Jack - Episode 87 | Appeal Primer
Episode Date: July 28, 2024This week we go over what Jack Smith’s appeal to the 11th Circuit will look like and why Judge Cannon will likely be overturned.Donald Trump threatens to sue DoJ for violating his Constitutional rig...hts. Plus we take some listener questions. Professor LedermanUnited States v. Nixon at Fifty: Why Judge Cannon Is Wrong About the Attorney General’s Authority to Select a Special Counsel Questions for the pod Submit questions for the pod here https://formfacade.com/sm/PTk_BSogJ AMICI CURIAE to the District Court of DC https://democracy21.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Attachment-Brief-of-Amici-Curiae-in-Support-of-Governments-Proposed-Trial-Date.pdfGood to know:Rule 403bhttps://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/fre/rule_40318 U.S. Code § 1512https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/1512 Prior RestraintPrior Restraint | Wex | US Law | LII / Legal Information InstituteBrady MaterialBrady Rule | US Law |Cornell Law School | Legal Information Institutehttps://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/brady_rule#:~:text=Brady%20material%2C%20or%20the%20evidence,infer%20against%20the%20defendant's%20guiltJenksJencks Material | Thomson Reuters Practical Law Glossaryhttps://content.next.westlaw.com/Glossary/PracticalLaw/I87bcf994d05a11e598dc8b09b4f043e0?transitionType=Default&contextData=(sc.Default)Gigliohttps://definitions.uslegal.com/g/giglio-information/Statutes:18 U.S.C. § 241 | Conspiracy Against Rights18 U.S.C. § 371 | Conspiracy to Defraud the United States | JM | Department of Justice18 U.S.C. § 1512 | Tampering With Victims, Witnesses, Or Informants Questions for the pod Submit questions for the pod here https://formfacade.com/sm/PTk_BSogJCheck out other MSW Media podcastshttps://mswmedia.com/shows/Follow AGFollow Mueller, She Wrote on Posthttps://twitter.com/allisongillhttps://twitter.com/MuellerSheWrotehttps://twitter.com/dailybeanspodAndrew 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
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I signed an order appointing Jack Smith.
And those who say Jack is a fanatic.
Mr. Smith is a veteran career prosecutor.
What law have I broken?
The events leading up to and on January 6th.
Classified documents and other presidential records.
You understand what prison is?
Send me to jail! Welcome to episode 87 of Jack, the podcast about all things special counsel.
It's Sunday, July 28th, 2024.
I'm Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
All right.
We have a lot to cover today. Do I ever say, okay, really
not much fruit on the tree today? No, never. Because there's always something to cover.
And today we have Donald Trump threatening to sue the DOJ for indicting him. That's a
good one. And of course, we'll update you on the status of Jack Smith's appeal to the
11th Circuit of Judge Cannon's dismissal of the Florida documents case.
Yes.
And this episode is going to get weedy and wonky because we're going to look at the possible
arguments that Jack Smith's team, the Department of Justice, might make in their appeal to
the 11th circuit and when that appeal, at least for now, must be filed.
But first, it's time for another installment of Good Week, Bad Week. So on last Sunday's
show, I said, who knows what could possibly happen this week, but it's going to be big.
I'm sure it's going to be big and we'll talk about it next week.
So good week, bad week for Trump.
Andy bad week, bad week, bad week for the Trump man.
Yeah, man, this game changed on him quick, right?
Ooh, boy.
Yikes.
I mean, changed on everybody.
It's like, we seem to cram like years worth of news
into a couple of days now,
but certainly coming out of the convention,
riding high on surviving the assassination attempt
and what they thought, I guess,
was a successful Republican convention,
only to have President
Biden really steal the thunder and step aside.
He sure did.
Yeah.
And so that was like earthquake-y enough.
But then we had this massive groundswell of support that emerged very quickly and brought its money with it behind Kamala Harris, which
is like injected this level of enthusiasm and excitement into the campaign that we really
haven't seen so far. So yeah, not a great turn of events for the former president, an
amazing speech by the current president. I honestly like I watched the whole thing kind of in
silence I couldn't look away and I was just really stunned. I really feel like
it's the kind of thing that like people will refer to and study like the
decision that he made in like leadership classes decades from now. I really feel like it was such an example
of like selfless leadership
that I think the guy really deserves a ton of credit
for doing a very hard thing.
Yeah, and I think it'll be studied in history as well
as a speech on par with, you know,
what George Washington did
with his peaceful transfer of power speech. And we
don't have a recording of it. He might have done a horrible job with that speech. I don't
know. So it's the content of the speech that survives. Right? As far as we talk about where
history is concerned. And this was up there. And it just keeps sinking in, the selfless act.
The transformational leader, he's a selfless leader,
whereas Donald Trump is a selfish transactional leader.
And that was one of the first things I thought of,
all those effing leadership courses I took, Andy,
when I was getting my master's in business administration
and my PhD, the different kinds
of leaders, right? There's expertise leaders who just, you know, by the sheer volume of stuff they
know, become a leader. There's rank leadership where like if you're in the military, you're a
leader because you outrank me. Not because of anything special that you do. Then there's
rank me. Yeah, not because of anything special that you do. Then there's transactional leadership and there's transformational leadership. And I think we see huge, if not probably, I mean,
if you were going to put a scale out of one to 10, I think Trump and Biden would be on
the extreme sides of that scale considering what he did. But yeah, Sunday morning was, it was a roller coaster, like
a lot of heartbreak. But then, like you said, the groundswell of support. Black women had
a call, 44,000. They raised 1.8 million. Then black men for Kamala had a call, 42,000. They
raised 1.2 million. I was on a call last night. White women answer the call.
We had 200,000.
We broke a Zoom record.
And so far we've raised $8.5 million.
Just from that call alone.
And all the endorsements coming all at once instead of dripping out over the course of
a year or a year and a half. I think I think all elections should start in July. Totally
agree. Save us from this fate. Come on. Like it can happen. You can do it. It's fine. You
know, it's a scramble, but that's the way it should be. But I think you hit the nail
on the head with the stuck with JD Vance thing.
