RawStory

Jack Smith

Tensions boil over in House GOP as they hurtle toward shutdown disaster: 'No one has a plan'

Republicans in the House of Representatives are in "open warfare" as right-wing hardliners are seemingly refusing to endorse any deal to keep the federal government open, reports Politico.

Tensions have boiled over in recent days as several Republicans have rejected a deal to keep the government open that was negotiated between the House Freedom Caucus and the Main Street Caucus over the weekend, which makes the likelihood of a government shutdown all but inevitable.

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Why Jack Smith requested a Trump gag order

In each of former President Donald Trump’s four indictments, he has been allowed to stay out of jail before his trial so long as he abides by certain conditions commonly applied to most people accused of crimes in the U.S.

In the federal case in Washington, D.C., that concerns Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election, Trump is under a protective order barring him from speaking to people involved in the case except through or with his lawyers. In a document unsealed on Sept. 15, 2023, special counsel Jack Smith has also asked the judge in that case to issue a “narrow, well-defined” gag order against Trump to protect witnesses and the jury pool. In the New York state case regarding alleged falsification of business records, Trump has been ordered “not [to] communicate about facts of the case with any individual known to be a witness, except with counsel or the presence of counsel.” In the federal case in Florida, about his handling of classified documents, he is under a similar order.

In the Georgia racketeering case about the alleged attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, Trump’s bond agreement imposes limits like those imposed by the other judges and also says he may not intimidate or threaten anyone involved in the case, including by posting on social media.

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Trump threw his own legal defense 'under a freight train': Retired Harvard Law professor

Former President Donald Trump torched his best defense in the election cases against him when he told NBC's Kristen Welker that he doesn't respect his own attorneys and followed his own instincts when he tried to overturn the vote.

Retired Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe elaborated on the legal bungle in a discussion with CNN's Anderson Cooper.

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Rudy Giuliani sued by his lawyer for $1.36 million in unpaid legal fees

Former President Donald Trump's close ally Rudy Giuliani is being sued by his lawyer, Robert Costello, for $1.36 million in unpaid legal fees, MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin reported on Monday.

The lawsuit was filed in the Supreme Court of New York for Manhattan.

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Trump's posts are being influenced by lawyers — legal expert explains how you can tell

Donald Trump is facing a demand for a limited gag order in the federal case over the 2020 election and Jan. 6 after a filing from special counsel Jack Smith.

The recently unsealed motion hasn't been discussed in court yet, but it goes through many of Trump's attacks on Smith, prosecutors, the judge, witnesses and more in his effort to intimidate them or influence the jury.

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'Rock-crusher of a case:' Expert reveals disaster is coming in Trump docs case

News that Donald Trump used the back of documents with classified markings as “scrap paper” to make to-do lists for his executive assistant, and her remarks to Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigators that Trump told her, “You don’t know anything about the boxes” of classified documents, is a “rock crusher” revelation and “yet another alleged instance of obstruction” against the ex-president, according to legal experts.

ABC News first reported the revelation that Trump had used the backs of documents with classified markings, that they wound up at Mar-a-Lago, and that an aide, Molly Michael, resigned after her concerns over his refusal to return the documents.

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Former FBI official issues a warning for Mark Meadows: 'You can't out-lawyer crime'

Mark Meadows is still fighting his effort to move his case from Georgia state court to federal court. But he handed prosecutors a gift when he testified under oath in the attempt to get his case out of the state court. Then, the effort failed.

What has developed this week is that Donald Trump is sending messages to Mark Meadows on social media about being "loyal." The problem is that Meadows' only options are to capitulate to what he revealed under oath in the hearing and accept his sentence, or throw Trump under the bus.

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MAGA congressman lists ambitious demands that must be met before he'd vote to keep government open

Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN), one of the hardline congressional Republicans who has vowed to vote against a continuing resolution aimed at averting a government shutdown, released his list of demands for what he needs before getting on board with keeping the federal government open.

Writing on Twitter, Ogles put out a list of items that would need to be on offer in exchange for backing the continuing resolution – and roughly all of them are nonstarters for the majority of Congress.

