Jack - Bad Facts
Episode Date: October 12, 2025Trump’s hand picked US Attorney Lindsay Halligan has secured an indictment of New York Attorney General Leticia James on two felony counts of fraud.Jim Comey has pled not guilty to both counts durin...g his arraignment and indicated he’d be filing multiple motions to dismiss, including a challenge to Lindsay Halligan's appointment as US Attorney.Republican Senators have denounced Jack Smith over phone records he subpoenaed during his investigation of the January 6th, 2021 attack on the Capitol.The Department of Justice continues its losing streak, failing to secure indictments of protestors they claim assaulted federal law enforcement officers.Plus listener questions…Do you have questions for the pod? Do you have questions for the pod? Follow AG Substack|MuellershewroteBlueSky|@muellershewroteAndrew McCabe isn’t on social media, but you can buy his book The ThreatThe Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and TrumpWe would like to know more about our listeners. Please participate in this brief surveyListener Survey and CommentsThis Show is Available Ad-Free And Early For Patreon and Supercast Supporters at the Justice Enforcers level and above:https://dailybeans.supercast.techOrhttps://patreon.com/thedailybeansOr when you subscribe on Apple Podcastshttps://apple.co/3YNpW3P Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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M.S.W. Media.
Trump's hand-picked U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan has secured an indictment of New York Attorney General Letitia James on two felony counts of fraud.
Jim Comey has pled not guilty to both counts during his arraignment and indicated he'd be filing multiple motions to dismiss, including a challenge to Lindsay Halligan's appointment as U.S. attorney.
Republican senators have denounced.
He announced Jack Smith over phone records he subpoenaed during his investigation of the January 6th, 2021 attack on the Capitol.
And the Department of Justice continues its losing streak, failing to secure indictments of protesters they claim assaulted federal law enforcement officers.
This is unjustified.
Hey, everybody. Welcome to episode 38 of Unjustified. It's Sunday, October.
October 12th, 2025. I'm Allison Gill. And I am Andy McCabe. And man, from one perspective,
Allison, that number 38 seems really big. But from another perspective, it also seems like we've been
doing this for a long time. Because so much has happened. Week after week, it's just like
the challenge, I guess, is to pick the most relevant stories because there's plenty of them out there.
Yeah, as I like to say, it was a long decade this morning.
Yeah.
following 20 different court cases.
But we did get confirmation this week from ABC News that you are not person three.
It is Daniel Richmond.
We were correct in our assumptions.
You can't see me because this is a podcast, but I'm putting my hands in the air like I just don't care.
Okay.
I'm doing a little bit of a little touchdown dance here because, yeah, that's what I said.
But, okay.
I see the news coverage every day of, you know,
rando articles that mention me and, like, people are still out there pushing it.
Everyone, you know, it's believed that person three is Andrew McCabe.
Like, dude, you need to listen to more news.
It's not me.
Yeah, and now it's not just us putting that out there.
It's, I mean, not that, you know, you being the source is probably the most relevant source of information
on who person three is.
You would think.
But it's been now confirmed
by multiple sources
to ABC News.
And, you know,
we're going to get into
the arraignment hearing
in a little bit.
But Fitzgerald,
who's representing Jim Comey,
said to the judge
what you and I
both said when we read
these indictments,
whose person one,
whose person three,
what is even the charge?
We don't even understand
what's going on.
These are not clearly
stated charges.
I know Trump filed
multiple motions to dismiss the cases against him brought by Jack Smith saying they failed to
cite a charge, a clear charge. And that's really what's happening here. And we're going to get a little
bit into the weeds on that in a minute. But, Andy, the top story this week is that the weaponization
of the Justice Department continues with the indictment of New York Attorney General Tish James.
Once again, Lindsay Halligan was all by her lonesome in the grand jury room.
presumably because no one else in the Eastern District of Virginia was willing to do it.
Same with the Comey indictment.
In fact, they had to go all the way to North Carolina to find somebody to sign on to that case.
So pathetic.
So pathetic.
Nobody in the Eastern District of Virginia would touch it.
So she's the loan signatory on this two-count indictment of Tish James as well,
just as she is the loan signatory on the indictment of Jim Comey.
So let's go over the indictment because we were all essentially.
assuming that this would be about the mortgage that she secured for her niece, right? But it is not.
That's right. This is actually for a home she purchased in Virginia in 2020. And the government
contends she listed it as a second home as opposed to an investment property. So when she
secured her funding to purchase the home, the government contends she indicated it was going to be
a second home that she would live in, not just a straight up investment property.
So it's not even the difference between a primary residence and an investment property.
It's the difference between a second home and an investment property, which is a much smaller savings if one can be attributed to it.
That's exactly right.
So reading from the indictment, it says, honor about August 17, 2020, James as sole borrower, purchased the three-bedroom, one-bathroom property located on Peron Avenue, Norfolk.
Virginia for approximately $137,000, financed with a mortgage loan of approximately $109,600 backed by Fannie Mae.
The loan was originated by OVM Financial under a signed second home rider, which required James as the sole borrower to occupy and use the property as her secondary residence and prohibited its use as a time sharing or other share.
ownership arrangement or agreement that requires her to either rent the property or give
any other person any control over the occupancy or use of the property. Despite these
representations, the Perone property was not occupied or used by James as a secondary residence
and was instead used as a rental investment property renting the property to a family of three.
Okay. And now I just want to go on the record here and say that what you just read from Lindsay
Halligan is actually wrong.
Why am I not surprised?
Because I looked at Fannie Mae's website for what qualifies as a second home, and it says
it must be occupied by the borrower, in this case, Letitia James, for some portion of
the year, but it actually can be rented out as long as the rental income isn't used for
qualifying purposes, and that the owner occupies the home for, quote, some portion of the
year. It doesn't specify for how long, and it specifies it can't be.
run by a property management firm, which is not alleged in this indictment.
According to the indictment, calling this a second home netted her favorable loan terms not
available for investment properties, including a note rate of 3%, avoiding a 0.815% higher comparable
investment property rate of 3.815. So she got 3% instead of 3.815. And she also, Lindsay Halligan,
doesn't specify how she came up with that number.
she just said it's a comparable investment property rate and that resulted in about $17,000
in rate savings over the life of the loan and a seller credit of about $3,200 which exceeds the
seller credit for investment properties by about a thousand bucks and so the total ill-gotten gains
based on their calculations do we trust those is about 19 grand over the life of the loan and
And Andy, over the life of the loan is important here.