Cause John Fuglsang and I were discussing this prior to, to Biden's exit where he's
going to wait, he has to wait until after the VP, his VP is picked and after his
Republican national convention, then, and only then if Biden decides to drop out,
will he drop out and then bam Sunday with COVID from the White House in a letter. And then
he came out and delivered that speech. Really, really incredible week, just this past week.
So me last week on the show saying, who knows what could happen? Well, lots.
There you go. Couple of things happened.
And lots has happened.
So Jack Smith though, regular week.
Regular week, same old, same old,
trying to fight his way out of the trenches.
This is like trench warfare that he's in here.
Literally fighting for the life of his case in Florida.
And then of course in DC, which the fight there is not,
we haven't hit the green flag yet
and started throwing shots
at each other, but that's coming. It's just a matter of time. So unfortunately our man
Jack is really backed up against the wall, I think in both cases. Um, and so it'll be,
we'll have a lot to talk about going forward, but right now we're in a little bit of this
lull before the storm, which is good that we're taking it, taking the chance to kind
of reset and think about like what, how he he's gonna approach this question with the 11th circuit
Of course, we do that with the with the help of some
Pretty astute folks who've written things about it. So we'll get into that too. Yeah, brilliant legal minds constitutional scholars
law professors, etc and
You know not to mention
not to like why I don't want to forget to mention
people like Norm Eyes. Like I learned when I got my PhD, Andy, that most of my opinions,
first of all, I'm like hesitant to make an opinion unless I have a two foot tall stack
of articles that I can cite for the basis of that opinion. But all of what we're going
to go over today, which again, it gets in the weeds, we're going to get into statutory
considerations regarding his dismissal, the dismissal of the Florida case. But all of
the information is coming from truly high-level experts, and we're going
to deliver that information.
We may have some speculation on it, but we wanted to give the facts to you so that you
can mull it over yourself and decide where you think things are at and where they might
go.
And so that's kind of the purpose of this episode.
And you're right, Andy, being in limbo right now
on both of these cases, it gives us a really good chance
to take a deeper dive into this dismissal for, you know,
Jack Smith not being appropriately appointed
or funded, even though she didn't consider the funding,
but she talked about it for a long time anyway.
But it gives us a really good chance to stop, take a breath as we ride the
Kamala Harris roller coaster of awesomeness and discuss what the nitty gritty statutes
are that back up Jack Smith's appointment. Do you know what I'm saying?
Definitely. It'll give us a great context when we finally get some briefs and ultimately
an opinion from the 11th Circuit. It'll give us a great context when we finally get some briefs and ultimately an opinion from the 11th Circuit.
It'll give us a great background and context upon which to kind of assess how each side
did.
So yeah, let's dive in.
Yeah.
I did that today in the Alvin Bragg Manhattan DA case, which is a case we usually talk about
over on Clean Up on L45 with Pete Strzok.
But you know, we had, I had
assumed that Alvin Bragg would argue that first of all, nothing in the hush
money case was, could possibly be considered an official act. And number
two, when you appealed, or when you filed for immunity in that case, you didn't,
you abandoned the appeal, right? How many times have you and I, Andy, talked about
the fact that some of these pretrial motions might seem ridiculous, but they become placeholders
that allow you to appeal if you're convicted. Yep. Right. And so during the the hush money
election interference trial, Donald Trump didn't either didn't appeal or didn't even
make. Well, he didn't appeal. He abandoned his appeal when he lost his immunity motion.
Because he wasn't filing for immunity like, you can't, I'm totally presidentially immune. He was saying some of this evidence
is part of official acts and I'm immune, so you can't use that evidence.
But
basically the way that it,
we were thinking it would roll out was that because he asked
for immunity for that evidence, and then when it was denied by the court, he didn't appeal.
And so therefore, you abandon your right to appeal it after you're convicted.
Now, a different set of circumstances has gone down since then. But I just thought it was an interesting way to think about why these pre-trial motions
happen when they do and how they can apply to an appeal later on. But that was sort of
what I was going over.
Yeah, I read that.
In the Alva Bragg case.
I read that probably an hour ago. And I think it's, I think you're right
to think of it that way.
It's also important to put it in a little bit
of a framework like these rules seem kind of very procedural
and kind of persnickety a little bit.
Oh, you didn't say it before, you can't say it now.
But it's absolutely essential
to keep the whole process moving.
If you let people just keep bringing stuff up
again and again and again, or bringing
things up that are essentially out of time, should have happened earlier, now you're trying
to do it later, you're constantly giving the defendant an opportunity to throw roadblocks
in the progress of the case. And the system can't work that way. And, you know, New York
City, criminal courts, they're cranking out cases every day,
you know, dozens and dozens of hundreds of whatever. So, yeah, they follow these rules
pretty carefully. And I think it'll be a big factor in his appeal up there.
Yeah, but there was a cool third thing that we didn't consider. So, you know, we were
saying these aren't no way these could be official acts. These are private acts in the hush money election interference case. Number two, you failed
to appeal. So you've kind of abandoned them. And number three, that that Alvin Bragg brought
up that I talked about, you know, I wrote about it on Substack. We'll talk about it
on CleanUp on F-45 that I hadn't even considered is that there's you have it has to if it's
harmless that this evidence
Came in to the conviction then it doesn't matter anyway. It's like the ultimate even if you know, I talk a lot about even ifs
The ultimate even if even if you think that all of this evidence is should be thrown out and he's immune It doesn't matter because the pieces of evidence that Donald Trump is contesting as being immune would not have an impact on
the jury's ability to find him guilty on all counts. So it's going to be interesting to
see how the judge rules. Norm Eisen is under the impression that, you know, as soon as
Donald Trump files his opposition or his reply, I should say, because he filed the initial
and this is the government's reply itself.
But as soon as he files that, the judge will take however much time he needs to make a
decision and render a decision.
He said by September 7th or 9th, I can't remember which one, but I think the sentencing will
go forward in mid September.
I don't think that any of Trump's arguments are going to prevail.
But also just very, very interesting how this immunity decision, as much as we talk about
how it impacts the Jack Smith investigation or investigations, plural, it also impacts
the state investigations.
Yeah, totally.
Totally.
