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Jack Smith

Donald Trump's criminal cases were 'not optional' for Jack Smith: Ex-prosecutor

In a Saturday opinion piece entitled "Ignore Jack Smith’s Critics," a former U.S. attorney and Bush official says the criminal charges brought against Donald Trump are to be celebrated, not lamented.

Donald Ayer, a former deputy attorney general under President George H.W. Bush who previously said special counsel Smith could prove Trump participated in an insurrection, said for the Atlantic that too many in the media are claiming that the former president being charged is a travesty. In reality, he says, it should be considered a necessary consequence of a fair society.

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'Payback': Jen Psaki says Trump already blew up his 2024 chances in 2020

"Payback can be a real pain in the neck." Those are the words of former Biden representative Jen Psaki as she explains how Donald Trump likely blew up his chances of being elected again.

Psaki, who a month ago correctly predicted that the Georgia indictment would present unique challenges for Trump, spent time in the Biden administration before joining MSNBC. She also previously knew that the second Jack Smith indictment would be about more than just Jan. 6.

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'Alarmed' Trump security chief intervened to keep crucial Mar-a-Lago tapes from being destroyed

In a deep dive into the life of the key Donald Trump employee who has flipped on the former president and some of his colleagues who worked with him at Mar-a-Lago, the New York Times is reporting that Trump's head of security made a fateful decision that helped out special counsel Jack Smith's investigation.

As part of their profile of IT manager Yuscil Taveras, the Times creates a moment-by-moment timeline where Mar-a-Lago property manager Carlos De Oliveira contacted Yuscil Taveras to meet him "somewhere more private" to discuss deleting the surveillance video.

As the Times is reporting, "According to the indictment, which does not name Mr. Taveras but refers to him as 'Trump Employee 4,' Mr. De Oliveira led him through a basement tunnel to a small room known as an 'audio closet,' where Mr. De Oliveira delivered a message from Mr. Trump: 'the boss' wanted the footage deleted. Mr. Taveras rebuffed the request, prosecutors said in the indictment, but Mr. De Oliveira raised it again."

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Noting that Taveras once again denied the request, the report states that Taveras then reportedly confided to fellow employee Renzo Nivar about what had happened and days later alerted "a superior in Trump Tower."

According to the Times, "One executive in New York, Matthew Calamari Jr., the Trump Organization’s corporate director of security, apparently became alarmed, according to people with knowledge of the matter. He alerted the company’s legal department, prompting a senior lawyer at the company to deliver a stern warning not to delete anything."

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Trump targets Jack Smith and current and former top DOJ officials by name in latest attack

Donald Trump unleashed his latest attack Friday afternoon, targeting, by name, two current U.S. Dept. of Justice officials and several former DOJ officials, along with a well-known government watchdog group.

The ex-president appeared angered about efforts to remove him from the 2024 presidential ballot in Colorado, based on numerous reports from conservative and other legal scholars that say the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution automatically bans Trump from holding office.

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'Disastrously failed gambit': Legal experts react to Mark Meadows removal flop

Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows suffered a huge blow on Friday as a U.S. District Judge Steve Jones rejected his bid to have his charges in the Georgia election racketeering case removed to federal court, saying that he had not met his burden of proof in the matter.

Legal experts were quick to weigh in on social media — with many outlining why his gambit backfired, and some noting that he actually put himself in a worse legal situation than he had been in before.

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'Slime balls': Trump attacks ballot removal effort in post that lashes out at liberal talking heads

Donald Trump on Friday lashed out at efforts to keep him off the Colorado ballot in a social media post that attacked not only the group suing to have him removed, but also several liberal commentators.

The former president’s post on his Truth Social website followed a lawsuit filed by advocacy group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington that aims to keep him off the 2024 Republican primary ballot in the state, citing the 14th Amendment’s ban on insurrectionists holding public office.

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'It’s time to play hardball': Lindsey Graham critics pounce on his near indictment in Georgia

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis may not have named Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) in her RICO indictment that included 19 alleged co-conspirators with Donald Trump at the top of the list, but he is facing fresh scrutiny after the release of a grand jury report on Friday.

According to the report, grand jurors voted 13-7 to indict the South Carolina Trump ally over his involvement in an attempt to overturn the election results in Georgia, but Willis gave him a pass.

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'Ouch': Morning Joe panel reacts to Fani Willis' attack on Jim Jordan's 'sabotage' attempt

MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski and other "Morning Joe" panelists were stunned by Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis' scathing response to Rep. Jim Jordan's attempt to peek into her investigation of Donald Trump.

The Ohio Republican last month asked for records, communications and other documents related to the Trump election interference case, and Willis accused Jordan of obstructing her work and misunderstanding the fundamentals of the law -- and she took a gratuitous shot at his never having taken the bar exam despite finishing law school.

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Jack Smith may have been able to get key info from Trump's closest allies: Jan. 6 committee member

A House Jan. 6 select committee member Thursday credited special counsel Jack Smith for obtaining evidence the committee couldn’t.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The Beat with Ari Melber” acknowledged the limitations of her committee but said Thursday’s conviction of Trump aide Peter Navarro shows that a “subpoena isn't just a suggestion.”

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GOP Rep. knocks Marjorie Taylor Greene for knowing more about CrossFit than the Constitution

Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) hit back against his GOP colleague, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA), during a radio show Thursday.

Greene attacked Buck on Tuesday in a thread where she posted a letter Buck sent to other Republicans in the Colorado GOP. It was a response to a complaint sent by a constituent claiming that Jan. 6 defendants are being held without bond and are political prisoners. Buck alleges in the letter that the constituent made many unsubstantiated allegations that Buck attempts to dispute.

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Jim Jordan launches probe into 'abusive tactics' DOJ used to force Trump aide to flip

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) on Thursday announced the launch of an investigation into special counsel Jack Smith over prosecutorial abuse allegations.

The probe will center around claims presented by Stanley Woodward, a lawyer who represents Trump aide Walt Nauta in connection with the classified documents case, according to a letter the House Judiciary Committee chairman sent Smith.

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Trump will get 'sick to his stomach' thinking about witness flipped by Jack Smith: Chris Christie

Donald Trump has been paying for the lawyers of the employees who witnessed his decisions surrounding the top-secret documents he kept at Mar-a-Lago -- until recently when one of those witnesses fired their lawyer and got a public defender instead.

What's more, that employee has now made a deal with the Justice Department in exchange for testimony against Trump.

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Grand jury that indicted Trump reconvenes as prosecutor targets 'big grift'

The grand jury that indicted Donald Trump on federal charges relating to efforts to overturn the 2020 election reconvened Thursday after a four-week break, CNN reported.

The last time the grand jury met was on Aug. 8, just after it hit Trump with charges. As CNN points out, the latest meeting is a sign that Special Counsel Jack Smith's investigation is ongoing.

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