RawStory

Jack Smith

Redacted warrant reveals how Jack Smith scoured Trump's Twitter data for election case

Special counsel Jack Smith likely seized a broad amount of information related to former Donald Trump's Twitter account.

A redacted search warrant unsealed this week showed the large swath of data Smith's team ordered Twitter to hand over that could be related to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. The existence of the search warrant was first revealed earlier this year after media organizations sued.

Keep reading... Show less

'Commas matter': CNN legal analyst breaks down crucial new piece of evidence against Trump

Former Vice President Mike Pence is saying that a typographical error in his book obscured a serious moment in which he admonished former President Donald Trump against his plan to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Specifically, the former vice president told special counsel Jack Smith's team about the errant insertion of a comma in the statement "You know, I don't have the authority to change the outcome of the election," which made it look as if Pence was simply explaining it wouldn't work, when in reality he was scolding Trump that he knew it was illegal and was doing it anyway.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump finally pins the blame on Putin in new bid to stay out of jail

For years, former President Donald Trump has avoided agreeing with intelligence assessments that Russian President Vladimir Putin interfered on his behalf during the 2016 presidential election.

Most infamously, Trump rejected the American intelligence community's assessment about Russia's actions at a press conference in Helsinki, Finland where he stood next to Putin and said, "President Putin says it's not Russia, I don't see any reason why it would be."

Keep reading... Show less

One misplaced comma in Mike Pence's book may give Jack Smith even more evidence

Investigators pored over Mike Pence's book so closely that they questioned the former vice president's placement of a single comma.

Pence sat for an interview earlier this year with special counsel Jack Smith's team to discuss Donald Trump's efforts to remain in office despite his election loss, and sources told ABC News that their questions zoomed in to a granular level of detail.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Pence considered skipping Jan. 6 certification to avoid hurting 'friend' Trump

Mike Pence briefly considered skipping the Jan. 6, 2021, congressional certification of President Joe Biden's election win, according to his personal notes.

The former vice president told special counsel Jack Smith's team earlier this year that he was "sure" he informed Donald Trump that he had seen no evidence of widespread election fraud, but sources told ABC News that one of Pence's notes obtained by investigators shows that he nearly decided not to preside over the congressional proceedings.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's new First Amendment defense in Georgia case 'won't carry water': legal expert

Former President Donald Trump is testing out a new defense in the Georgia election racketeering case, reported The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Monday: the First Amendment.

"In a filing on Monday in Fulton County Superior Court, Trump attorney Steven Sadow said the former president will challenge his indictment on racketeering, conspiracy and other charges by asserting his right to political speech and expressive conduct," reported David Wickert.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Cannon accused of trying to 'rig the game' for Trump by ex-AG Garland spokesman

During a panel discussion on MSNBC on Saturday morning, the former spokesperson for Attorney General Merrick Garland dropped the hammer on Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon by accusing her of trying to disrupt the multiple trials of Donald Trump.

Appearing with fill-in host Charles Coleman Jr., Anthony Coley was asked about Cannon's slowness in bringing Trump to trial in the federal obstruction of justice case brought by special counsel Jack Smith over stolen government documents stored at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort, including a multitude of boxes found stored in a bathroom.

Coley was asked by the MSNBC host, "We haven't heard much from Jack Smith understandably. We have not heard much from Merrick Garland the closer that these trials get pushed towards an election. Would you advise either of them to say something publicly about the need to either hold off or the need to press the gas? And if so, which one?"

"I don't imagine them to say anything else out of the courtroom," he began. "Listening to you talk about this is really interesting because my takeaway is that Judge Aileen Cannon, in this case, she feels like she's a referee who is trying to rig the game before any of them starts. That is how I view this."

ALSO READ: Marjorie Taylor Greene declares war on Republicans

"The fact of the matter is that the evidence in this documents case is so overwhelming, we are not talking about George, something that a witness may or may not have overheard secondhand in a coffee shop," he added. "We are talking about, here, solid evidence, firsthand accounts from people who were in Donald Trump's employ, with photographic evidence, videotapes from Mar-a-Lago; the government's case here is airtight, I would note."

"They are really successful in winning these types of cases — up to 98 percent of the time," he added.

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump spymaster may have spilled 'crucial' secrets to special counsel Jack Smith: analysis

A former Trump administration spymaster may have given “crucial” evidence to special counsel Jack Smith that former President Donald Trump is itching to get his hands on, a new political analysis contends.

Former director of national intelligence John Ratcliffe is the subject of a recent discovery request filed by Trump's team that New York Sun editor A.R. Hoffman calls suggestive, especially considering he reportedly warned against challenging the 2020 election.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lawyers shrug off threats against court officials as 'audience reactions'

Donald Trump's lawyers dismissed threats targeting New York Judge Arthur Engoron and his chief clerk, including many that propose violence or even death, as "audience reactions."

The former president's defense team responded to a motion filed Thanksgiving Day by special counsel Jack Smith's office that cited threats in the New York fraud trial as a reason why a gag order should be imposed in the election subversion case in the District of Columbia.

Keep reading... Show less

How Rudy Giuliani’s financial woes have gone from bad to worse

In the past, Rudy Giuliani's allies applauded him for being tough on crime — first as a federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, then during his two terms as mayor of New York City. But these days, Giuliani is inundated with legal problems, in addition to being among the many co-defendants in Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis' case against 2024 GOP presidential frontrunner Donald Trump.

Giuliani has so many legal bills that, according to reports, he hasn't been paying them on time. In September, Robert Costello, one of Giuliani's former lawyers, filed a lawsuit against him and alleged that he was owed $1.36 million in unpaid legal bills. Now, Giuliani is being sued by his accountants for the same reason.

Keep reading... Show less

'The media reports are accurate': Trump stuck defending news sites in new criminal filing

Donald Trump's legal team on Wednesday found itself in an unfamiliar position for the former president: defending traditional media sites.

Trump, who has railed against what he has dubbed the "fake news media," on Wednesday claimed in a filing in his criminal case in D.C. that news reports from the New York Times and other sites are "accurate."

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Cannon could further delay trial by allowing Trump to 'graymail' Jack Smith

Judge Aileen Cannon has more opportunities on the horizon to drag out Donald Trump's trial well into next year, as the former president seeks re-election.

The Florida-based federal judge has taken a leisurely pace in the lead-up to Trump's trial in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case, and experts told Politico there's virtually no chance the trial will begin as scheduled on May 20 due to her unwillingness to set short deadlines for reviewing evidence in accordance with the Classified Information Procedures Act.

Keep reading... Show less

Revealed: How South Carolina’s capital city accommodated Trump ‘patriots’

Preparing for former President Donald Trump to speak on the South Carolina state fairgrounds this summer required a statewide — and national — effort.

Maps and documents exclusively obtained by Raw Story through a South Carolina Freedom of Information Act request detail how significant a public effort it was.

Keep reading... Show less