When the Supreme Court comes out with a decision that upends our view of the law, creates all
kinds of issues, it applies everywhere.
If it's a constitutional issue, obviously defendants can raise those in the state courts
and ultimately seek relief from the Supreme Court.
If those appeals don't go their way, you can expect that Trump will do that here eventually.
But I don't think that that process will forestall the sentencing. He'll be sentenced. If he's sentenced to some form
of incarceration, it's possible that that will be suspended until the appeals are resolved. I think
that's likely. But nevertheless, the sentencing is important because it signals the end of the criminal
case as it stands right now in front of Judge Mershon.
And I'm sure he's anxious to end this thing and move it along.
Go away, case.
Yeah.
It's hard to wrap up a case with Donald Trump.
Let's just...
It just never goes away.
I don't know if you know anything about that.
Yeah, a little bit.
Yikes.
All right.
Well, we're going to get into the weeds here, but this week we did get the official notice
from the 11th circuit that the appeal of Judge Cannon's dismissal has been officially docketed
and the special counsel has not yet asked for an expedited briefing, Andy.
But the 11th circuit has issued an order with
the normal briefing schedule per the rules, right? The regular rules. It's like if you
don't get an expedited briefing, this is the briefing schedule. As it stands, according
to the order from the 11th circuit, Jack Smith's appeal brief is due by August 27th, about
a month from now. Now, once Trump is served with that brief, not when it's filed, but once it's served to him, he has 30 days to respond. That would push that out to September 26th.
That's if and only if Jack Smith files on August 27th. And then if special counsel wants
to respond, he has 21 days to do so. So the issue would be fully briefed no later than
October 17th. And as we explained during the previous episode, and as I just mentioned, special
counsel need not take the entire time granted.
So let's say Jack Smith files his brief Wednesday, July 31st.
Trump has 30 days from the service of that filing.
And that would be what?
August 30th.
And then special counsel doesn't need to take the full 21 days to reply.
So even if we don't get an expedited request and that request is granted or whatever, without
an expedited appeal, we could be fully briefed in September, if that makes sense.
Yeah, it's certainly a possibility, but I think it's still possible he'll ask for an
expedited schedule.
So I hope so.
Because Jack's going to file as fast as he's going to file with that with an expedited schedule. So, you know. I hope so. Because Jack's going to file as fast as he's going to file with an expedited briefing or without.
The question then becomes, does Trump get 30 days to respond?
Right?
And I think Jack Smith will ask to give him two weeks,
and then maybe the judge will give him three weeks,
because they like to split the baby like that.
But I'm sure Trump will use the entire time of whatever he has been granted to respond.
No question. Even if they stay on the normal schedule and he gets his 30 days
after being served with Jack Smith's brief, I wouldn't put it past him to go in and ask for more time.
Yeah, he will.
We're running for president. We don't have time for this.
It's a lot better, you know, whatever.
He will. I'm appealing my conviction in another jurisdiction right now. And that's a Bove,
and he's my guy here for this, you know, that definitely will happen.
I don't think they'll really give too much credence to it. They might throw them a couple extra days
to like a shut up gift, but, you know, the appellate courts are, are pretty rigid in
how they do their business.
And they, I think they kind of take a, you don't have to be here approach you.
So, you know, it's, uh, this is, this is your thing, man.
Yeah.
These are our rules.
If you don't like them, you go to a different McDonald's or something, whatever.
So this is a Wendy's.
And keep in mind, the 11th Circuit does not assign the panel of three judges until after
the issue is fully briefed.
All the briefs are in.
And right now, no oral arguments have been scheduled because we don't know how long Jack
Smith is going to take.
We don't know if he's going to ask for an expedited appeal.
It's just too early to schedule an oral argument
So we're gonna break down what special counsel may argue
After this quick break, so everybody stick around. We'll be right back
Welcome back. Okay. This is where the show gets a little into the weeds on the arguments special counsel might make in their appeal brief and how Judge Cannon got her ruling so far off the mark,
wrong on the law.
So here's what Marty Liederman writes for just security.
Marty Liederman, by the way, is a professor at Georgetown University Law Center.
He was deputy assistant attorney general in the Department of Justice's Office of Legal
Counsel from 2021 to 2023, and also in 2009 to 2010. And he was an attorney advisor in OLC from
1994 to 2002. So really one of the people around who's got the most experience in that
office and to remind folks, those are the lawyers for the lawyers. That's where the
Justice Department decides the legality of policies and things that the president wants
to do. If the president wants to initiate hostilities in a foreign country, they will often go to DOJ and say we'd like an opinion as to
the lawfulness of this proposed plan and that's who write researches and writes
those those long policy papers. They're not law because these are not judges in
a court, but boy they're pretty close and they are treated like gospel by the DOJ
and typically by presidents.
Yeah.
So think about when Bill Barr went to his office of legal counsel and asked for a memo
saying that Donald Trump was not guilty or wouldn't be prosecuted for obstruction of
justice even if he weren't
the sitting president. And of course, they obliged. And we got to see a good chunk of
that memo, thanks to, was it Judge Beryl Howell or was it Amy Berman Jackson? One of them
was really upset that the DOJ was trying to hide that memo. But
it's also the legal counsel memo that likely made it impossible for Merrick Garland to
charge Donald Trump with obstruction of justice because the office of legal counsel determined
that as because he was president at the time, you can't and that in general, you can't obstruct
justice in this particular case unless there's an underlying crime,
which of course is BS.
But it would be very hard for Merrick Garland
to bring those obstruction charges because Donald Trump
would run in with his golden ticket OLC memo saying,
ah, na, na, na, your Department of Justice
said I can't be prosecuted.
And it would get dismissed 10 times out of 10.
I think-
I mean, typically what happens, like, infamously
around the torture memos, so in the aftermath of 9-11,
when the Bush administration wanted
to take some very controversial actions overseas
with suspected terrorists, they went to OLC.
And OLC wrote them a whole list of memos that basically said,
no, it's OK to do all these things. And then years later, they completely 180'd
it and said, no, that's all torture that shouldn't have happened. And it's prohibited by the Geneva
conventions and stuff like that. So OLC is not without a history of, you know, countermanding
their prior directions. But nevertheless, Lieberman is a guy that's been there a lot.