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Trump shot himself in 'both feet' during 'Meet the Press' interview: former assistant US attorney

When former President Donald Trump told Kristen Welker in her debut interview leading "Meet the Press" Sunday that he "didn't respect" the attorneys telling him he lost the election, an expert says he blew up one of the most compelling defenses he had in the federal 2020 election subversion case brought by special counsel Jack Smith.

That's the view of Gene Rossi, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia who broke down Trump's crucial mistake on CNN Monday with anchor Sara Sidner.

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'That’s a crime': Legal analysts gush over exposure of Trump’s 'twofer' scheme

During Sunday night's episode of Inside with Jen Psaki, legal analysts Neil Katyal and Andrew Weissman explained why new NBC Meet the Press moderator Kristen Welker's recent interview with ex-President Donald Trump was successful.

During Welker and Trump's conversation, the former president boasted that he followed his own instincts when it came to his efforts to overturning the 2020 presidential election — not the guidance of his counsel.

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Trump is pushing Judge Chutkan to send him to jail: legal analyst

With Donald Trump drawing the ire of U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan, a conversation has reemerged about the former president ending up behind bars.

It isn't only that Trump could be held in contempt of court. Chutkan also said that continued violations of her rule not to disparage the case, the prosecutors or witnesses will only speed up his trial. A faster trial means a quicker verdict and sentence along with it.

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Trump made Jack Smith's case before Judge Chutkan 'a lot easier' after NBC interview admission: legal expert

Appearing on MSNBC on Sunday afternoon with host Jen Psaki, a positively giddy Neal Katyal applauded the job new "Meet the Press" host Kristen Welker did in her interview with Donald Trump, claiming she got him to make a confession that should make special counsel Jack Smith very pleased.

According to the former solicitor general, Welker used just enough flattery to lure the former president into admitting that it was his decision alone to try and overturn the 2020 presidential election results.

In a clip shown by Psaki, Welker asked, "The most senior lawyers in your own administration and in your campaign told you that after you lost more than 60 legal challenges that it was over. Why did you ignore them and decide to listen to a new outside group of attorneys?”

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

After Trump admitted he "didn't respect them," he later added, "You know who I listen to? Myself. I saw what happened, I watched that election, and I thought the election was over at 10 o’clock in the evening. My instincts are a big part of it. That’s been the thing that’s gotten me to where I am -- my instincts."

Welker pressed, "Just to be clear, were you listening to your lawyers’ advice, or were you listening to your own instincts?” to which the former president replied, "Oh, sure. It was my decision. I listened to some people. Some people said that."

After watching the clip, a smiling Psaki commented, "So, this is interesting, because they've been using this advice of counsel arguments. So, what did you think about that exchange?"

An equally smiling Katyal replied, "So, Jen, anyone who is any critic of Kristen Welker on 'Meet The Press' who's like, 'Oh, she's not making news,' she just made huge news this morning."

"Because Donald Trump's defense to January 6th has been one basic thing, which is, I relied on the advice of my lawyers. I didn't have bad criminal intent. It is my lawyers who were telling me to do this," he explained. "And she got him through a masterful interviewing, and playing to his ego, to go, ''Oh no, I did it all myself.'"

"And if you're Jack Smith this morning, you're going, 'Thank you, that's what I always thought, and yes, you hired these kind of cockamamie crazy lawyers, but at the end of the day, this was you, through and through,'" he added. "This demonstrates his culpability right there and then and I think makes this case that Judge [Tanya] Chutkan has going to trial on March 4th a lot easier."

Watch below or at the link.

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'A colossal mistake to showcase this sociopath': NBC facing backlash after 'shameful' Trump interview airs

NBC's attempt to avoid the pitfalls of the Donald Trump CNN town hall that was a contributing factor to the departure of CEO of CNN Worldwide Chris Licht does not appear to have panned out despite being taped and edited.

On Sunday the network used the interview with the former president to introduce new "Meet the Press," host Kristen Welker who took over for the much-maligned Chuck Todd.

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