If this is a 30-year fixed loan, on a $109,000 loan, by the way, that's a savings of about
$47 bucks a month.
Now, keep in mind, Letitia James found that Donald Trump defrauded banks to the tune of
millions of dollars with his false representations to banks about the value of his properties
and the size of his properties.
Yeah.
So, and additionally, the indictment says, James filed.
Schedule E tax forms under penalties of perjury, treating the perone property as rental real estate,
reporting fair rental days, zero personal use days, thousands of dollars in rents received,
and claiming deductions for expenses relating to the property further contradicting the second home
classification. So that's a little bit confusing to read. But essentially they're saying
she made representations in her tax forms that also run a foul of using this home as a second home.
But she's not charged with tax fraud here.
She's not charged with that.
But this is their evidence.
They're just using those statements as evidence that she said one thing but did something different.
Yeah, the evidence that she never stayed at that property and just rented it out.
That's right.
So to be clear, there are two counts.
The first is bank fraud under Title 18 U.S.
1344 and false statements to a financial institution under Title 18 U.S.C. 1014.
It's also of note that nobody in New York filed criminal charges against Trump for violating those laws.
It was just a civil case.
That's right.
As with every criminal case, they will have to prove intent.
So the government is going to have to show that this was an intentional misrepresent.
representation for the 1014 charge and for the 1344 charge are going to have to show that
she intended to commit fraud, that she knew what she was doing was wrong and was willfully did
it anyway. What kind of proof would you need to show that she intended? Like maybe communications
with somebody saying, ha ha, I'm going to get one over on the bank here. Like what sort of intent
do you have, like how would you prove that this was not an error? Like maybe she didn't know
the difference between a second home and an investment property, or that she was purposefully trying
to save $47 a month?
Yeah.
So, and this is an interesting point because here, there's no, she was, she has not been charged
as a co-conspirator or in a conspiracy at all.
So there's no reference to any other people in this charge.
It's just her, okay?
So if it were a conspiracy to commit bank fraud, typically what you would have is communication
between the co-conspirators.
And those communications can be very illustrative when you're trying to prove intent.
Hey, you know, you tell the bank this and I'll tell them something else or whatever,
the elements of how they're carrying off the fraud.
Right.
Hey, family of three that I'm going to rent this property to.
I'm going to say that this is a second home.
Yeah.
Make sure to tell people I stay here two days a year.
Right.
And that that'll save you $47 a month on your rent to me or something like.
that. So it would have to be a statement from the defendant that's captured in writing or a text
message or something like that or maybe a statement from a witness who heard the defendant say
something or was told by the defendant to take some illegal or fraudulent action. There's no
indication that of any of that evidence here. Maybe they have it. Maybe they don't. But the
indictment doesn't say. Yeah. All they have is her tax filing where she says it's a second home and
she spent zero days there. Right. So if she did spend time there, then she could be on the hook
for lying to the IRS, but that's not charged here. It's not charged here. But you also have to,
like you said, show intent that she meant to save that 47 bucks a month by misrepresenting this
as a second home and not an investment property. So if she prepared these documents herself,
if she kind of didn't have professional help in purchasing, securing the funding and purchasing the house,
and those documents indicate different, you know, responses to these sorts of questions along the way.
It's going to be very hard to prove that that wasn't just a mistake, confusion.
That's significantly short of criminal intent.
If she did have somebody helping or prepare them, that could introduce another element, a variable into this.
equation, maybe the mistakes or the problems were attributable to the other person. So there's
this rapidly, it's very complicated when you're trying to show that Letitia James intentionally
pulled the wool over the eyes of the bank here. Right. And maybe it was just her and her loan officer
or her broker or her real estate agent saying, hey, are you ever going to stay in this house? And she's
like, I might at some point. I'm not sure. And so, all right, we'll put it as a second home. And, you know,
blah, blah, blah. And there may not have even been in exchange of, you'll save $47 a month. It might have
just been like, we want to kind of make sure we get this right as a second home investment
property. And maybe Tish James said, I may stay there myself at some point in the future. I'm not
quite sure. I mean, if she has those communications, it's going to be real hard to show that she
intentionally tried to defraud this bank out of $40 a month. It's also interesting that the tenant is not
identified. So if the tenant is in fact someone who's related to her or is just a good friend of
hers who she visits and spends time with, that could account for her thinking, well, I will
spend some time in the house. Right. So there's all kinds of room, wiggle room, I think,
here that the indictment seems kind of simplistic on its face, but they're going to have to
go pretty deep to try to prove intent, I think. Yeah. And she listed.
herself as an A-USA on this form.
I don't know if that's because maybe her authority
as a U.S. attorney is being challenged
or if it's just a mistake
because she made another mistake in the paperwork
saying that Tish James lives in Brooklyn, New Jersey,
which is not a thing
and would probably upset Brooklynites
pretty hard.
Yeah, that's fighting words of Brooklyn for sure.
I don't know.
Maybe Lindsay Hulligan just,
thought, you know what, I'm really not good enough to be the U.S. attorney. So I'm going to put myself
down as an assistant U.S. attorney for now until I get a little more seasoning under my wings
here. Now, she also didn't, she entered this as a summons, which is a voluntarily show up for
arraignment, which is at the end of October. No perp walk, right? They tried to do one for Comey
and fired the guy who refused to get together a bunch of beefy agents in full kit to carry out that
order. And it's been assigned to Judge Jamar Walker, who's a Biden appointee. So Trump's batten
or Halligan, I guess, is same thing, is batting oh and two for drawing judges that were appointed
by Trump, though. I don't think it's going to matter in these cases. Yeah. Let's see how far
she has to go to find somebody to actually handle the arraignment. I mean, North Carolina on the
Comey case. Maybe we're going all the way to Florida for this one.
Who knows? She'll just keep going south until she finds somebody.
That's right.
Something else interesting.
Jim Comey is going to be filing his challenge to the appointment of Lindsay Halligan.
He's challenging her authority as U.S. attorney.
And he's going to be doing that before Tish James is arraigned.
So we'll talk about Jim Comey's arraignment, but we do have to take a quick break.
So everybody stick around.
We'll be right back.
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limited time new customer offer for three months only, speeds may slow above 35 gigabytes on
unlimited plan, taxes and fees extras, cement mobile for details. So this is, I mean,
obviously just an extension of the weaponization of the Justice Department with the indictment
of Tish James. And it comes a week after,
Comey was indicted, and he was arraigned in the Eastern District of Virginia this week. No
perp walk, like I said, much to the chagrin of Donald Trump, probably. But we learned a few
things during that arraignment hearing before Judge Nachmanoff, also a Biden appointee in the Eastern
District of Virginia, which is also known, Andy, as the rocket docket.