So he's a pretty well-known constitutional lawyer.
So he writes in this piece for just security,
he writes, Trump's motion and Judge Cannon's opinion
are styled as if the question is a constitutional one, namely,
whether the attorney general's appointment
of the special counsel violated
the Appointments Clause of the Constitution, which of course is at Article 2, Section 2,
Clause 2.
But as Judge Cannon herself acknowledged on page 3 of her opinion, in truth, it's not
a constitutional question at all.
The Appointments Clause provides that the head of a department, such as the attorney general, may appoint what the clause refers to as an inferior officer.
Judge Cannon assumed, correctly, that the special counsel is an inferior officer, at
least as a matter of governing precedent.
Accordingly, even if we assume that Attorney General Garland appointed Smith to an office, the method of
appointment here complied with the appointments clause.
So what he's talking about here is the difference between appointing an officer and creating
an office and filling the vacancy of the head of the office.
That's right.
Okay.
So if it's not a constitutional question, then what is the legal basis for Judge Cannon's
dismissal?
As Judge Cannon concedes, the determinative question is a statutory one, namely whether
Congress has given Merrick Garland the power to appoint someone outside the government
to prosecute Trump.
Now, both sides, Trump and Jack Smith, agreed that if Garland lacked the statutory authority
to appoint Jack Smith, that would resolve the whole question, regardless of the appointments
clause.
He wouldn't be there, okay.
But no one's arguing that.
No one is arguing that Garland could have appointed Jack Smith without statutory authority
to do so.
Nobody's saying that.
And it stands to reason that if he does have statutory authority, then
the appointment is constitutional. So what gives Garland the statutory authority to appoint
a special counsel, Andy?
Well, this is where Professor Liebman breaks it down into two categories. One, the attorney
general had statutory authority to hire Jack Smith to work in the Department
of Justice, which Trump does not contest.
And two, the attorney general also had authority to assign the supervision of the two criminal
cases to anyone working at DOJ.
That's the big one right there.
Yeah.
As you walk through this, it makes total sense.
So, Leaderman goes on, as for the first, the attorney general had statutory authority to
hire Jack Smith to work in the Department of Justice pursuant to 5 USC 3101. That law
gives every executive agency the power to hire employees, including officers.
And 28 USC sections 503 and 509 gives Merrick Garland the authority to perform virtually
all DOJ functions, including hiring.
Now, Judge Cannon describes Smith as a, quote, private citizen exercising the full power
of a United States attorney, but he is not.
He is a DOJ employee hired by Garland to work for DOJ.
Attorney General Garland's appointment memorandum specifies that Smith is, quote, to serve
as special counsel for the United States Department of Justice." Close quote.
Okay, so Garland can hire him and he hired him. Fine. Okay. So by statute, as you said, he can
hire and because he's the head of the agency, he's allowed to hire people. And he hired Jack
Smith to work for the DOJ. But what about the second proposition above, the one I said that's where all the marbles
are, that the attorney general has the authority to assign the supervision of the two criminal
cases to anyone working at DOJ?
The basis for that conclusion is a combination of two laws, 28 U.S. Code Section 509 and
Section 510. So Section 509 says all DOJ functions
are vested in the attorney general even where another statute specifically assigns a particular
function to other DOJ officials. Now Section 510 says the attorney general had virtually unlimited power to delegate those authorities given to him in 509.
It provides that the attorney general, quote,
may from time to time make such provisions as he considers appropriate,
authorizing the performance by any other officer, employee, or agency of the Department of Justice
of any function of the Attorney General. So by law, by statute,
the Attorney General can hire people. All powers of the DOJ can be performed by the
Attorney General. Any job, he can do any job in the DOJ. And anything the AG can do, he
can also delegate to anyone else who works for the DOJ.
And this is all despite whether any other law or directive
assigns a particular function to a particular person
within the Department of Justice.
The attorney general can override that
and take that function for himself
or delegate it to someone else.
And Professor Lederman gives an example.
Section 510 would have authorized Merrick Garland
to assign supervision of the Mar-a-Lago case and any subsequent prosecution to an attorney
employed in the office of the attorney general, the OAG, or to an attorney in the tax division,
or he could give it to like a Jeffrey Clark over in the environment and natural resources
division.
I'm glad you didn't do that. I'm really glad you didn't do that.
Well, Clark is long gone, just about to be disbarred. But you get my point, right?
I do.
He can assign this to anybody who works for the DOJ.
Yeah. So for example, for the past 17 years, the attorney general has exercised his section
510 delegation authority to assign supervision of criminal investigations
and prosecutions involving national security related
offenses to the DOJ National Security Division,
even though Congress has not vested the Assistant Attorney
General for NSD with any statutory authority
to prosecute criminal cases.
So Congress essentially created the national
security division and the assistant attorney general who runs it. Congress didn't give
that person criminal prosecutorial authority, but the AG did. And it's fine.
Yeah. Well, they had no complaint about the National Security Division running this up until Jack
Smith's appointment.
Of course.
So I mean, because the AG can delegate any task to any DOJ employee, he does have the
statutory backing to do stuff that Congress hasn't specifically designated in a statute.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And before Attorney General Garland appointed Jack Smith,
the Mar-a-Lago investigation and the litigation
were supervised by National Security Division Assistant
Attorney General Matt Olson, rather than a US attorney.
Such NSD direction of the case was the result of Garland's
authority under Section 510.
He can delegate. He can do any function
and he can delegate any function to anyone he wants in the department.
Hmm, but yet there was no motion to stop Matt Olson from investigating.
Of course not.
Or Chris Ray or literally any other employee except for some reason Jack
Smith and we'll get into
that. So no one had an issue with Matt Olson. That's pretty important. So if Garland had
hired Jack Smith to work in the national security division and delegated the authority to oversee
the case to him, Judge Cannon would be cool with it, I guess. That just shows how completely
wrong she is on this.
Yeah. I mean, like if he had just turned in an application one day to NSD, he got an interview and called
up Matt Olson and impressed him, got the hire, then all of a sudden found himself in charge
of those cases, would have been totally fine.
