RawStory

Jack Smith

Supreme Court may have disguised 'bad news' for Trump as a temporary win: analysis

Former President Donald Trump was triumphant when the Supreme Court rejected special counsel Jack Smith's request to leapfrog the appellate court and immediately take up the former president's claim to presidential immunity, which has currently paused the 2020 election conspiracy case brought against him in by the special counsel D.C.

But not so fast, wrote Jessica Levinson for MSNBC on Wednesday — this could be a Pyrrhic victory for Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lawyers will draw 'ire of the judge' by pushing conspiracy theories to jury: expert

Special counsel Jack Smith has made a filing that seeks to prevent former President Donald Trump and his attorneys from using political attacks and other irrelevant side criticisms of the integrity of the process during his trial in the 2020 election conspiracy case.

But even if U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, who has currently paused trial proceedings pending the resolution of the former president's immunity claim at the appellate court, grants Smith his request, Trump's attorneys will try to find clever ways around it, warned former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti on CNN Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump claims 'errand boy' Jack Smith's new filing in D.C. case is 'illegal'

The former president ranted about Special Counsel Jack Smith’s potentially damning new court filing in an oddly-capitalized and run-on sentence-ridden screed posted Wednesday to Truth Social.

“Crooked Joe Biden’s errand boy, Deranged Jack Smith, is obsessed with attacking your favorite President, me, and with interfering in the 2024 Presidential Election, which I am Dominating,” Trump declared, before addressing the new motion filed by Smith's team.

Keep reading... Show less

Melania reveals why she skipped Mar-a-Lago Christmas with the Trumps this year

Former First Lady Melania Trump skipped out on having Christmas celebrations with her husband's family this year. And she has now told Fox News the reason why.

A source told Fox News Digital Wednesday that Melania Trump did not attend the Trump family Christmas at Mar-a-Lago this year so she could be with her mom, reported Brooke Singman.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's Jan. 6 defense is like bank robber blaming security for trying to stop him: expert

Legal analysts are diving through the details included in special counsel Jack Smith's Wednesday filing, and coming up with explanations and observations about what it contains.

National security expert Marcy Wheeler pointed out the crux of Smith's argument is likening Trump's defense arguments to "a bank robber [] defend[ing] himself by blaming the bank’s security guard for failing to stop him."

Keep reading... Show less

Prominent Republicans urge court to throw out Trump's 'dangerous' argument

Former President Donald Trump's argument for presidential immunity regarding the plot to overturn the 2020 presidential election is "dangerous" for America well beyond the current moment, warned Republican experts in an amicus brief to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, Salon reported on Wednesday.

"Nothing in our Constitution, or any case, supports former President Trump's dangerous argument for criminal immunity," said the brief. "The last thing presidential immunity should do is embolden Presidents who lose re-election to engage in criminal conduct, through official acts or otherwise, as part of efforts to prevent the vesting of executive power required by Article II in their lawfully-elected successors."

Keep reading... Show less

Jack Smith filing suggests he has testimony from Congress members that incriminates Trump

Special counsel Jack Smith submitted a filing Wednesday that indicated he has testimony from members of Congress that he intends to use in Donald Trump's 2020 election trial.

Smith requested that, when trial witnesses are cross-examined, Trump's lawyers be barred from asking questions that would force them to breach attorney-client privilege or the Speech and Debate Clause.

Keep reading... Show less

Jack Smith moves to block Donald Trump from using conspiracy theories in Jan. 6 case

Special counsel Jack Smith is taking steps to stop Donald Trump from using the court to spin election conspiracy theories.

In a Wednesday filing, Smith says, among other things, that he wants to exclude specific pieces of evidence and arguments in the 2020 election trial that include Trump's claims that he's being targeted or that the election is being interfered with because of his prosecution.

Keep reading... Show less

'I was just doing my job!' Trump pushes election conspiracies to claim immunity

Donald Trump pushed conspiracy theories about his 2020 election loss to insist he is "entitled to immunity."

The twice-impeached former president was indicted Aug. 1 by a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., on four counts related to his effort to overturn his election loss, but he claimed Wednesday morning in a Truth Social post that he was acting within the scope of his official duties to overcome what he claims were irregularities in the vote.

Keep reading... Show less

'Presidential immunity' is a key part of Trump’s game plan — but it isn't working

Donald Trump has made "presidential immunity" a big part of his defense in special counsel Jack Smith's election interference case, arguing that because he was still president in late 2020 and early 2021, he is immune from prosecution.

Judge Tanya Chutkan has flatly rejected Trump's argument, ruling that presidents do not enjoy a "divine right of kings" in the United States — a decision that Trump's lawyers have appealed. Smith, hoping the U.S. Supreme Court would quickly resolve the matter, asked the justices to review it sooner rather than later. But his request was denied, which means that Trump's "presidential immunity" claims will remain in the lower federal courts for now.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Trump's 'divine right of kings' claim will be smashed by Supreme Court: legal experts

Donald Trump's claim of unlimited presidential immunity will, almost certainly, make its way eventually to the U.S. Supreme Court, but multiple legal experts have already predicted he will lose.

The former president has been indicted on 91 charges in four jurisdictions, and the Supreme Court is expected to review the immunity issue raised in special counsel Jack Smith's criminal investigation of his efforts to overturn the results of his 2020 election loss — though it ruled last week the case needed to be heard by the lower court of appeal first.

Keep reading... Show less

Here’s the problem with Trump’s 'truly bonkers assertion' in immunity appeal: expert

As he continues to pursue delaying special counsel Jack Smith's election interference case against him, MSNBC Daily writer and editor Hayes Brown highlights the fact Donald "Trump all but requests the appeals court to rule that the judiciary has no power over anything he did while in office — to rule, in effect, that [Judge Tanya] Chutkan got it wrong: He does possess the divine right of kings, and as such, no other branch of government can touch him.'"

Brown is referring to Trump's lawyers' current focus on appealing Chutkan's ruling from earlier this month, rejecting the ex-president's claim that he's immune from prosecution, refusing to trash Smith's indictment against him.

Keep reading... Show less

'Biggest threat': Legal expert dissects which prosecution Trump fears most

Former President Donald Trump is likely fretting four felony counts he's been charged with over any other, according to former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Harry Litman.

Appearing on Laura Coates' CNN show, Litman outlined why Jack Smith's case that's due to go to trial in Washington D.C. next year should worry him the most.

Keep reading... Show less