Jack Smith

‘Doesn’t know most basic rule’: Conway blasts Cannon over ‘perplexed’ reaction

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon suffered more strong criticism, this time from attorney George Conway who blasted the Trump-appointed jurist over a New York Times report in which, he said, she appeared to not understand the basics of a criminal rule.

Judge Cannon is already under fire after likely delaying until after the 2024 presidential election one of the most important cases in American jurisprudence – an ex-president, his party's presumptive nominee, running again for the White House, charged under the Espionage Act with unlawful removal and retention of some of the nation's top classified documents, including nuclear secrets.

Keep reading... Show less

'Take these guys out': Ken Paxton and Steve Bannon call for action against 'Gestapo' FBI

Right-wing podcast host and convicted criminal Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Donald Trump, and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton compared the FBI to the Nazi Gestapo and said the agency should be dismantled.

During a Wednesday interview with Paxton, Bannon falsely claimed that the FBI had plotted to assassinate Trump during a search of his Mar-a-Lago estate for classified documents.

Keep reading... Show less

Jack Smith 'finally' has a path to boot Judge Aileen Cannon from Trump trial: analyst

Florida federal judge Aileen Cannon's latest ruling sets up a path for special counsel Jack Smith to demand her recusal from former President Donald Trump's classified documents case, MSNBC analyst Jordan Rubin explained Tuesday.

The ruling in question was Cannon's decision to smack down Smith's demand that Trump be prevented from attacking FBI officials — a ruling Jordan argues was carefully crafted to prevent him from being able to appeal the decision.

Keep reading... Show less

Revealed: Lawmaker who gave J6ers a Capitol tour targets ex-Capitol Police intel head

The former assistant director of intelligence for the U.S. Capitol Police, who issued a stark warning about the threat of extremist violence days before the Jan. 6 attack, expects to be called to testify before a House subcommittee led by Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA) that is focused on shifting blame away from former President Donald Trump.

Julie Farnam told Raw Story she expects “to get a subpoena any day now,” and anticipates that she will be called to testify behind closed doors before Republican members of the House Administration Oversight Subcommittee on June 21.

Keep reading... Show less

'Smoking gun': Expert claims Judge Cannon made error that will finally get her removed

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon will be removed from overseeing the trial in special counsel Jack Smith’s Espionage Act case against Donald Trump, predicts a top constitutional scholar who is calling her rejection of an urgent request from federal prosecutors to place additional restrictions on the ex-president “wildly lawless” and a “smoking gun.”

Last week Trump, his campaign and his supporters claimed President Joe Biden had tried to assassinate the ex-president in 2022 when FBI agents executed a search warrant on Mar-a-Lago. Trump is accused of illegaly storing well over 1,000 White House items he had taken, including hundreds of classified documents, at the Florida residence and resort. Among those were some of the nation’s top nuclear secrets.

Keep reading... Show less

'A menace!' Aileen Cannon slammed after denial of Jack Smith’s gag order request

On Tuesday, while Donald Trump's defense team was making its closing arguments in his hush mone trial, some bombshell news in a separate Trump-related criminal case broke: Politico's Kyle Cheney reported that Judge Aileen Cannon had denied special counsel Jack Smith's request for a partial gag order in his Mar-a-Lago documents case.

Trump has faced limited gag orders in three other cases, including the one imposed by Judge Tanya Chutkan in Smith's election interference case. But Cannon, a Trump appointee, not only rejected Smith's request — she was also highly critical of the special counsel's team.

Keep reading... Show less

'Form over substance': Judge Cannon's latest ruling shredded by legal analyst

MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang criticized a recent ruling by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon that refused to acknowledge the danger Donald Trump poses to law enforcement.

In a social media post, Phang responded to Cannon's denial of special counsel Jack Smith's motion to modify Trump's bond conditions after he suggested Department of Justice agents were part of a plot to assassinate him.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Cannon threatens to 'sanction' Jack Smith for lack of 'courtesy' to Trump's team

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon denied a request from special counsel Jack Smith to modify Donald Trump's bond conditions in his classified documents case.

In a motion last week, Smith asked Cannon to modify the conditions to clarify that Trump cannot endanger law enforcement officials investigating his case.

Keep reading... Show less

'Crassest instincts': Biographer outlines mentor whose 'ghost hovers' over Trump's trial

The controversial attorney Roy Cohn, who served as chief counsel for Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) and the House Unamerican Activities Committee during the 1950s and went on to represent a young Donald Trump during the 1970s, died of AIDS-related complications on August 2, 1986.

But 38 years later, Cohn remains a major inspiration to Trump, now 77, at a time when he is facing four criminal indictments.

Keep reading... Show less

CIA lawyer debunks common 'false premise' about Jack Smith's Trump case in Florida

There has been a lot of speculation about what would have happened if Special Counsel Jack Smith charged Donald Trump for the Espionage Act case in another venue, as opposed to Florida, but that's a "false premise," according to a former attorney with the CIA.

Brian D. Greer, an attorney at the CIA's Office of General Counsel from 2010 to 2018, addressed recent claims that Smith should have brought the classified documents case in Washington, D.C., perhaps avoiding Judge Aileen Cannon, who has been accused of bias in favor of the ex-president who appointed her to her spot on the federal bench.

Keep reading... Show less

Plaque required by law to honor police heroes reportedly 'held up by GOP Congress'

A plaque to honor police heroes was required by law to be installed by March 2023, but it "still hasn't happened," and it's reportedly being "held up by GOP congress."

CBS News Congressional Correspondent Scott MacFarlane, who earlier in the day highlighted a legal filing in which Donald Trump sought sanctions against Special Counsel Jack Smith in the criminal Espionage Act case, explained in a video that the plaque was "required to be mounted under federal law," yet it "has not yet been put in place."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump seeks sanctions against Jack Smith after being called out for 'dangerous statements'

Donald Trump's legal team on Monday asked Judge Aileen Cannon, the jurist overseeing the criminal Espionage Act case brought against the former president in Florida, to sanction Special Counsel Jack Smith for the prosecutor's recent attempt to modify the conditions of Trump's release pending trial.

Smith recently moved for what some have compared to a gag order for Trump's recent false claims about the FBI. Specifically, Trump claimed that President Joe Biden and the FBI sought to kill the ex-president, which is why they used a warrant that allowed for "deadly force" when searching his Mar-a-Lago resort for classified records.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump repeats FBI 'deadly force' claim as Jack Smith scrambles to get gag order

Donald Trump’s campaign doubled down on claims that FBI agents were cleared to use “deadly force” against him as they searched Mar-a-Lago for classified documents — as special prosecutor Jack Smith scrambled to get a gag order to silence the discredited statement.

In a fundraising email sent late Sunday, the GOP’s expected nominee re-shared a misquoted section of FBI policy that has been blasted as false by several experts — including Attorney General Merrick Garland who called Trump using it as "dangerous."

Keep reading... Show less