the implications of Cannon being the judge to oversee the case that includes Espionage Act charges against the former president. This question is especially relevant considering Cannon was previously reversed by the Eleventh Circuit for wrongly involving herself in the investigation phase of the Trump case.

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New Jack Smith filing points to more indictments coming against Trump team: ex-Watergate prosecutor

Donald Trump and his team should brace for new indictments incoming based on a new filing in the criminal case brought by Jack Smith, a former Watergate prosecutor said on Saturday.

Jill Wine-Banks, who served as a prosecutor during the Watergate scandal and was also the first female general counsel of the Army, appeared on MSNBC's Ayman on Saturday. She was asked about the recent filing in which Jack Smith mentions "ongoing investigations."

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'Long live the King': Trump calls Jack Smith a 'sick and deranged sleazebag' in Truth Social tantrum

Twice-indicted former President Donald Trump spent Saturday morning raging against United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith, President Joe Biden, and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

"Smith is a sick and deranged sleazebag," Trump wrote at 9:45 a.m.

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'Somebody is going to have to pull a trigger' to stop Trump prosecutions: Fox News guest

Retired Major League Baseball pitcher-turned-right-wing commentator Curt Schilling told Fox News host Jesse Watters on Friday that "somebody is going to have to pull a trigger" in retaliation to the criminal charges that were filed against former President Donald Trump by United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith.

"The problem is Jesse, you know, if you look at, you know, I love coming on this show. I love talking to you. I love what you've done, what you're doing with your voice, but the fact of the matter is, you know, I'm tired of listening to Jim Jordan and Matt Gaetz and Dan Crenshaw and these people talk. Talk. Talk — that's all they're doing. They're talking," Schilling crowed on Jesse Watters Primetime.

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Former DOJ official pinpoints the moment Judge Aileen Cannon will face her first 'real test' in Trump trial

According to a former DOJ official, a good indication of how U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon will conduct the trial of Donald Trump will soon arrive.

Appearing on "The Saturday Show" with host Jonathan Capehart, a skeptical Harry Litman suggested that the Trump-appointed Cannon will be under intense scrutiny as special counsel Jack Smith's prosecution of the former president on 37 criminal counts kicks into gear.

He went on to point to the moment where Cannon will tip her hand as to how the trial will play out.

"Remember there is a lot of cause for her to step down on her own, and she might have, and yes it's true," he began. "I'm sure she is chastened from being lambasted throughout the country over her last misadventure with Trump."

"But the real test for her is going to be when the Trump lawyers get up and say 'Oh, judge, we need three months to get up to speed and two months to have an evidentiary hearing and enough to get it over the hump. That is hard for even a completely neutral but inexperienced, which she also is, judge to push back on."

"So I remain pretty worried that it will be hard, or it will be a long shot for her to actually make it in time for the American people to decide, which they have a right to when they go to the polls, is our candidate a convict or not?" he added.

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Trump lawyers put on notice by Jack Smith of more legal moves to come

In a legal filing made late Friday, attorneys working for special counsel Jack Smith notified the court that information they will be handing over to Donald Trump's attorneys as part of the discovery process will contain some information on "ongoing investigations" that could lead to new charges.

According to a report from Alan Feuer of the New York Times, those documents also contain information about "uncharged individuals.”

Now that the former president has been arraigned in a Florida courtroom on 37 federal counts that include alleged violations of the Espionage Act, prosecutors are pressing forward with normal court procedures and the notice given on Friday puts Trump's lawyers on notice that there is likely more to come.

RELATED: 'The dam will break': former Trump communications chief predicts voters will abandon Trump

As Feuer wrote, "...the reference to continuing investigations was the first overt suggestion — however vague — that other criminal cases could emerge from the work that the special counsel Jack Smith has done in bringing the Espionage Act and obstruction indictment against Mr. Trump in Miami last week."

The Times report notes that the mention of "ongoing investigations" likely are related to Smith's inquiry into the events of Jan 6th when the former president helped incite an insurrection at the Capitol where protestors attempted to halt the certification of the 2020 presidential election that Trump lost.

The Times is reporting, "The government’s motion for a protective order, which Mr. Trump’s lawyers did not oppose, said that prosecutors were ready to start turning over a trove of nonclassified evidence that they had collected during the documents investigation," then adding, "It also sought to restrict disclosure of the evidence to Mr. Trump’s legal team; to people who might be interviewed as witnesses and their lawyers; and to any others who were specifically authorized by the court."

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