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Jack Smith

'Eight months to save our republic': Liz Cheney lays down stakes of 2024 race

Former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) put out a stark message about the stakes of the upcoming presidential election Wednesday.

Hours after Nikki Haley dropped out of the Republican presidential primary, Cheney took to Twitter to acknowledge that former President Donald Trump will be her party's nominee for the presidency again, while also making clear that the thought of him returning to the White House is an unacceptable outcome.

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Ex-FBI official thinks Trump lawyers are intentionally trying to confuse Judge Cannon

Former FBI assistant director Andrew McCabe thinks Donald Trump's lawyers are intentionally trying to confuse Judge Aileen Cannon in his classified documents case.

Speaking with legal expert Allison Gill on the "Jack" podcast Tuesday, McCabe read aloud a filing from Trump's team which argues that it should be able to publicly disclose the identities of witnesses in the case and their testimony.

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‘The good of the country’: Trump explains why he thinks he should have immunity

Responding to the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling Monday that he can remain on the Colorado ballot after the state, citing the 14th Amendment, removed him for engaging in insurrection, Donald Trump on Monday suggested he should have absolute immunity "for the good of the country and actually the good of the world."

The Supreme Court recently decided to take up Trump's "absolute immunity" claim, which is tied to Special Prosecutor Jack Smith's prosecution of Trump for his actions to overturn the 2020 presidential election results. But falling under that argument could be his Espionage Act case against Trump, also referred to as the classified documents case, and indeed, possibly any case against him for his actions while in office.

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Jack Smith vows to hand over 'favorable' evidence to Trump in classified documents case

Special counsel Jack Smith said in a filing Monday that he will follow a standard court rule in Donald Trump's classified documents case that says prosecutors must provide "material information that is favorable to a defendant and in their possession," Newsweek reports.

The Brady rule, if found to be "violated during a trial," could lead to "a mistrial or block the Justice Department from using unfavorable evidence."

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Trump is far weaker than we think: legal expert

Critics of former President Donald Trump were bitterly disappointed when the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would hear Donald Trump's presidential immunity argument — and set hearings for the week of April 22.

Those critics aren't so much angry with the High Court for hearing Trump's arguments but for waiting so long. Special counsel Jack Smith's cases against Trump can’t proceed until the question is resolved, which means the justices have greatly reduced the possibility of a trial starting before the 2024 presidential election.

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Trump warns he could be open to blackmail if U.S. Supreme Court doesn't grant immunity

In a series of posts to his Truth Social platform on Monday, former President Donald Trump appeared to suggest that he'll be open to blackmail if the Supreme Court upholds lower court decisions that he does not have immunity from criminal prosecution for actions taken as president.

Trump has argued the office of president means he can't face criminal prosecution.

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Here’s what SCOTUS just did — and did not do — in its Trump ruling: experts

The U.S. Supreme Court Monday morning handed down a unanimous 9-0 decision determining the State of Colorado cannot kick Donald Trump off the presidential ballot — but legal and constitutional experts caution it's not quite as unanimous as initial reports state.

And they added there's a lot the justices did — and did not do — that makes some onlookers extremely concerned.

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'Court did not do what Trump asked': Experts say SCOTUS ruling will dismay ex-president

Legal analysts had anticipated that the U.S. Supreme Court would reverse Colorado's effort to kick Donald Trump off its ballot — but they said Monday it hadn't worked out the way the former president might have hoped.

Speaking to MSNBC, former senior Department of Justice prosecutor Andrew Weissmann and former acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal both pointed out that the state didn't address if Trump is guilty of insurrection — which the Colorado decision had ruled.

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'Bond remains elusive': Trump's latest rant seen as sign he can't pay massive legal bill

Former president Donald Trump late Friday night railed against the civil fraud case in which he was ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars. Some saw it as a sign that he can't even afford the bond needed to appeal it.

Trump has promised to challenge the massive judgment, but legal experts suggest it will be unsuccessful, except for maybe shaving some money off the total fine.

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Here’s how Trump could still face a verdict in Jan. 6 trial before election: ex-prosecutor

The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) dashed the hopes of Americans hoping for a speedy trial for former President Donald Trump by accepting his immunity appeal. But one legal expert is still optimistic that Trump will get a verdict in Washington, D.C., before Election Day.

In a recent essay for Politico, Ankush Khardori — a former federal prosecutor who specialized in financial crimes — explained how the former president still stands a chance of having a public trial in the final weeks of the presidential campaign season. Khardori wrote that Department of Justice special counsel Jack Smith and U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan have signaled that the immense public interest in the case necessitates the completion of the trial before voters go to the polls.

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Judge Cannon went somewhere in Trump hearing that was 'none of her business': expert

The federal judge overseeing Trump's classified documents case appeared to chart way off course in her court deliberations while determining a trial start date.

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann pointed to a moment in Friday's hearing in Fort Pierce, Florida where U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, a former prosecutor before Donald Trump elevated her to the bench, decided to talk about the so-called "60-day" rule.

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Jack Smith made an 'interesting and smart' comment to Judge Cannon in hearing: report

Special Counsel Jack Smith is playing legal chess against Trump's lawyers. And the game board is the calendar.

During Friday's hearing in a federal court in Fort Pierce, Florida, the special counsel, who is prosecuting former President Donald Trump in both his classified documents obstruction case as well as his Jan. 6 election subversion case, showed how scheduling a trial date in the docs case could have unspoken maneuvers at play.

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Judge Cannon just showed her 'inexperience' or 'bias' in latest Trump hearing: expert

Judge Aileen Cannon, the jurist overseeing Donald Trump's criminal case over allegedly stashed confidential documents, showed that she's either in the bag for the former president or that she's too much of a novice on the bench to handle the momentous case, a former prosecutor said on Friday.

Andrew Weissmann, the former top prosecutor on former special counsel Robert Mueller's team, gave his thoughts on Cannon's hearing from earlier Friday, where she fielded recommendations from both sides on potential trial dates in 2024.

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