It is. Yeah, they take it very seriously in EDVA.
Yeah, and they didn't disappoint on the speed with which they're taking this to trial in that district.
Yeah, they're very tight on keeping things moving and setting deadlines that they do not delay very often.
So we'll see how that plays out here.
So in his arraignment Comey pled not guilty to both counts during the hearing, Benjamin Wittes from Lawfare read the transcript of the arraignment and had three main takeaways that will go over now.
So the first, Ben says, the first is that there is a notice.
gap between prosecution and defense lawyers who showed up to yesterday's hearing in what we might
call pride of service. Pride of service. Only Ben. On the prosecution side, the U.S. Attorney's
Office for the Eastern District of Virginia could not find a single lawyer who had worked in the
office prior to late September to stand up in court and say, my name is X and I represent
the United States. Not one. The acting U.S. attorney, of course, had been
fired because he wouldn't bring the case and no career official from the office was at the
prosecution table either. Instead, there were two assistant United States attorneys from North Carolina
whose familiarity with the case was so limited that they stressed they were only just
starting to get their hands around it and its discovery. Hmm. Now, Wittis continues. On the other
side, by contrast, Comey's lead defense counsel introduced himself as follows. Your honor, Pat Fitzgerald,
and it's an honor of my life to represent Mr.
Comey in this matter. This is a bit of an inversion of the normal understanding of the roles of
criminal lawyers. Federal prosecutors typically feel a certain honor and pride in representing the United
States in court, believing that their cases represent attempts to do justice. Defense counsel,
by contrast, generally think of themselves as representing a check on the justice system's
coercive power in general. But they often don't take particular pride in their specific individual
representations as embodying justice, much less that representing a particular accused miscreant is the
honor of their lives. There are exceptions, of course, but I'm not sure I've ever seen a case in which
the prosecution was so evidently ashamed of its case and the defense so visibly proud to represent
someone accused of a crime. Fitzgerald is, of course, a smart lawyer, and he was, I assume,
making this point intentionally. But the point is also undoubtedly sincere. And it worked
rhetorically because it is so intuitively right. Fitzgerald is a famed federal prosecutor,
one who has prosecuted mobsters, politicians, and White House officials on behalf of the United
States, saying that the singular honor of his entire career is representing a defendant
against prosecution by the United States, even as the government is having trouble finding
lawyers to show up in court on its behalf. Now, Ben says the second point he wanted to
to bring is a related one and it concerns preparation. There's something embarrassing about the government
in indicting a case and then showing up in court completely unprepared to litigate it. Yet in a brief
hearing, the government did not merely put forward new lawyers from a different state who had clearly
been assigned to the matter only a day or two before. And these lawyers declared they had not yet
discern the scope of their discovery obligations, anticipated that there might be issues with respect
to classified materials, SEPA, but did not yet know the full scope of those issues.
and asked for time to sort things out
that are normally sorted out
before a case is ever brought.
Quote, we're just getting our hands
around this discovery as well.
That's what prosecutor Tyler Lemons said,
as though the prosecution hadn't had five years
to figure out what documents it might need to produce
if it brought the case.
And Andy, this is why the prosecutions of Donald Trump
took so long.
And when people were like,
why didn't they arrest Donald Trump
on January 7th, it's because you have to get your hands around the evidence of the case.
And in the January 6th case, in particular, we had an almost year-long protracted legal battle
fighting privilege claims by almost a dozen key witnesses.
We called him La Ocha Nostra when we covered this on the Jack Smith podcast because we only knew of
eight, but there were upwards of 12.
And so that took 10 months, I think, for Merrick Garland to win that.
and get past the privilege claims.
Then there was like a four-month delay getting Twitter
to hand over information on Donald Trump's Twitter account
that was considered discoverable evidence.
And then there was the January 6th committee,
which took three or four months,
to give over their work materials,
which weren't needed because the DOJ didn't do their job.
They were needed so they could compare testimony given in the January 6th committee.
With the statements, testimony, all that stuff.
Right, because if you're in consistent,
then your, your key witnesses are screwed and impeached on the stand if you have asked John
Durham about that.
I don't call him anymore, but I get your point.
It's about how that's why Sussman, because of Baker's inconsistent, not lying, but inconsistent
testimony to the Congress versus his testimony to a grand jury or whatever was inconsistent.
And so he was impeached on the stand as credible.
and the whole case was acquitted.
So that is what took so long.
And for these lawyers to indict first
and then get their hands around the evidence,
as Ben Witta says, is embarrassing.
And I love how he's like,
especially if you've been looking at this for five years.
Yeah, for sure.
And I mean, I almost feel bad for the North Carolina dudes
because clearly when they got to Virginia,
no one told them about the rocket docket.
You don't show up in a criminal courtroom
room in the Eastern District of Virginia and say, hey, Judge, we're just trying to, we're just
starting to get our hands around this big boy and give us a few more weeks.
We'll come back in and we'll know more next time.
That is exactly what the Rocket Dogget was created to eliminate.
You have to have your shit together when you walk in in front of a judge there.
Right.
It's like being online at Starbucks in New York.
Know your order before you get to the counter.
Exactly.
Or any decent deli in New York.
Like if you don't have that, you've got half a second.
to order your sandwich. If you don't get that sandwich order out like fast, they just move on
to someone else. So anyway, so the defense also acknowledged that it was unprepared, but for a very
different reason. Fitzgerald stated that he lacked the most basic information about what the
indictment alleges Comey is supposed to have done. Same Fitzgerald. Same. I feel you.
Exactly. I'm just glad we weren't wrong. We're really.
that indictment, we're like, I don't know, how do you defend against us? I'm not even sure what it is.
And clearly, Pat had the same response. Wittes says, the people about whom Comey is alleged to have lied to
Congress are still unnamed, he noted. We haven't received a single piece of paper of discovery
to date. We still haven't been told who person three and person one are. We don't know the nature
of the charges. I mean, it's stunning to hear a, a, a, a person three.
an accomplished experienced defense attorney have to walk into court and be like the most basic
aspects of what you've accused my client of doing are not even we're not even aware of what it is
like what what is this you know yeah it's crazy yeah and fitzgerald was able to sketch out a
speedy briefing schedule um in which the defense will file its motions to dismiss for selective
and vindictive prosecution big surprise and challenging the legality of the appointment of lindsay
Halligan, and they're going to do it in less than two weeks. That's what Fitzgerald is doing.
