AG Garland appoints special counsel

DIY-HP-LED

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Prof. Tribe: Pence’s argument a ‘pathetic political ploy’

48,892 views Feb 15, 2023 #msnbc #mikepence #trump
MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell speaks to Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe about new reporting that former Vice President Mike Pence is expected cite the Constitution's speech and debate clause as a reason to get out of answering questions from a Washington, D.C. grand jury, an excuse Professor Tribe says is designed to curry political favor with Trump’s base.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Is Jack gonna indict Trump or make him go nuts first? :lol: He still seems to be lining up witnesses for the documents case and is full steam ahead on J6. There is a reason Garland gave Jack those two separate cases, the documents and J6, and he will use the documents case to leverage on theJ6 case. Once the kingpin goes down before there are indictments over J6, it will loosen some tongues and they won't need to give deals for Donald over J6, if he is convicted of the documents and obstruction of justice.


Lawrence: Trump special counsel suspects criminal conduct by Trump's lawyer

128,042 views Feb 15, 2023 #msnbc #trump #maralago
MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell analyzes new reporting from NBC News and other outlets that federal prosecutors investigating the Mar-a-Lago documents scandal are invoking the crime-fraud exception to get around attorney-client privilege and compel one of former President Donald Trump’s attorneys to answer questions from a Washington, D.C. grand jury.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

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The clearest sign yet that Special Counsel Jack Smith has evidence of a crime

65,979 views Feb 15, 2023 #Trump #SpecialCounsel #DOJ
Washington Post national investigative reporter Carol Leonnig, former U.S. attorney Harry Litman, and former FBI Assistant Director for Counterintelligence Frank Figliuzzi react to the aggressive new legal strategy by special counsel Jack Smith to get answers to questions around obstruction of justice
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Looks like Mark meadows didn't rat, yet. The heat is definitely on, and Donald should be freaking out!


Lawrence: Mike Pence will be forced to testify

10,229 views Feb 15, 2023 #msnbc #mikepence #january6
After former Vice President Mike Pence confirmed today that he will be fighting a subpoena from Special Counsel Jack Smith, MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell explains why Pence’s argument for why he should testify will not work and why Pence’s efforts to curry favor with Trump’s supporters will ultimately prove futile.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Rep. Schiff: Mark Meadows could shed light on Trump's state of mind for DOJ

3,577 views Feb 16, 2023 #msnbc #markmeadows #trump
The special counsel subpoenaed Mark Meadows in the investigation into Trump’s role in the January 6th attack on the Capitol. Rep. Adam Schiff tells MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell that Meadows is in a “paramount position” to testify about Trump’s state of mind as prosecutors determine which potential charges to bring against Trump in an investigation that’s “probably nearing its conclusion.”
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Joe: Now Pence is claiming privilege that he can't tell the truth about Jan. 6?

21,325 views Feb 16, 2023 #MikePence #DonaldTrump #Republicans
Former Vice President Mike Pence said Wednesday that he plans to fight a subpoena from the special counsel investigating Donald Trump's actions surrounding the Jan. 6 rot, calling the demand for his cooperation "unprecedented and unconstitutional."
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Special counsel is locked in at least 8 secret court battles in Trump investigations

Special counsel Jack Smith is locked in at least eight secret court battles that aim to unearth some of the most closely held details about Donald Trump’s actions after the 2020 election and handling of classified material, according to sources and court records reviewed by CNN.

The outcome of these disputes could have far-reaching implications, as they revolve around a 2024 presidential candidate and could lead courts to shape the law around the presidency, separation of powers and attorney-client confidentiality in ways they’ve never done before.

Yet almost all of the proceedings are sealed, and filings and decisions aren’t public.

The sheer number of grand jury challenges from potential witnesses is both a reflection of the scope of the special counsel’s investigation and a hallmark of Trump’s ultra-combative style in the face of investigations.

By comparison, Robert Mueller’s grand jury investigation into Trump had a smattering of sealed proceedings where investigators used the court to pry for more answers, and independent counsel Kenneth Starr’s Whitewater investigation ultimately totaled seven similar sealed cases.

A key sealed case revealed Wednesday is an attempt to force more answers about direct conversations between Trump and his defense attorney Evan Corcoran, where the Justice Department is arguing the investigation found evidence the conversations may be part of furthering or covering up a crime related to the Mar-a-Lago document boxes.

A spokesman for Smith’s office declined to comment.

About half a dozen cases are still ongoing in court, either before Chief Judge Beryl Howell or in the appeals court above her, the DC Circuit. Most appear to follow the typical arc of miscellaneous cases that arise during grand jury investigations, where prosecutors sometimes use the court to enforce their subpoenas.

More challenges from subpoenaed witnesses – including former Vice President Mike Pence – are expected to be filed in the coming days, likely under seal as well. Pence may raise novel questions about the protections around the vice presidency.

Investigations that implicate government officials often beget sealed court proceedings, because confidential grand jury witnesses become more likely to assert privileges that prompt prosecutors to ask judges to compel more answers, criminal law experts say.

