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Jack Smith

'It would almost be malpractice': Trump lawyer Alina Habba's defense gutted by legal analyst

According to former prosecutor Paul Butler, one of Donald Trump's many lawyers is barking up the wrong tree if she thinks provisions found within the Presidential Records Act will come into play as her client faces a 37-count indictment in federal court.

Appearing with MSNBC host Chris Jansing, Georgetown Law Professor Paul Butler dismissed out of hand a defense offered by Trump attorney Alina Habba during an appearance on Fox News on Sunday, explaining she seems to not be aware of what is contained within special counsel Jack Smith's indictment.

Habba told Fox host Shannon Bream, "What I can tell you is he has every right to have classified documents that he declassifies under the Presidential Records Act. They're making it sound like a five-alarm fire and it's not."

She continued, "Frankly, he was the only one that could take classified documents that he declassified under the Presidential Records Act -- people forget that."

"Is that something, Paul, you could expect to hear at trial?" host Jansing asked.

"I hope not because it would almost be malpractice," Butler shot back. "The Presidential Records Act is not anything that Donald Trump is charged with -- he's charged with very serious federal felonies."

"For all those scandalous charges in the indictment, the problem for Donald Trump is that Jack Smith has receipts," he elaborated. "He's got dozens of those documents pertaining to national security, he's got photos, he's got audio and video tape, he's got text messages."

"Chris, what's probably most worrisome for Donald Trump is that the special counsel also has a lot of evidence that we don't yet know about," he added. "You can be sure he's saving some of the most incriminating evidence against Donald Trump for the trial."

Watch the conversation at this link:

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Trump vows to appoint 'a real special prosecutor' to 'go after' Biden

Former President Donald Trump on Monday vowed to appoint his own special counsel to indict President Joe Biden in retaliation for special counsel Jack Smith's indictment of Trump on Espionage Act charges.

In a furious all-caps rant on his Truth Social network, the former president put Biden on notice that he was not going to escape unscathed after leaving the White House.

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'I want blood': Rabid Trump supporters' fury is building as arraignment nears

Donald Trump's supporters are threatening war over the former president's indictment on espionage-related charges.

Republican lawmakers and politicians have responded to the indictment with incendiary rhetoric, while pro-Trump message boards have been ablaze with violent threats reminiscent of the online chatter before the Jan. 6 insurrection, reported Vice News.

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Ex-DHS official outlines tough 'challenges' Jack Smith faces prosecuting Donald Trump

Special counsel Jack Smith's case against former President Donald Trump turned out to be even worse than originally reported. On Thursday night, June 8, major media outlets reported that Trump had been indicted on seven federal counts in connection with Smith's probe of government documents he was storing at Mar-a-Lago. But when the indictment was unsealed the following day, it was revealed that there were 37 counts — not seven.

This indictment comes in addition to the 34-count New York State prosecution Trump is up against from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jr. And Trump is still facing separate criminal investigations involving his post-2020 election activities: one by Smith, another by Fulton County, Georgia DA Fani Willis.

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'Running out of options': George Conway says Trump is struggling to find lawyers

Former President Donald Trump's immediate challenge is to find a legal team willing to represent him on federal charges involving his stashing highly classified military documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort, conservative attorney George Conway told Molly Jong-Fast on the latest edition of the "Fast Politics" podcast.

"So, I want to ask you, as we are now in this sort of — the indictment is out, people have read it, it's 47 pages," said Jong-Fast. "Tuesday, he will go into the courthouse in Miami."

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Trump is 'rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic' as he collides with Jack Smith: analysis

The startling withdrawal of two of Donald Trump's most prominent attorneys within 24 hours after he was indicted by the Department of Justice is drawing increasing scrutiny into the turmoil that continually surrounds the former president's legal team.

Following the bombshell announcement by special counsel Jack Smith, Trump announced on Truth Social that attorneys Jim Trusty and John Rowley would be replaced by Todd Blanche who is also handling the former president's tax fraud case brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

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Trump indictment is only 'a fraction of the evidence the government has amassed': Maggie Haberman

Special counsel Jack Smith's indictment of former President Donald Trump drew praise for its thoroughness even from conservative legal experts such as Jonathan Turley and former Attorney General Bill Barr, who in the past have defended the former president amid numerous scandals.

And according to New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, the government has a lot more damning proof that it can throw at Trump during his criminal trial.

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'Entirely self-inflicted': CNN legal analyst marvels how Trump bumbled into felony charges

Former President Donald Trump's indictment for the removal of national defense information to his Mar-a-Lago resort is entirely the result of a series of bad decisions he made even as federal authorities gave him every chance to hand them over without legal action, said former federal prosecutor Elie Honig on CNN Monday.

Honig's point came during a discussion of former Attorney General William Barr, who laid out how severe the charges against his former boss are in a recent interview.

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Former Trump official: 'He has committed very serious crimes' if indictment is proven

Former Trump national security adviser John Bolton on Monday said that his one-time boss should face severe legal consequences if the federal government can prove the charges outlined in its indictment against him.

Appearing on CNN, Bolton broke down the significance of the allegations leveled against former President Donald Trump by special counsel Jack Smith in an indictment that was unsealed on Friday afternoon.

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Aileen Cannon faces being 'publicly humiliated' if she issues more 'wacko rulings': Morning Joe panel

The assignment of federal judge Aileen Cannon to the Mar-a-Lago case has set off warning alarms for legal experts, but panelists on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" said she had plenty of reasons to step aside.

The Donald Trump-appointed district court judge issued some eyebrow-raising rulings in her handling of the case last year, before the former president was indicted, but Florida prosecutor Dave Aronberg said Cannon would be constrained by legal guardrails.

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Trump is nailed 'dead to rights' and 'it doesn't matter' why he stole nuclear secrets: Morning Joe

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough tried to cut through the chatter around Donald Trump's indictment for stashing classified documents at his home at Mar-a-Lago and refusing to return them to the government.

The former president's defenders have claimed the case is a witch hunt and insisted he had the authority to declassify and keep anything he wants, but the "Morning Joe" host said the evidence laid out in the indictment by special counsel Jack Smith was just too overwhelming.

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Here are two paths to booting Judge Aileen Cannon off the Trump Espionage Act case: legal experts

According to three leading scholars specializing in federal government ethics laws, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon needs to either recuse herself or be preemptively forced off overseeing the trial of Donald Trump related to special counsel Jack Smith's investigation of the former president.

In a column for Slate, legal experts Norm Eisen, Richard Painter and Fred Wertheimer present multiple paths for the Trump-appointed Cannon to be ousted either using federal laws or allowances under Florida state law.

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Who is 'Trump Attorney 1'? Lawyer Evan Corcoran's key role in indictment

By Andrew Goudsward

(Reuters) - Evan Corcoran, a lawyer hired by DonaldTrump to fend off a federal investigation into his handling of sensitive documents, is now a central figure in the U.S. Justice Department's criminal case against the former president.

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