And then, while the government is responding to those, they're going to prepare a second tranche
of motions to file in November. Quote, we're a little less certain of precisely what motions these
will be, but there might be a Bronson literal truth defense motion. There may be a grand jury abuse
motion, outrageous government conduct motion, but those motions would be addressed to the indictment.
So, first of all, you know, we got the main four, but Roger Parloff pointed out on Twitter
and then over on Blue Sky that they actually squeezed in there a Bronston literal truth defense
motion. And that is a legal maneuver used in perjury cases, and it's based on the Supreme
Court's decision in Bronston v. United States. The defense argues that a witness's statement,
even if intended to mislead, cannot be prosecuted as perjury, if it's actually
technically are literally true on its face. The responsibility is on the questioner to ask
precise follow-up questions. In this case, maybe Ted Cruz, but again, we don't know because
they didn't put it in the indictment or uncover evasive answers. So what I think maybe he's
getting at is that what Comey actually said with his mouth in 2020 was, I stand by my previous
testimony. And that could be literally true on its face. It might be intended to mislead,
But under a Bronston perjury thing, it doesn't count as perjury.
Now, perjury is different from 1001 charges, but it could apply here.
And so I think that's why Pat was like, we're not sure yet, basically, because we don't know what the hell he's being charged with.
But, you know, we've got several motions here that we want to file.
Yeah, this is going to, it's hard for me to imagine that this, the current trial date, which is January, something I don't.
remember the day, will actually hold because they're going to get, this motion practice is going
to get really challenging. I think it'll go faster than it did, of course, in Judge Cannon's
courtroom. But there will be a lot of issues to get through. And, you know, we anticipate
the government might fall short on a few of them. They'll likely appeal all those losses, whatever
losses they get. So the judge even said during the arraignment hearing about CEPA and
possibly classified documents because I feel like the government wants to drag this out with a long
SEPA process because there's a supposedly classified material. But I'm pretty sure Chuck Grassley's
released it all with John Ratcliffe. So I'm not sure how that covers it. But again, we don't know
because none of it's in the indictment. But the judge said, this will then be the fastest.
He's like, don't mess with me. This will then be the fastest SEPA you've ever seen in your life.
Like he actually said that from the bench. I sent it to our friend Brian Greer,
SEPA or SEPA Specialist for the Jack podcast.
He's like, bingo.
Sipa guru gear.
So Ben then wraps it up by saying, my third observation is that the reason for both of the
first two points is the same and unsubtle.
Because the government is behaving shamefully and proceeding with a rushed criminal case
based on compound untruths.
It neither has put itself in a position to behave responsibly by having discovery ready
and the like, nor does it have access.
to attorneys of the sort who know the case that they have brought when it comes time to move
it forward in court.
Andy, I was thinking back to what the DOJ was arguing in Cannon's courtroom.
Like on the day one, they're like, we've produced 800,000 documents, and we gave him a skiff
and a laptop and an IT guy, and the videos of the obstruction and a partridge in a pear tree.
Like, they were on top and had everything, they had their, quote, hands around the evidence
before they set foot in a courtroom.
Yeah, and I think the point that Ben is making here is absolutely true.
It is that fundamental, shameful, blatantly political, untrustworthy position that the government has taken with this prosecution that's led to these other two problems.
One being they got no reasonable attorneys willing to represent it in court.
And two, they don't have any idea what they need or what they need.
what the case involves because they just slap this thing together literally in a couple of days
to beat the statute of limitations problem. So that original sin is going to be a problem for them
at every step of this prosecution. They'll have subpar attorneys working with bad facts.
And when you add those two things together, the government doesn't have a great future in this case,
I don't think. Yeah, no. And, and,
Comey asked for a speedy trial and asked for January 12th.
And the judge said, why not December?
And so they agreed on January 5th, because Comey wanted the 12th.
They agreed on the 5th.
So that's the trial date.
And as far as the other dates that were set in a minute order by the judge, Judge Nachmanoff,
the first round of motions, including the one challenging Lindsay Halligan's authority,
which I think
considering order of operations
you know how courts like
look at standing first
and then look at jurisdiction
and then standing
like they do that before they get into
bother getting into any of the merits or anything
I think they're going to look
at Lindsay Halligan's authority
at her appointment first
because if she's not appropriately
appointed and doesn't have authority
and is the only one who signed this
this indictment
It's good by Cincinnati.
Like, you can't, there's no coming back from that because the statute of limitations has expired.
So I think they'll solve that first.
But that motion and the motion of vindictive and selective is due October 20th, which is, gosh, eight days from now.
And the court will hold a hearing on those motions on November 19th.
And any additional pretrial motions, the ones for like the Bronston thing and the possible abuse of a grand
jury process, which again, you and I were asking, like, what evidence did she possibly present to
the grand jury? And you said that there was a way that the judge could look at that evidence and
decide whether there was probable cause to return an indictment. And I think that has to do with
the abuse of the grand jury process. And of course, outrageous misconduct by the government.
That all is due October 30th. And the court is going to hold hearings on those motions on December 9th.
So rocket, docket, it is.
This is going extremely fast.
Totally.
Let's get it on.
I mean, I'm sure, you know, the defense is a little bit between a rock and a hard place here
because on the one hand, they want to get this thing over with, right?
They want speedy trial, let's go, let's go.
But on the other hand, they have all these motions to file.
So they have to give themselves at least a little bit of leeway to get solid motions downrange,
which I'm sure they will.
And then we'll see.
As you said, there's a lot.
of motions coming up that could derail the entire thing, you know, just right off the tracks
at step one. So that'll be really interesting to see. Yeah, which would make me sad because
I'm interested to know what the abuse of the grand jury process was. And if this case goes away
before we get there, we may never know. Can we ask them to stretch it out a little bit just for
the podcasters of the world? It gives us something to talk about every week.
Yeah, although grand jury process is secretive, and I'm assuming a lot of that would be under seal.
behind closed doors if we even get to it.
And so the SEPA thing where the judge was like,
it'll be the fastest SEPA in the West or the East,
again, might not even get to that point.
Yeah.
If they determine that Halligan isn't qualified,
doesn't have the authority,
and can't go back and get another indictment
because the statute of limitations has passed.
Typically, and this is why it'll be different if she is disqualified
in a motion like that,
in this case, yeah, that'll happen before Tish James goes forward, but it wouldn't have the same
overall effect, right? Because the problem here is that the error can't be fixed because the
statute of limitations is passed. It's probably not the same in the Tish James case.