But Judge Cannon appears to concede this point on page 24 of her opinion.
Of course she does.
Yeah. point on page 24 of her opinion. Of course she does. Yeah, so there she writes that section 510
gives the attorney general the flexibility
to authorize existing DOJ officers, employees,
or agencies to perform the functions of the attorney
general consistent with the nature of those functions.
In fact, throughout her opinion, Judge Cannon
acknowledges that Attorney General Garland
could have assigned the authority in question to any already retained DOJ attorney. So if
that's correct, and it is, then Attorney General Garland could have authorized
Smith to handle the Mar-a-Lago case had he done so, let's say, five minutes after
hiring Smith to work at DOJ.
So it's a five minute rule that makes this unconstitutional, I guess.
And how long?
Like, what do you have?
Like, what's the...
That's...
Wow.
Yeah.
So Judge Cannon's holding that Section 510 is inadequate in this case, then, appears
to be premised on her assumption that Congress has insisted upon some waiting period, no
matter how brief,
between the act of hiring an individual and the act of authorizing that DOJ official to supervise
a prosecution. I have to say, this has been lurking. It took Mr. Lederman's writing and his
structuring of this whole thing to kind of open my eyes.
But in the back of my mind, since I've been reading these motions as they were originally
filed, I've had this nagging like idea that like, but why isn't he just an employee? Like
I don't get it. Why, why, why are they going to all this trouble to say he's an officer?
He's not an officer inferior, whatever. Isn't he just a simple Joe that works at DOJ?
And that's basically what Lederman is pointing out here.
I mean, for real, like I guess because he hired him and appointed him at the same time,
in the same memo, like if it were one memo, two memos.
How could that possibly be significant?
But her 93 page opinion boils down to that.
So 509 and 510 would seem to be enough to give Jack Smith statutory authority here.
Just that, just what we've just talked about.
But Cannon spends a lot of time on sections 515 and 533 sub 1 of Title 28. And we'll talk about those
after the break. Stick around. We'll be right back.
Hey everybody, welcome back. So before the break, we discussed how Title 28 of the US
Code, sections 509 and 510, which Garland cited in his appointment of Jack Smith, are
sufficient to establish congressional statutory authority for Jack Smith. Nobody circumvented
Congress. Nobody messed up separation of powers. Nobody did anything without the advice and
consent of Congress. This is by law as Congress Congress passed 5.9 and 5.10. Cannon's only argument is that he didn't wait five seconds or five
minutes before delegating the authority. But let's move on to where Cannon spends most
of her time, which are sections 5.15 and 5.33 sub one. So we'll start with 5.15, which says
the attorney general or any other officer for the Department of
Justice or any attorney specially appointed by the attorney general under law may, when
specifically directed by the attorney general, conduct any kind of legal proceeding, civil
or criminal, including grand jury proceedings and proceedings before committing magistrate
judges, which United States attorneys are authorized by law to conduct, whether or not he is a resident of the district in which
the proceeding is brought. That really went out of its way. Congress really went out of
its way to kind of cover all the bases saying the attorney general or any other officer,
especially pointed by the attorney general can do what Jack Smith does.
Yeah, it's like this massive carve out in the normal function of things.
The normal function is US attorneys who are nominated by the president and approved by the Senate,
they do this stuff. It's under their authority that people go in front of the grand jury,
get indictments and arrest warrants and all that kind of stuff. What this law says is that any person essentially that the attorney
general specifically appoints can do those things that a US attorney normally does. It's
just a massive carve out.
Yeah. And Professor Lienerman writes here, in other words, even though criminal trials
are proceedings that United States attorneys are authorized by law to conduct, the attorney general himself can conduct such proceedings
or specifically direct any DOJ officer or any attorney specially appointed by the attorney
general under law to conduct them.
I don't know how you weasel out of that. Well, this is why no other court decided they needed 93 pages to come to the wrong result.
All right. So subsection 515B in turn reflects a congressional understanding that such an
attorney general may in some cases make such case specific quote special appointments to persons who weren't previously employed at DOJ.
So 515 alone could give Garland the authority
to point Jack Smith.
Seemed though, I would think so.
Yeah, but even if not the combination of 515
and 509 and 510 that we talked about earlier,
you feel like you certainly got there with all those three.
Mm hmm. Yeah. So now let's talk about another statute. The DOJ says gives it the authority
to appoint Jack Smith and that is title 28 USC 533 part one. That says, quote, the attorney general
may appoint officials to detect and prosecute crimes against the United States. Attorneys general did not invoke section 533-1 for special counsel appointments before attorney
general Garland included it in his 2022 appointment memorandum for Jack Smith.
For example, special prosecutor Leon Jaworski relied on it, however, along with other statutes
in his Supreme Court brief in
the Nixon tapes case. And in the court's decision in that case, Chief Justice
Berger identified section 533 together with sections 509, 510, and 515 as
establishing that Congress has vested the Attorney General with the power to
appoint subordinate officers, including the special
prosecutor Jaworski to assist him in the discharge of his duties.
And by the way, Andy, Concord management, remember them, the Russian troll farm?
I do.
Indicted by Robert Mueller made the same argument Judge Cannon is making when they tried and
failed to get Mueller booted as special
counsel. But anyway, I digress. Professor Lieberman writes that he wants to focus on
the following. He says, Judge Cannon insists that Section 533 sub 1's reference to the
appointment of officials to detect and prosecute crimes against the United States does not
authorize Merrick Garland to appoint someone to prosecute crimes.
If that person would, by virtue of an assignment, be an officer
for the purposes of Article 2's appointment clause.
Wow.
Liederman disagrees for three reasons.
First, although the term officials might be broader than the term officers,
the term officials encompasses constitutional
officers as well as mere employees. It's like everybody. Second, the prosecution of federal
crimes is a significant governmental authority. And therefore, someone assigned to perform
that function pursuant to 533 would virtually always be an officer for appointments clause
purposes.
It's like a definition of officer.
Yeah. And third, there's no reason to assume Congress had the appointments clause in mind
at all when it enacted Section 533 or its predecessors going back to 1921. Therefore,
the legislature's use of the broad and generic term officials wasn't designed to imply anything
one way or the
other about whether such officials might include DOJ actors who occupy constitutional offices
and thus must be appointed in conformity with the appointments clause. It just doesn't even
apply.
