RawStory

Jack Smith

More Mar-a-Lago witnesses dump Trump-funded lawyer: court filing

It appears that a few more of the witnesses involved in the Mar-a-Lago document scandal have abandoned lawyer John Irving, who is being paid for by Donald Trump.

Just a few weeks ago it was revealed in a Justice Department filing that IT supervisor Yuscil Taveras found another attorney outside of Trump world attorney Stanley Woodward, and was beginning to set the record straight after giving false testimony to the grand jury. Now, it appears that in another filing for witness Carlos De Oliveira, lawyer John Irving revealed others are abandoning his services as well.

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Trump will throw Eric under the bus in his business lawsuit: biographer

An extensive and "meandering" deposition with Donald Trump was released by the New York attorney general this week revealing some of the details about the legal strategy the former president intends to use. Namely, it appears he's going to find a way to throw his sons under the bus and embrace his own alternative facts, while throwing his son Eric under the bus.

Trump biographer and Bloomberg Opinion executive editor Tim O'Brien was asked by MSNBC host Alex Witt if the family business, the Trump Organization, could be banned from doing work in New York or even fined over $250 million.

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'Crazy' Marjorie Taylor Greene buried by Dem lawmaker over new threat: 'I need her to be voted out!'

Reacting to threats made by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) two days ago that she will hold the economy hostage unless, among other things, special counsel Jack Smith's investigation of Donald Trump is defunded, Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) had more than a few words to say about her House colleague.

Among them was calling the Georgia Republican "crazy."

Appearing on MSNBC with host Alex Witt, Crockett went off on an extensive and blunt-talking rant about the far-right extremist Republicans who are dictating policy to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and then she ended with a brutal jab at the former president.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

Getting right to the point, the Texas Democrat told host Witt, "You know, I need people to understand that there is no point in voting any of these crazy people in."

" I mean, you are talking about somebody that has a personal vendetta that she is trying to settle," she continued. "Right now, all she wants to do is be Trump's tool, okay? Being Trump's tool, Trump's literally, making sure that our economy stays on track, making sure that her constituents have access to the services that they need, making sure that our servicemen and women are able to protect us without worrying about whether or not they're going to receive a check."

Taking a breath, she added, "This is someone that claims that she wants to put America first, yet seemingly, we are always putting America last when it comes to her rhetoric and when it comes to her policies."

"Listen, Marjorie Taylor Greene is not qualified to sit in Congress and I need her to be voted out," she exclaimed. "And this isn't being said just because she is in the opposite party from me. This is being said because she continues to present a national threat to us just like Trump did. I know that people want to ignore all of the charges that are pending against him. but it is quite serious that our national secrets were literally in the same place that he uses to go and do number two."

Watch below or at the link.

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The Proud Boy jury knew 'who is actually accountable' and that should worry Trump: former prosecutor

Reflecting on the harsh sentences handed down to convicted Proud Boys this past week for their part in the Jan. 6 insurrection, a former U.S. attorney suggested their fate and how quickly a D.C. jury found them guilty should alarm Donald Trump.

Speaking with host Ayman Mohyeldin, former prosecutor Cynthia Alksne cited the Proud Boy cases as a good reason why the former president has been fighting to get his Jan 6 trial overseen by Judge Tanya Chutkan moved.

Speaking with the host, she explained that the juries who have been hearing cases related to the Capitol riot are locals who saw firsthand how it disrupted their lives and that is likely coloring their views of the defendants.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

And that is bad news for Donald Trump.

"Cynthia, we have about a minute left," the MSNBC host prompted. "Legally speaking, do these convictions bode badly for Donald Trump, as he faces the charges or his allegations in [special counsel] Jack Smith's January 6 investigation?"

"Yes, they do," she replied. "Because these are jurors in D.C. These are people who have experienced the Capitol riot, these are people who are locked down, these are people who know these police officers who were beaten severely. They've seen that on their local television stations in addition to the national television stations. They counted on these people to protect them over the years and this is what's happened."

"And this is the jury pool going into this knows who is actually accountable," she added. "And that's why Donald Trump doesn't want to go to trial in D.C., because he knows this jury pool is affected and it's a problem for them because of this local jury is the jury that experienced the riot with these police officers."

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Why Mark Meadows made a 'very risky' move in testifying: ex-prosecutor

Donald Trump's former chief of staff Mark Meadows made a "very, very risky" move to make comments under oath before trial, according to an attorney and former prosecutor.