But it will be another problem for them. No, right, but they would have to find someone else to
sign on to the Tish James indictment besides Lindsay Halligan herself. Or maybe
re-present it to a great jury.
Represent it.
And maybe in another district that actually has a functioning United States attorney.
But who knows?
We'll see.
We'll cross that one when we get to it.
Yeah, we'll definitely keep an eye on it.
And all of this just ridiculous.
I mean, more broadly speaking, we're in the weeds right now talking about these two indictments.
But broadly speaking, this is a massive, massive violation of longstanding Department of Justice policy.
of not weaponizing the government against your political foes.
So here we are.
Yeah.
And it is the obvious marshalling and manipulation of the government's power to affect political revenge on perceived enemies.
That is exactly what we're not supposed to be doing in this country.
It's exactly.
Ironically, it's what the Republicans complained about all through the Biden administration,
despite the fact that it was the same Biden administration.
went after Hunter Biden. But nevertheless, here we are. This is this is a hundred steps beyond that.
Yeah, agreed. All right, we have some Jack Smith news. We're not going to change the name of the podcast back to Jack,
but he is back up in the news again. We'll talk about that after this break. Stick around. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. Jack Smith is back in the news. Last week, it was because there was a filing with the 11th Circuit to release volume two of Jack Smith's report on the investigations into Donald Trump. Well, this week, it's because our friend Chuck Grassley released information showing that Jack Smith had subpoenaed the phone records of Republican members of Congress.
Now, just before you get into this New York Times report, I just want to remind everyone that,
we this was public information a long time ago we talked about it quite a bit on the jack
podcast anyway please continue yeah and there's all kinds of um i think very reasonable explanations
as to why you would do this in an investigation but we'll get to that in a minute so first the new
york times reports at a senate judiciary committee hearing on tuesday republican lawmakers
repeatedly denounced jack smith the former special counsel and the bidened ministry
for taking the phone records of more than a half-dozen GOP senators
to determine whom they had spoken to just before and after the January 6, 2021 riot at the Capitol.
The attacks formed a core part of Republicans' response to Democrats on the panel
that grilled Attorney General Pam Bondi over Trump's increasing pressure on the Justice Department
to prosecute his political enemies. This was their defense.
Republicans used the phone records to argue,
instead, that the Biden administration had politicized the department, though much remains unknown
about the record's role in the investigation, and there has been no evidence that the Biden White
House actually influenced the inquiry. He didn't put out a bunch of tweets on his own
on his own social media platform telling people to go after these Republicans. Republicans press
Pam Bondi to investigate and punish anyone associated with this investigative step, such as
FBI agents who examined the phone data of nine Republican lawmakers to determine who they called, who called them, and when the calls were made.
The analysis of phone toll records is a common investigative tactic, though there are occasional policy and political debates about when and how such data should be taken.
Such toll record information does not include the contents of conversation, which would require a court-approved wiretap.
On Monday, Republicans revealed an internal FBI document showing that the toll records were collected in September 2023, shortly after Mr. Smith indicted Mr. Trump for conspiracy and other crimes related to January 6th.
Oh, sorry to interrupt you, but it was after they indicted Trump.
And so remember how he said they didn't indict everybody else?
But you said there might be mop-up cases.
So it looks like he was looking into tying up those threads and loose ends after the indictment.
Donald Trump? Yeah, that's certainly possible. But it also could have been simply trying to
identify witnesses. It could have been an effort to understand, like, who else might have been talking
to our defendant at the time of this alleged conspiracy and what sort of interactions did they
have? Did those conversations reveal things about the defendant's intent, for instance? So there's all
kinds of reasons why you would want to do this. So Times goes on. The calls are scrutinized because at
the time, prosecutors are trying to identify relevant communications between the president and his
inner circle with members of Congress on the key days surrounding the violence, according to a person
familiar with the investigation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the decision-making
process.
Ah, identify relevant communications. Okay. Exactly. Now the committee's chairman, Chuck Grassley,
called the move spying, politically motivated spying,
and says there was no factual predicate
to justify examining the lawmakers' phone records
around the time of the riot by supporters of Trump.
Yes, there was factual predicate.
Yeah, it was called the January 6th riot.
That was the factual predicate.
What?
It's on TV.
You could see it.
There's lots of it.
One of the senators whose phone records
were taken with the grand jury subpoena,
Now, Lindsey Graham erupted at the hearing over the issue.
And he's done this before, like when in the Russia investigation, they were looking to see who he was talking to on the phone.
And he was very upset about that as well.
And Lindsay said, can you tell me why my phone records taken at the time when he was the chairman of the committee were sought by Jack Smith's agents?
That's what Lindsay asked.
Why did they ask how, asked to know who I called and what I was doing from January 4th to the 7th?
It's to make sure you weren't in the crime, my friend.
Yeah, just to figure out, like, did you talk to Trump a lot that day?
Because if so, maybe we should go interview you and see what you have to say about those conversations.
Like, maybe you could tell us good things about what Trump was thinking.
I mean, there's a whole range of possibilities here.
Or maybe they thought some of these members were co-conspirators and should be looked at for charge.
I mean, who knows?
There were a lot of questions about whether some senators were trying to do.
delay the certification of the election.
That's right.
Yeah.
To push it past midnight or somehow throw it back to the house.
I mean, there was a lot going on.
So, you know, were you indicted?
No, then be quiet.
Exactly.
Unless you're really worried about what's in your phone records.
I'm just saying.
I'm just throwing it out there.
Another Republican lawmaker whose phone records were examined over that four-day period
was Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, who falsely claimed that the FBI
documents showed agents had engaged in wiretapping, quote, the FBI tapped my phone, Mr.
Hawley said angrily. I don't know why I thought that would sound like Josh Hawley if I did that,
but I just kind of think it did. Mr. Grassley and other lawmakers have hedged when asked if they
plan to call Mr. Smith as a witness to discuss his investigation, saying, I bet they're
bad idea.
Not doing that. Saying they plan to let the FBI director Cash Patel conduct his own inquiry.
that'll go great at the hearing mrs bondie and miss bondie said she cannot discuss whether there is an ongoing investigation into the matter oh this transparency can't discuss it full on so josh holly let's stop there just for a second josh holly who was captured in that now immortal photograph giving uh all the rioters the fight the power sign with his raised fist in the air and then
scampering across the Capitol to the safety of security officers or whatever.
This is just blatant lying.
