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Jack Smith

'Meant to incite anger': Expert shows how Trump attacks witnesses with coded messages

Former President Donald Trump is doing his best to manipulate, intimidate, and scare away witnesses in the leadup to his federal 2020 election charges going to trial, argued former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti on Friday.

This comes as a federal appeals court upheld the gag order placed upon Trump by Judge Tanya Chutkan.

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'Game is basically over': Expert says Trump at 'end of the road' for gag order challenges

With the latest appeals court ruling upholding Judge Tanya Chutkan's gag order in the 2020 election interference trial, former President Donald Trump is essentially out of options to get out from under it.

That's the view of former federal prosecutor Harry Litman, who weighed in on MSNBC Friday.

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Furious Trump slams gag order ruling for stopping him 'telling the truth'

Former President Donald Trump reacted with fury after the D.C. Court of Appeals upheld Judge Tanya Chutkan's gag order against him in the 2020 election case — and he took to Truth Social to claim that it is preventing him from "telling the truth."

"An Appeals Court has just largely upheld the Gag Order against me in the ridiculous J6 Case, where the Unselect January 6th Committee deleted and destroyed almost all Documents and Evidence, saying that I can be barred from talking and, in effect, telling the truth," said Trump.

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Judge Tanya Chutkan's gag order on Trump upheld in appeals court ruling

An appeals court Friday upheld key parts of the gag order against former President Donald Trump in his Washington D.C. election inference case, court records show.

The Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued a 68-page ruling affirming Judge Tanya Chutkan's order banning Trump from speaking publicly about potential witnesses, case lawyers (excluding Special Counsel Jack Smith), court staff and their families.

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D.C. court sets tight appeal deadline in effort to keep Trump trial on track

The District of Columbia court clerk set a deadline for later this month for filing key paperwork in Donald Trump's effort to halt his prosecution.

Judge Tanya Chutkan denied his motion to dismiss charges filed against him by special counsel Jack Smith, and the court clerk then set a Dec. 26 deadline for his attorneys to file forms needed for him to appeal that ruling.

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Trump says 'destroyed' Jan. 6 evidence would have shown Nancy Pelosi 'guilty' in new rant

Former President Donald Trump on Friday morning uncorked a fact-free rant in which he declared unspecified "evidence" would have found former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) "guilty" of somehow inciting the January 6th Capitol riots that featured multiple Trump supporters who threatened her life.

In a lengthy tirade on his Truth Social platform, the former president ranted about the multiple civil lawsuits and criminal charges that he is currently facing before then focusing specifically on special counsel Jack Smith's charges that Trump tried to defraud the United States by illegally remaining in power after losing the 2020 election.

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Ken Chesebro cooperating with multiple probes in hopes of avoiding more charges: report

Attorney Ken Chesebro, the architect of the 2020 fake electors scheme that has resulted in criminal charges in multiple states, is not just cooperating with prosecutors in Georgia.

CNN reports that Chesebro is cooperating with prosecutors in Michigan and Wisconsin, which are two of the states where fake pro-Trump electors submitted paperwork falsely declaring themselves to be their states' legitimate representatives in the electoral college.

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Trump has a new plan to stop Jack Smith's case 'dead in its tracks': Legal expert

Former President Donald Trump has reacted to Judge Tanya Chutkan's rejection of his "presidential immunity" claims by filing an appeal. But this is much more than a regular appeal — it's essentially a move to put the entire trial, down to the last detail, on hold, and stall out the case.

That's the view of legal expert Lisa Rubin, who weighed in on MSNBC's "All In" on Thursday.

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Judge Chutkan issues new order on Trump's request to stay all proceedings in D.C. case

Judge Chutkan on Thursday issued a new order in response to Donald Trump's request to stay all proceedings in the 2020 election subversion case in Washington D.C., directing both the former president and Special Counsel Jack Smith to submit briefs on the contested subject.

Trump earlier in the day filed an appeal in the case, challenging Chutkan's rejection of his "presidential immunity" argument. The ex-president also asked that the court stay the entire case, until that appeal has been resolved.

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Jack Smith will ram Trump’s witness attacks ‘down his throat’ at trial: legal expert

Donald Trump’s personal social media attacks will come back to bite him when he faces off against special counsel Jack Smith in his federal election interference trial next year, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance predicts.

“Smith is going to ram Trump’s attacks on people involved in the cases against him, and especially witnesses, right back down his throat at trial,” Vance writes.

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DOJ now has 'compelling' evidence that a defeated Trump pleaded for 'violence': expert

A redacted portion of a Jack Smith filing submitted to Judge Tanya Chutkan hints that the Department of Justice has "compelling" evidence that links Donald Trump to the 2020 election violence.

Citing the notice the special counsel had to file under the Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) that previews evidence the DOJ will bring to trial, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance noted the redacted portion that follows the disclosure of an "agent" of Trump, also described as an unnamed campaign official who was in contact with a campaign lawyer in Detroit encouraging "rioting and other obstruction at the TCF Center where the vote count was taking place."

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How a 2020 debate comment could come back to haunt Trump at trial: analysis

Special counsel Jack Smith made a pivotal 9-page filing to U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Judge Tanya Chutkan this week where he delineated accusations of Donald Trump's wrongdoing that, as yet, the former president has not been indicted for.

Of note, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance explained, was Smith's inclusion of a glib comment made by Donald Trump during a 2020 debate performance that could come into play when his D.C. trial related to his attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election convenes.

As Vance noted on her Substack platform, "The [Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b)rule] tells prosecutors they can’t offer evidence that a defendant committed bad acts or crimes beyond what’s charged in the indictment to try and show that the defendant has a propensity to commit crimes, that he’s a bad guy. But the rule permits prosecutors to use the evidence for other purposes."

With that in mind, the legal expert noted that a key component of Smith's case against the former president centers on his attorneys asserting he was acting in good faith when he contested the election results.

According to Vance, Smith cited an instance in 2020 where a debate moderator reminded the former president about "the American tradition of a peaceful transfer of power" and asked him if he would adhere to it, to which he responded, "What I’m saying is that I will tell you at the time. I’ll keep you in suspense. OK?”

That, she pointed out, could be used to show a jury that Trump's mindset with regard to the legitimacy of the election could be described as "If I win, it’s a fair election, but if I lose it’s fraud” long before the Jan. 6 insurrection.

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'Be skeptical': Trump asks Judge Cannon to nix Jack Smith's classified documents request

Donald Trump's lawyers on Wednesday made a filing in the Florida classified documents case in which the former president's legal team encourages Judge Cannon to reject Jack Smith's proposed handling of materials.

Cannon, who has been accused of trying to disrupt the multiple trials of Donald Trump, has to decide whether to accept Smith's team's bid to delete certain classified items without giving Trump or his lawyers access to them. Trump's team is requesting access for the lawyers, but not Trump himself.

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