Christopher M. Mattei appeared on MSNBC's American Voices with Alicia Menendez on Saturday, and was asked why Meadows would risk taking the stand for four hours for a procedural hearing.

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Legal expert throws cold water on plan to bar Trump from running for office

Some legal experts have pushed the idea that former President Donald Trump is facially ineligible to even run for president again at all, due to his support for the rioters who stormed the Capitol on January 6 — seemingly contradicting the 14th Amendment's prohibition on those who "engaged in insurrection" from holding federal office. Two of the most prominent advocates of this theory are retired Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe, and conservative former federal Judge Michael Luttig.

But unfortunately, that is probably not going to hold water, argued legal analyst Charles Coleman on MSNBC Friday.

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'Their is no system of justice': Trump lashes out at Judge Chutkan, Fani Willis, Letitia James in wild series of rants

Donald Trump posted a lengthy series of angry rants Thursday afternoon all the way in to Friday morning, attacking U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, New York Attorney General Letitia James, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, Special Prosecutor Jack Smith and a top DOJ official, despite having been warned by Chutkan and having signed a pledge to not "intimidate or attempt to intimidate" an "officer of the court.”

As a condition of his release in Special Counsel Jack Smith's federal prosecution of the ex-president on charges related to his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election, Trump signed a document called an “Advice of Penalties and Sanctions.” It makes clear Trump could be jailed if he violates the order.

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'Mark Meadows has a potential perjury problem': Legal experts outline possible new charges

Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, already under indictment in Georgia’s sprawling election conspiracy case, may have created new legal headaches for himself, a legal expert said Thursday.

NYU law professor Ryan Goodman said in a social media post that he believes Meadows may have perjured himself during testimony at a hearing Monday in which he sought to have his case moved to federal court. Meadows argued that his role as a federal official shields him from state charges.

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Special counsels are intended to be independent − but they aren’t entirely

By Joshua Holzer

On June 20, 2023, Hunter Biden, the second son of President Joe Biden, entered into a plea agreement with prosecutors related to tax-related charges and the illegal possession of a firearm.

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Jack Smith may have found another Mar-a-Lago witness to flip against Trump: experts

Special counsel Jack Smith may have discovered how to make alleged co-conspirators in Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago documents case flip on the former president, according to legal experts on Wednesday.

Former prosecutor Glenn Kirschner appeared on MSNBC's The Last Word With Lawrence O'Donnell, where he and national security attorney Bradley Moss were asked about requests filed by Smith regarding potential conflicts with attorneys representing the co-defendants in that case.

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MSNBC host questions why Roger Stone hasn't been charged despite role in 2020 plot

The day before the Jan. 6 attack, Donald Trump was telling Mark Meadows to get Roger Stone and Gen. Michael Flynn on the phone ASAP. Speaking about Stone's role in the 2020 election overthrow, MSNBC's Ari Melber said that it seems every road leads back to the so-called "dirty trickster."

Melber showed several clips of the recently revealed Stone documentary, "A Storm Foretold," and put everything together with other testimony, a number of documents in special counsel Jack Smith's case, and testimony from witnesses. Melber explained that it seems to paint a picture of Stone's involvement in the conspiracy.

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Trump's allies are 'splintering' as they seek to 'save their own skin': analyst

Former President Donald Trump's co-defendants in the Georgia election racketeering case appear to be "splintering" off into their own legal strategies as they hire different counsel and develop their own plans to try to beat the charges, said New York Times reporter Glenn Thrush on MSNBC Wednesday.

Alongside Trump, eighteen other people were indicted in the scheme, including former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, former DOJ official Jeffrey Clark, lawyers Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Sidney Powell, and Kenneth Chesebro, and a number of Georgia Republican officials including former state party chair David Shafer. Various defendants have either requested expedited trials or motioned for their trials to be removed to other jurisdictions.

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Trump could have saved allies after 2020 shenanigans — and 'no one' knows why he didn't

Prior to leaving office, Donald Trump's allies were asking for pardons for things they did on or around the 2020 election, but he never jumped in to help before leaving office on Jan. 20, 2021.

Now that lawyers Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, and other campaign aides and White House advisers are facing legal jeopardy, the question is coming up again. In fact, a number of Republican lawmakers asked for preemptive pardons, and it has never been explained why.

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