He knows that the document that he's referring to, the document that Grassley brought into
this whole conversation does not show that the FBI collected anybody's contents of
conversation, didn't tap anybody's wires, didn't have any sort of active electronic surveillance.
This is simply a request to a phone company or service provider for retrospective business records, you know, your call records.
It also, by the way, has to, you have to have a subpoena to get it.
So it's actually done through the Justice Department with the under the purview of a sitting grand jury.
So it's not unlawful?
The people asked for these phone records.
Essentially, yes, the grand jury asked for the phone records. That's right. So, yeah, it's not unlawful. It's not improper. It's not even a violation of policy. The policy in DOJ gives special consideration to very sensitive subjects that you want to maybe get phone records from. So if you want to get the phone records of a reporter, it's almost, well, it was.
I don't know what the rule is now, but it was almost impossible because DOJ had set of policies that protected reporters' phone records from investigators in an effort to avoid stepping on their First Amendment responsibilities.
Same would be true if you're trying to get phone records of a sitting member of Congress because they have speech and debate clause privileges and so requires a little bit of extra analysis and oversight.
So I can tell you, without question, this was not just the, hey, let's do this because it seems cool of two FBI agents.
These are FBI agents who simply evaluated this stuff when I got back.
This went through the highest levels of either the special counsel's office or DOJ, depending on how that was working out at the time.
So, yeah, and Holly knows that this was not a wiretap.
But yet he says it from the bench, which is horrific.
And the reason grand jury stuff is secret and kept under seal is because you might have gotten wrapped up.
It's so we don't tell the world that we were looking at Josh Hawley's phone records because we don't want to embarrass him.
But here they are telling the whole world themselves, which makes me wonder if they're waiving privilege.
But we'll get to that in a second.
But, you know, here we, the reason that you keep that a secret is because there are a lot of phone records that are often subpoenaed without the person.
who owns the phone, knowing that those records have been subpoenaed.
And if nothing comes of that person and their phone records, that is under seal so that that
non-charged person doesn't get publicly humiliated by having their phone records subpoenaed.
And, you know, you can even take it a little bit of a step further.
If they are involved, then Jack Smith would have reached out to them to say, we need to interview you.
a subpoena
come before
the grand jury
or we'll do
an interview
at the FBI
or whatever
there'll be
302s
and somebody
Lindsey Graham
Josh Holly
they would
have made a
big old
noise about it
like Scott Perry
did
the House
member
who filed
speech or
debate
arguments
against having
his phone
records
gotten
so you have
remedies
to not have
your phone
records
handed over
if you're
contacted
by the
investigative
and Scott Perry
I don't think
his phone
records were
ever handed over
because they lost that battle.
I think for him it was actually the analysis of his phone.
I think his phone got seized and he basically was able to block the analysis of that phone.
Most of it, right?
Most of it.
Yeah.
So in any case, yeah, this is not the kind of, oh, that weaponized criminal squad CR-15 at the Washington Field Office.
They just decided to go and start rousting, you know, members' phone records.
That is not what happened here.
But that's what Josh Hawley wants you to think happen.
That's why he uses this inflammatory, the FBI tap my phone line in a Senate hearing in front
of the world because he knows it's going to land on newspapers, headlines, and things like
that.
And so he just intentionally misrepresents it because his job is to undermine the FBI.
And since a Freedom of Information Act request of that information.
the call logs would normally be rejected for privacy purposes.
The fact that these senators have proudly said that their phone records were subpoenaed
might actually make these things subject to a Freedom of Information Act request.
Hmm, that's interesting.
Just want to throw that out there.
It's possible.
You never know.
News to come.
News to come.
Also, you mentioned CR-15.
This next story will do real quick here before we get to the D-block.
The FBI took personnel action against three special agents who worked in connection with Jack Smith's probe of Trump, firing two.
And that's according to three people familiar with the matter.
All three agents were previously named in documents released by Chuck Grassley called Arctic Frost, an FBI investigation that was the precursor to the Smith investigation.
That's interesting.
I want to know more about that, which resulted in two federal criminal cases against Donald Trump, one for his handling of classified documents and the other involving the 2020 election.
and, you know, attack on the Capitol on January 6th.
So when did Arctic Frost start?
That's interesting.
Started by Garland, I guess.
I have to say, I just, this is not correct.
Like, I think NBC has this wrong.
This is all part of, there are a lot of reporters out there now who are trying to, like,
piece together the puzzle pieces of all the leak cases, one of which was Arctic Frost,
in an effort to figure out who is person three and the Comey indictment, who is person one,
all that stuff.
And so there's some stray voltage and misfires in how these things are reported.
Arctic Frost was a leak case handled by the Washington Field Office.
As far as I know, I don't think it had anything to do with the Jack Smith investigation.
Not a precursor to the Jack Smith investigation?
No, the precursor to the Jack Smith investigation was the riot.
Why would these eight senators or nine senators, why would Jack Smith, why would Arctic Frost documents?
show jack smith subpoenaing them i think there's a conflation here i think the document that
petel handed over to grassley this week about the members phone records is not from arctic frost
arctic frost came in that 256 page release that the bureau sent to grassley um wasn't that arctic
haze maybe that was arctic hazed there were a couple of arctics there's a there's a there's a
There's a couple. Yeah, I don't know. I thought that sounded weird, but I don't know.
Yeah, and if it couldn't be a precursor, if it was gotten after the indictment of Donald Trump.
That's correct. So, I don't see, you know, we've seen a million cases of Gen 6 prosecutions.
I don't remember seeing Arctic frost on any of them. Right. Right. The precursor to the Trump case was the massive January 6 case.
So anyway, one of the fired FBI employees, a combat veteran who was months away from becoming eligible for retirement, was called back to the office after having left for the day and informed of the dismissal, a person familiar with the matter told NBC News.
The other dismissed agent was also called back to the office after having left for the day, the person said.
Patel said Tuesday night on Fox News that some agents involved in subpoenaing phone toll records of members,
of Congress had been fired, though he did not say how many.
Quote, you're darn right, I fired those agents.
You're darn right, I blew up CR-15, the public corruption squad, that led the weaponization
at the Washington field office, Patel said.