“I think we are in extraordinary times. Part of it is I think President Trump continues to assert these theories long after they’ve been batted away by the court,” Neil Eggleston, a former White House counsel who argued for executive privilege during the Clinton administration and the Whitewater investigation.

In Whitewater, after the court in DC ruled that privilege claims wouldn’t hold up when a federal grand jury needed information, other witnesses shied away from trying to refuse to testify, Eggleston recalled. But in the Trump investigations, witnesses aligned continue to test whether he still may have special confidentiality protections.

Still, the number of cases is out of the ordinary.

...
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Mark Meadows' Behavior Typical of Cooperating Witness: Ex-U.S. Attorney


ormer U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance believes that Mark Meadows, the ex-White House chief of staff, is behaving in a way consistent with cooperating witnesses.

Meadows previously represented North Carolina's 11th Congressional District from 2013 to 2020, chairing the far-right Freedom Caucus in his later years. Considered a close ally to former President Donald Trump, he was brought in to serve as his chief of staff in March 2020 replacing acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, who took over following the departure of John Kelly from the role.

During his time in the role, Meadows was accused of participating in Trump's attempts to overturn or circumvent his loss to Joe Biden in the 2020 election. He was previously ordered to testify before a grand jury investigating Trump and his allies' attempts to allegedly commit election fraud in Georgia, and was most recently subpoenaed by Jack Smith, the Department of Justice's (DOJ) special counsel handling various investigations into the former president.

During an appearance on MSNBC's The Katie Phang Show on Saturday morning, Vance, an outspoken critic of Trump, said that Meadows' recent behavior indicates that he might be cooperating with the DOJ. Host Katie Phang expressed such suspicions due to the fact that "he's been so darn quiet." Vance also highlighted the fact that Meadows' past behavior related to other Trump investigations might indicate that his cooperation is not a certainty.


"Meadows has been very quiet and that's something I typically associate with a witness who has decided to cooperate, when they go dark," Vance said. "But it's important to remember that Meadows cooperate with the January 6 [House select] committee, until suddenly he didn't."

Vance continued: "That said, he gave them a large volume of information, some of it's highly incriminating, and it may be that federal prosecutors have now confronted him with the incriminating parts and convinced him that his future lies in cooperation. I think it's very difficult to read the tea leaves about Mark Meadows given his past history."

Vance previously served as a U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama from 2009 to 2017, and was notably among the first U.S. attorneys nominated by former President Barack Obama. She departed the position on January 20, 2017, the same day that Trump was sworn in as president. Since then, she has become a prominent legal analyst for MSNBC, often weighing in on the legal woes facing the former president and his associates.

CNN first broke the story that Smith had subpoenaed Meadows on Wednesday. The order to cooperate reportedly went out sometime in January and called for the former chief of staff to provide relevant testimony and documents pertaining to the DOJ's Capitol riot investigation.

Newsweek reached out to Meadows for comment.
 

topcat

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Joe: Now Pence is claiming privilege that he can't tell the truth about Jan. 6?

21,325 views Feb 16, 2023 #MikePence #DonaldTrump #Republicans
Former Vice President Mike Pence said Wednesday that he plans to fight a subpoena from the special counsel investigating Donald Trump's actions surrounding the Jan. 6 rot, calling the demand for his cooperation "unprecedented and unconstitutional."
Oh, you'll talk, Mike. Bring your fly, we wanna talk to it, too. It knows things.

Pense friend.jpg
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Once Trump is indicted, he will throw EVERYONE on whom he has compromising information under the bus

5,229 views Feb 20, 2023 #TeamJustice
Given the release of the (redacted) Georgia grand jury report, it seems clear that an indictment of Donald Trump is coming. Once he's indicted, he almost certainly will acts as most narcissists do when they are facing the very real prospect of trial, conviction and imprisonment - he will throw every single person on whom he has dirt or about whom he has compromising information under the bus. Narcissist, believing they're always the smartest and most important people in the room, will generally sacrifice everyone else to save themselves.

This could spell real trouble for people like Roger Stone, Mike Flynn, Steve Bannon, Rudy Giuliani, Kevin McCarthy, Lindsey Graham, Mark Meadows and others.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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The DOJ Is Coming for Donald Trump Quicker Than Ever

Just as it seemed like the Department of Justice couldn’t get out of its own way and make any progress on its investigation of former President Donald Trump, in walks special counsel Jack Smith.

On this week’s episode of The New Abnormal, MSNBC legal analyst and host of Justice Matters Glenn Kirschner joins host Danielle Moodie, who says that since Smith’s appointment in November to oversee the criminal investigations into Trump’s Mar-a-Lago documents drama and parts of the attempted Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, “he’s been going a hundred miles an hour.”

“I don’t think you can reasonably argue that Jack Smith has been dragging his heels,” Kirschner says.

To boot, Smith is currently dealing with eight secret court battles concerning the ex-president—just as he begins his campaign for a 2024 presidential run.

“He’s fighting eight grand jury battles right now as we speak, trying to obtain incriminating evidence against Donald Trump. I don’t think anybody can say he is not moving quickly. So that gives me some hope that we could see indictments in, let’s just say, the coming months.”

 
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