Right. Right. And her discussion of that statutory term, however, reflects a related concern
that lurks throughout Judge Cannon's opinion, namely,
her apparent view that even if Congress has afforded the Attorney General with the authority
to assign a prosecutorial function to a DOJ personnel who would be deemed employees for
the purposes of the Appointments Clause, Congress has not vested the Attorney General with the
power to create a special counsel office in the constitutional
sense, i.e. to create continuing DOJ position that must be filled in conformity with the
appointments clause. That's really kind of resonating in the back of her head as you
read that opinion. It's like there's some bifurcation there. She's focused on this kind of
creation of the office and he didn't have a law specifically empowering him to do that.
Kaitlin Luna Yeah. So instead of what happened, which is him appointing a lawyer to delegate
some stuff to, she's saying Garland created a position in an office and filled it with
Jack Smith and that Congress gave no authority for him to do that, which doesn't comport with her other argument that you need to wait
five seconds between hiring and delegating. It's just so weird.
Yeah, that's right. And the attorney general does have statutory authority to create a
new DOJ position that meets the conditions for an Appointments Clause office. And once again, the primary source of that authority is 28 USC 510, which provides
that the attorney general may from time to time make such provisions as he considers appropriate,
authorizing the performance by any other officer, employee, or agency of the Department of Justice
of any function of the attorney general. So you have to wait five minutes, Andy. You got to wait five minutes before
you do it.
Five minute rule. It's not a five second rule either. Like the food off the ground is still
good if you got it within five seconds. None of that applies here.
It's just so bizarre. Yeah. And it's going to be really interesting. I'm really looking
forward to reading the brief, the appeal brief again, due by August
27th as it stands now. Actually, let me go look at the docket real quick and make sure
that we don't have an update on a briefing. Nope, nothing. They have not filed for an
expedited appeal as of Friday, July 26th at 3 PM Pacific time. But you know, if they do,
we will tell you about it.
But as it stands now, Jack Smith has until August 27th
to file this brief.
We will of course cover it here in detail.
I'm assuming if he doesn't ask for an expedited brief,
he's still gonna file faster than August 27th.
But I think we'll see a motion for an expedited brief.
I'm not sure.
Yeah, it seems like, you know, it's
going to come down to how much time he thinks he needs
to put the best work product forward.
This is not a swing and a miss situation here.
You want to hit that ball pretty hard.
But I do think that this is really down in the weeds,
kind of statutory interpretation conversation, which
I think is very helpful.
But it's also helpful to like kind of step back and remember like this does not happen
at the district court level.
Like district courts do not engage in months long processing of motions, including oral
arguments by amicus and all this other nonsense.
And they don't write a hundred page opinions
dismissing Supreme Court precedent.
Like that's not their job.
They're supposed to look at the precedent
and interpret it and apply it to the facts in their case.
They're not, they don't, you know,
it's hard to imagine like, what is she doing here?
We, I'll hold on this for a minute because we had a bunch of questions that kind of got
to this point based on something I said last week.
So, as always, our listeners kind of had us with the best questions.
So I'll just put a pin in that for now and we'll get back to it in a few minutes.
Yeah.
And the reason, Andy, I wanted to go over all of the statutory implications, there's
a method to my madness, believe it or not. What I was hoping to do is to prepare listeners
for when the appeal brief comes out, knowing all of this information about these statutory, you know, congressional, you know, 533 and 509 and 510
and 515. Now that you know all this, I think that the appeal brief is going to be much
easier to read. And I'm hoping you'll open it up as I will because I read Marty Liederman's
article here. I'll be able to open that brief and go, oh, yeah, here's this.
Oh, there's the 509. There's the 510. Oh, yep, yep. And that sort of precludes that. And even if
this, then that. And I think it'll give everybody a really great primer for being able to
interpret what Jack Smith files when he files it. So that's kind of why I wanted to put this
episode together the way that I did today
Hey, well, we turned the entire audience into experts on 1512 c2
So I feel like this is this is ground we can take okay
It's 28 5 5 0 9 5 10 and 5 33 so just carve those numbers into the back of your head
Well based on the amazing questions we get from our listeners
I numbers into the back of your head. Well, based on the amazing questions we get from our listeners, I imagine that they're
very interested in this kind of thing.
And we'll get to those questions and one other quick story, but we have to take one last
quick break.
Stick around.
We'll be right back.
Hey, everybody.
Welcome back.
We have one more quick story. I promised you this one's
from Lisa Rubin at NBC. She says she writes for the MSNBC website, as many major news
outlets continue to digest President Joe Biden's withdrawal from the 2024 race, and the Democratic
Party's swift rallying around Vice President Kamala Harris as its standard bearer, you would be
forgiven if you had turned your attention away from the person who commanded last week's
news cycle, Donald Trump.
But almost 24 hours to the minute after Biden announced he was leaving, Trump took to Truth
Social on Monday with what could be a significant post of his own suggesting it's time to sue an unspecified.
When is it not time to sue for Donald Trump?
Right.
It's time to sue an unspecified them for illegally breaking into and raiding Mar-a-Lago in the
wake of federal district judge Eileen Cannon's dismissal of the classified documents case,
the espionage and obstruction case. and his post therefore begets two questions.
She says one is Trump serious about a civil lawsuit against federal prosecutors and two
assuming he is with that suit have any chance of succeeding.
So she says let's start with whether Trump truly intends to sue a spokesperson for the
Trump campaign didn't respond to request for comment, but if past his prologue, yeah, he's probably going to sue. Remember, he sued under rule
53 to get a special master in this same case. Now, the second and more significant question
is what a lawsuit would look like. Let's assume Trump is going to sue and that what he's after
is damages, an award that would hurt and embarrass the government. Who going to sue and that what he's after is damages, an award that
would hurt and embarrass the government.
Who would Trump sue and what claims might he make?
Ordinarily, under Supreme Court precedent, which let's just take that with a grain of
salt for now, the federal government and its agencies are immune from damages unless they
waive sovereign immunity.