Now, Stacey Young, former Justice Department lawyer who founded Justice Connection, which
is a support network for current and former Justice Department employees, warned that the
firings could have a chilling effect at the Bureau, obviously, quote, this administration is
firing FBI agents who pushed back.
on direct orders from their superiors, while also firing agents who accepted assignments given to them
in a prior administration. Line agents can't do their job if they are in constant fear than any action
they take could result in their termination and they deserve better. NBC News first reported in
May that the CR-15 unit, the FBI Washington Field Office's federal corruption unit that was
deeply involved in the Smith case, was folded in the spring. But the agents were not fired until
Tuesday. Smith's report, which was issued in January, said Trump tried to reach two senators
by phone on January 6, 2021, and directed an unidentified co-conspirator to call members of Congress
to encourage them to further delay certification of his election loss. Those calls happened around
the time Trump tweeted a video telling rioters to go home and repeated his claim that the election
was stolen. Yeah. So there's obviously, you're like, what is the, what is the pretext for
opening that investigation. The riot at the capital. Pretty simple. Pretty obvious. So CR-15,
there was historically two public corruption squads in the Washington field office. CR-15 was the one
that handled public corruption having to do with federal targets. So that could be any federal
government agency or a member of Congress or employees of the government, what have you. And then the
second one did different things like corruption at the state level, corruption in the private sector,
things like that.
CR just means criminal because it indicates that it's a criminal squad and it's,
it was number 15.
Legendary squad filled with incredibly dedicated, very experienced people.
These cases are complicated.
They have all kinds of oversight requirements and technical requirements that other criminal
cases don't have because they're dealing with these sensitive targets.
politicians, maybe campaigns, things like that.
And people who do that stuff and are good at it, they spend their entire careers doing it.
They develop a real expertise.
Lots of other agents don't want to do this work because it's controversial and it's complicated
and it's not as much quote unquote fun, like, you know, chasing drug dealers and kicking
indoors and stuff like that.
It's a little more of a head game.
So the idea that you would come in and just destroy that unit and
cast all those people out either to other squads, maybe some punishment reassignments or
firing them outright, which they have done with several of these folks. It's a terrible thing to do.
It's vindictive and cruel to the people you're affecting. And it's bad for the country because
we no longer have these experts making sure that our government is run in a fair and lawful way
instead of, you know, rife with corruption.
Well, it's the criminal equivalent of kicking out all the inspectors general and hampering
that kind of oversight.
That's right.
That's right.
Because that's where all Trump's and the White House's crimes are going to take place
as in D.C.
And those would be looked at by CR15, which is, you know, of course you want to dismantle that.
Yep.
All right.
A couple of DOJ failures, again, we've been long following the loss of the presumption
of regularity.
and the U.S. attorneys failing to get indictments for alleged assaults against federal officers.
We're going to talk about a couple of those.
Plus, listener questions.
If you have a question, there's a link in the show notes.
You can click on to submit your question to us, and we're going to get to that after this break.
Stick around.
We'll be right back.
All right, everybody, welcome back.
Just a couple more stories about more failures of the justice.
Department before we get to listener questions. The first comes to us from the Chicago Sun
Times. Now, as you know, ICE operations have ramped up in Chicago, though judges have temporarily
blocked the deployment of the National Guard there and in Oregon, while they consider more
permanent injunctions. With a loud bang of his gavel Wednesday morning, a federal magistrate judge
agreed to dismiss charges against a Chicago couple found lawfully carrying loaded pistols last
month outside the U.S. ICE facility in Broadview. He did so after a grand jury on Tuesday
returned a no bill in the case of Ray Collins and Jocelyn Robledo. In doing so, the grand
jurors refused to indict in the high-profile case related to protests over the Trump
administration's Operation Midway Blitz. Now, it's highly unusual. It's a highly on the usual development
at the Dirksen federal courthouse, but one that's been watched closely as the Fed's aggressive
deportation campaign fills the court's docket. Top federal officials have touted cases like Collins
and Robledos while making the case that ICE agents are being threatened and that the National Guard
troops are needed to help protect them. Now, the dismissal of the charges against Collins and
Robledo, as well as a misdemeanor case that had been filed against Lucy Mazur, is sure to fuel
skepticism about this new wave of prosecutions. A spokesman for U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros declined
to comment. Richard Kling,
who has worked in Chicago courtrooms for decades and represents Collins,
said he'd never before seen a no bill in the federal courthouse.
He told reporters, quote,
I think the charges came from Washington.
Straight from Washington, Kling said,
from Attorney General Pam Bondi is my own speculation.
Yeah, and Kling also brought up the old adage Wednesday
about prosecutors and ham sandwiches.
While grand juries are meant to be a check on overzealous prosecutors,
they're viewed so cynically that it said a prosecutor
convinced a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich.
However, grand juries are now beginning to resist prosecution
brought by Trump's Justice Department,
most notably in D.C., now in Chicago,
Kling quipped that prosecutors apparently had less evidence
than a ham sandwich.
I bet you he's still telling that joke at home.
Yeah.
Okay.
Right? Am I right?
Am I right?
Then I said.
All right.
Collins and Rebletto are not completely out of the woods yet.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Harvey, or I'm sorry, Havy, sought dismissal of the complaint against
them only without prejudice, meaning prosecutors could still bring new charges against them
before the end of the month. A U.S. magistrate judge Gabriel Fuentes ordered the dismissal
of the complaint after peppering Havy with questions about Havy's obligations in the situation
and when a no bill had last been returned in the Northern District of Illinois.
Hey, he told the judge, I don't have any experience with this.
And he said a no bill has been known to happen periodically.
But in another case, okay, so we're switching now to Judge Zia Faruqi, who's a magistrate judge in D.C., Judge Faruqi pointed out,
the term unprecedented is casually bandied about.
But as Judge Sukhnanan identified, these recent weeks literally have been unprecedented.
To contextualize how unprecedented things have been, the undersigned had the clerk
office run the numbers. Specifically, the court pulled every motion to dismiss filed by the government
in cases charged by complaint for 10 years. The results speak for themselves. Of the over 4,000 cases
charged by complaint between 2014 and 24, the government moved to dismiss less than 20. In the last
eight weeks, the government has charged 95 cases, and in that time, the government has moved to dismiss
20. So 20 over 10 years and then 20 in eight weeks. Wow. Yeah. And in yet another case,
Judge Faruqi wrote, between the year 2005 and today, over 5,000 indictments were returned
in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Last week, the government
attempted for the first time ever to return an indictment from a D.C. Superior Court
grand jury after a federal grand jury previously refused to indict. This unprecedented workaround
to the normal federal grand jury process immediately raised serious questions about the legality
of the government's conduct. This is the case of Cavante Stewart that we discussed last
week. Judge Faruqi continued, the unprecedented number of recent federal grand jury rejections,
a trend that appears to be spreading, as most recently seen in Chicago, reflects that
federal grand juries want more than the government is offering. So there may be a nominal risk
that a D.C. Superior Court grand jury is a more receptive audience for charging federal offenses
than a federal grand jury. This litigation and the delay caused by it could have been avoided
if the government had simply gone to one of the other federal grand juries. That escape hatch
remains open today. At any time, the government can short circuit this dispute by taking their
federal charge before a federal grand jury. The question then is, why are they now afraid to?