Yet a federal statute, the Federal Tort Claims Act,
does just that. It specifically allows lawsuits for torts such as false arrest, abuse of process,
malicious prosecution, where those claims are rooted in the acts of federal investigative law
or law enforcement officers. And under a 1994 Florida Supreme Court ruling, claims of malicious
prosecution in the state require
proof not only that the plaintiff here, Trump, obtained a dismissal in his favor, but that
he also that the case was dismissed because of his innocence. We don't have that here,
right? Plus the plaintiff must also show proof that prosecutors lacked probable cause and
acted with malice. By contrast here, the case was
dismissed on procedural, not substantive grounds. And there are no conclusive judicial findings
from the litigation that the search was inappropriate. In fact, late last month, Cannon found Trump
failed to make even a preliminary showing that the affidavit submitted by the DOJ to
get the search warrant contained any material false statements or omissions and that's a showing
required to obtain any further hearing about the warrants propriety or you talk
about Bivens right? Yeah so the other way he could do it is file federally in
what we call a Bivens suit and a Bivens action generally refers to a lawsuit
for damages when a federal officer who is acting
under the color of their authority
allegedly violates the constitution.
So essentially what you have to prove in a Bivens,
they're very hard to prove.
You've got to prove that a constitutionally protected right
has been intentionally violated
by the federal officers involved.
So it's that level of intentionality, like knowledge that what you were doing was going
to deny someone this constitutional right makes the Biven suits very hard to succeed
in.
If you do succeed, there's damages at the end of that road for you.
But I think it's, as you said, for the reasons you mentioned, and I think that earlier decision
by Cannon essentially validating the sufficiency of the warrant puts this whole thing to bed.
Even Judge Cannon thinks the warrant was chill.
So you brought up Bivens, but Lisa Rubin
ended her piece saying, so should we take Trump at his word
he intends to sue?
Sure.
But can we expect Trump to launch this newest legal effort
soon, much less successfully?
That's both more dubious and murkier.
Yeah.
So thanks to Lisa Rubin.
And of course, thanks to you, my friend Andy,
for bringing up Bivens.
Yeah.
All right, let's get to some listener questions. And of course, thanks to you, my friend Andy, for bringing up Bivens. Yeah. All right.
Let's get to some listener questions.
And of course, if you have a question, there's a link in the show notes of this program that
you can click on to submit your questions.
What do we have today?
All right.
So the first one, this is what I was alluding to earlier.
There was a few questions that keyed off of some comments I made last week about how I
thought that kind of Judge Cannon
and the big 93 page ruling had been a bit crazy like a fox. And I actually went back
and re listened to that episode just before this to make sure that I hadn't said something
ridiculous because that's always possible. But what I pointed out was that all along
in the process of this motion with the crazy hearing and the amicus briefs
and the amicus each get in a half an hour,
it's just at each step when you kind of microanalyze
each one of those like, she's crazy, why is she doing this?
This isn't what district courts do.
It's crazy, it's crazy, it's weird.
When you read the 93 page opinion,
it's like, wait a second,
she was intentionally doing this all along.
My point is I think she was really trying to build
the biggest, broadest record of materials,
knowing that this would be a fight.
First of all, I think she knew she was gonna throw
this thing out from day one,
at least as soon as the motion was filed.
I think she has been working on this opinion for months
and knowing that the 11th Circuit will make their decision
about the appeal based only on the court record.
She tried to fill that record
with every possible argument, case, anything she could,
either in the ones that she put in her own
opinion or the ones that counsel brought up in oral arguments or the ones that amicus
brought up in oral arguments. So I do think that all these non-traditional things that
she allowed to happen in the course of this moment, I think they were intentionally done
to provide more of a record that could possibly be used
to substantiate and affirm her decision.
Whether that works for her is a totally different story.
My guess is no, but you know,
we've seen crazy things happen here before.
So that was my, I still believe that there's a bit
of a crazy like a fox going on here.
But the question we got, this one, I'll read Lee's. Lee says, Andy, of a crazy like a fox going on here. But the question we got
this one, I'll read Lee's. Lee says, Andy, your crazy like a fox comment in episode 86
has stuck with me, so I'd appreciate it if you two would spend a minute on the possible
knock on effects of Cannon's recent instructions. I'm particularly curious about your thoughts
on how her striking some of the comments from the indictment affected Jack's appeal. So that's kind of a different
issue. And technically that ruling is not going to be at issue in the decision that
the 11th circuit will have to render on Jack Smith's appeal of the dismissal of the case.
But I will say it is kind of similar because all along in the pendency of this case, we've seen these
interesting little things that she's done, like, you know, ruled for Jack Smith, but
in a way that's without prejudice, so issues can be brought up again.
She's done crafty little things to avoid, like, teeing up something that Jack Smith
would very obviously go forward and appeal.
She couldn't avoid that with the dismissal motion. She knew that this
collision was coming and so I think she built the record around that idea. But I
think she's got, she has very little relevant experience. I think she's got
very poor perspective on what she's doing and the way she runs her court is absurd.
But she's crafty.
And I think she spends some time thinking about these things
and writing these things as silly as they come out.
I think there's something else going on here
that isn't always apparent on the surface.
Yeah.
And as far as something like her decision to strike comments or to strike that paragraph
from the indictment or to, I mean, any of the other decisions that she's made, I don't
think that that will necessarily impact this appeal. The only thing I could see it impacting
is if Jack Smith were going to ask for a new
judge, he might bring up all of those past things.
Do you know what I mean?
There's kind of death by a thousand cuts examples that he could go to.
None of those were enough to like really make the case by themselves that she should be
removed.
But when you add them all together, it could be an overwhelming presentation to the court.
Right. And I don't know enough to know whether that, if he was going to make a motion for
recusal, if that would come in the appeal here or separately. I honestly don't know.
In my time covering the law, I've never seen anybody ask for a judge to be removed. I'd
have to go back and research that and see what that looks like in
an appeal to a circuit court of appeals. But I don't think that any of those past decisions or
rulings, even if it's like her, you know, the one that they had to do a motion for reconsideration
because she wanted to release witness lists, I don't think any of that would have anything to do necessarily with the narrow
argument in this appeal, which is that Jack Smith was appointed appropriately. I think
we're just going to kind of see those legal arguments there. But like I said, if he includes
a motion to recuse or he wants to get her off the case in this filing or in a separate
filing, we could see stuff like that come up there, I would imagine.
Yeah. So let's swing that into the next question, because I think it's very helpful. And this
one comes to us from Mike. It's again, very similar to, we had a few questions all along
these lines. Mike says, in episode 86, you referred to the appeal to the 11th circuit
only admitting evidence that was already admitted in the documents case? Does Canon's secret docket complicate the definition of admitted evidence? Are filings to the secret docket
but not made public admissible in the appeal? Thanks for the great pod. That's a good question,
Mike. But I think the easiest way to answer it is, and maybe I should have been more clear
about this last week, the record on appeal for this dismissal will just be the
matters that were raised on this issue.
So it'll be the original motion from Trump, it'll be Jack Smith's reply, and then it'll
be Trump's response to the reply or sir rebuttal, whatever they call it in Florida.
And then of course, it'll be all these crazy things that we don't normally see, which is the transcripts of all the oral arguments.
It'll be the actual amicus briefs that were submitted. It'll be the transcripts of the
amicus presentations. And then it'll be this monstrous order dismissing the case that
Cannon revealed. All that stuff is on the regular docket, so
there's not really a confusion or a problem with the secret docket. Now the secret docket stuff and
the way she's handled that could very well become another argument that Jack Smith might make if he
decides to press to have her removed. You know, we really don't know how far or wide he'll go in terms of his aperture,
how many examples, and how many things he wants to raise,
or how that gets raised, as you just said a few minutes ago.
So it could be relevant in that context.
But for the decision on whether to affirm or overturn
the dismissal of the case, that'll
be a narrower set of information.
Yeah, I agree.
I don't have anything to add to that answer.
So, um, I will read one final question for us.
That's from Panda Jan.
There you go.
Panda Jan says most wise and knowledgeable team who are also very pleasing to the
eye have a question.
If the dismissal of the documents case stands, does this give Trump
the opportunity to demand all documents be returned to his possession? Andy, what do
you think?
Andy Tate I say no. And here's why. The dismissal, if the dismissal stands, it's been dismissed
on procedural grounds, essentially saying the guy who brought the indictment didn't have
the authority to do so, so therefore the indictment is gone. That in no way changes the National
Archives perspective on what constitutes a presidential record and what doesn't and where
those things should be. And obviously it doesn't affect the classification of items. So all that stuff still stands.
I don't think he gets any of that back.
Now, if he gets reelected, he gets anything he wants.
He has unfettered access to any government material.
And he could certainly ask for all that stuff back
if he wanted to as president, and he would get it promptly.
Yeah, but the 11th circuit has already determined that those classified
documents belong to the government.
They did that in the special master case.
That's why they vacated her ruling.
Uh, and so I, yeah, I don't think, um, there would be anything.
Like he, he could try.
He might, it's always a good time to sue if you're trying to always, yeah.
11th circuit is not having it and neither did the Supreme court in that particular case. Yeah. He might. He could sue. It's always a good time to sue if you're Trump. Always, yeah.
Eleventh Circuit is not having it and neither did the Supreme Court in that particular case.
Yeah.
So.
Good point.
Yeah.
I'm saying no, no on that.
I mean, again, I don't put him, I don't put it past him to try anything.
Of course.
Yeah.
Because, you know, we often say, oh, that'll never work.
That doesn't mean he's not going to try.
Half the time it does work for him, even though it shouldn't.
But no, like one, like 0.01% of the time it works for him. But you know, I mean, he did win that
one case in 2020 where he wanted the election poll watchers to be able to stand within three feet
of the tabulators instead of five feet because they
made it five feet because of COVID. But these guys wanted to get sick, I guess. And so the
court was like, all right, fine. That was the one case he won, that people could stand
closer to people counting ballots. But that's it. Yeah. Yeah. Woo.
Ray, for you. The other 62, no, sorry.
No, you don't.
Sorry.
There is no widespread voter fraud, no outcome-determinative voter fraud and nothing else that you sued
for makes any sense.
Oh, and by the way, all of your lawyers are either indicted, have pled guilty, are permanently
disbarred or on their way to being permanently disbarred. And they have
all been sanctioned as well. So thank you. Have a good day. That's what happens. I think
I said a long time ago, hey, Mar-a-Lago is a magical place where people enter as lawyers
and leave as witnesses. It's just what happens down there in the magical land of West Palm
Beach. All right. Thank you so much for your questions. These
are always wonderful. They make me think so hard. So I really appreciate it. Send your
questions to us by clicking on the link in the show notes to submit them. We really appreciate
them. Andy, do you have any final thoughts before? I mean, I could say who knows what's
going to happen this week, but I feel like I might jinx something.
Let's just consider it a given every week. We don't know what's going to happen. There's
going to be five more days.
Like it's a no hitter, right? Like just don't say anything. Padres pitched a no hitter yesterday
against your Washington Nationals.
Of course they did. Yeah. So I'll be joining you next week, same time, but from a different
place. I'm going to be over in Paris watching the Olympics.
Yes.
Yeah, I'm super excited.
And so I will be taking a break from Olympics fun
and syncing up with you to do another episode.
It'll be what, episode 88?
Yeah, we'll just have to put some French cafe music
behind it. Yeah. You know, I think that'll be wonderful. put some French cafe music behind it.
Yeah.
I think that'll be wonderful.
There you go.
There you go.
And just to tie my final thought here is a tad bit of breaking news.
Let me see what I can say and what I can't.
Just a big congratulations to our friend Pete Struck, who just finalized a $1.2 million settlement
with the Department of Justice over his Privacy Act claims.
Nice.
Good for you, Peter.
High five.
High five, Pete.
All right, everybody, we'll see you next week.
And please know that there will be a Daily Beans bonus episode this weekend that's out
now and then the Beans will come back to you in your ears, me and Dana, Monday morning.
So we'll see everybody then and we'll see everybody next week on Jack. I've been Alison
Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
Transcribed by https://otter.ai