So, wow. And finally, the case of Sidney Reed, we've been following. Sydney Reed is the one where
prosecutors failed three times at three grand juries to get an indictment. So they filed misdemeanor
charges instead. The federal public defender claims in a new filing on this misdemeanor charge
that the government actually failed to preserve an exculpatory video violating Brady rules taken by one
of the officers watching the alleged incident.
Reed can allegedly prove that the officers had the exculpatory video,
shared it with each other,
and then failed to preserve the video taken by one of the officers
who had actually posted it on Instagram, but now it's been destroyed.
So that's super bad news for the misdemeanor case that they,
because they couldn't get a felony in Sydney Reed's case,
if that all is true.
So just embarrassing mistake after embarrassing mistake by the Department of Justice,
And I know that my friends who are former U.S. attorneys are just like, you know, face-palming it.
Yeah, yeah.
It's embarrassing.
It is embarrassing.
You cannot do these things.
You have to be right.
You have to be accurate.
You have to be truthful all the time because as soon as you stop being that or you're perceived as having abandoned those values, the whole thing starts to fall apart.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, we will continue to cover the failures of the department.
Department of Justice here on Unjustified. And now we're going to get to a listener question.
I think maybe we have time for one. We had a lot to cover today. So if you have a question for
us, there's link in the show notes. You can click on and submit your questions to me and Andy.
And we'll read them on the air. And we love definitely going through these. They're really,
really thoughtful questions. Andy, what do we have today?
I picked actually two about Comey's case. The first one is very quick.
It comes to us from Adam. Adam says, why is Comey's case being tried in Virginia when the
supposed crime took place in the capital building in D.C. And then he says, if it goes to trial,
will people like sitting senators like Ted Cruz be called to testify? The case is in Virginia
because when Jim Comey testified, he was actually sitting in his residence and they conducted
the hearing over Zoom because it was 2020 and, you know, there was the pandemic and all the
problems in doing these things safely. So he was sitting in his residence, which is in Virginia.
That's what gave the government the opportunity to venue the case in Virginia, which, of course, they took advantage of because they do not want to keep bringing cases in the D.C. district where, as we've been reporting, like in the last story with Judge Faruqi, the grand juries are not going the government's way in the district.
So that's why they put it in Virginia.
Yeah, and I didn't hear Pat Fitzgerald say that they were interested in filing a motion-challenging venue.
I don't even think they're going to get there
but that list of motions he rattled off in court
I'm assuming was non-exhaustive.
We may see additional motions to dismiss
and we'll know by October 30th
which is the second round of motions to dismiss.
For sure, for sure.
Okay, so the second one comes from Dorothy
and this one I picked because a bunch of people
ask questions along this line
and the theme is basically like
what can you do if you are,
selectively prosecuted and then, you know, the case falls apart. Do you have any recourse against
the government? So Dorothy says, thank you both for your amazing analysis. I've been listening
to you from Europe in Luxembourg and the UK. And following your discussion of the Comey indictment,
I'm convinced that Trump doesn't care if he loses the case, even at an early stage. It's all about
the pain and the cost and indignity that he can inflict however long the case lasts. My question is,
how does a vindicated defendant recover his costs? Is that even possible in circumstances such
as these? The answer is you don't. It's barely possible. To be able to successfully go after
the government, if you, let's say you had a case dismissed on one of these motions, selective
prosecution, maybe insufficiency of evidence, you would have to prove that the government
employees had exceeded the scope of their authority in prosecuting you or had intentionally,
intentionally denied you, deprived you of your constitutional rights. That is a very, very hard thing to
do. Government officers and employees are protected by kind of a limited form of civil
immunity. So it's very challenging. And essentially, no one does it.
because it's basic.
I don't want to say it's impossible,
but it's a very, very tough thing to prove
against anyone who is an officer of the government.
Yeah, and I know mayor of New Jersey,
Ross Baraka, has filed a civil complaint for false arrest.
So I guess we could watch that case
for maybe a hint of how that might turn out.
But those circumstances were also different
because he was arrested on the spot
after a phone call from Todd Blanche.
And he wasn't doing anything wrong.
So he might actually have the facts necessary to prove a specific intentional deprivation of constitutional right there.
It's much harder when you have a case like the how, you know, like the Comey case.
It was put to a grand jury.
The grand jury voted to indict it.
So once you've kind of gone through these some semblance of the normal process, it becomes harder and harder to prove that this was like a,
conspiracy of government people to deprive you of your rights.
Yep. And a Wall Street Journal says John Bolton could be next. He might actually be
indicted by the time this show airs on Sunday. The sources who spoke to the Wall Street
Journal said it could be within days that they were going to try to take the John Bolton case
to a grand jury. So that is what we might be talking about on the next episode of Unjustified.
Again, I'm not a fan of John Bolton, but we will be covering that.
It's still, it falls in the category of the weaponization of the Justice Department to go against your political enemies.
Thank you so much for your questions.
Again, link in the show notes, you can submit your questions.
Thank you all so much.
I wish we had more time to answer more questions from you.
Maybe we'll do some sort of a question answering bonus sesh episode at some.
some point. I think it's a great idea. Since our regular episodes don't really leave much time.
And we'll talk about that. I think that would be fun. Put out a bonus episode of just questions.
So with that in mind, send your questions in because we'll need a lot of questions for that
particular episode if it's just all questions. All right, everybody, we'll be back in your ears
next week. Do you have any final thoughts, Sandy? No. Another busy week. Hopefully we won't have
more indictments to talk about next week, but as things are going, it looks like we probably
will. So, yeah, stay tuned and we'll bring it all to you here. All right. Everybody will talk to
you next week on Unjustified. I'm Alison Gill. And I'm Andy McCabe. Unjustified is written and
executive produced by Alison Gill with additional research and analysis by Andrew McCabe. Sound design
and editing is by Molly Hawkey with art and web design by Joelle Reader at Moxie Design Studios. The theme
The music for Unjustified is written and performed by Ben Folds, and the show is a proud member of the MSW Media Network, a collection of creator-owned independent podcasts dedicated to news, politics, and justice.
For more information, please visit MSWMedia.com.
