Jack - Grand Jury Shut Out
Episode Date: February 15, 2026Jeanine Pirro gets shut out by a federal grand jury trying to indict six members of Congress for their video asking military members to disregard illegal orders.Judges in the Northern District appoint...ed Donald Kinsella US attorney to replace John Sarcone, and Todd Blanche promptly fired him.Former Special Counsel Deputy in Jack Smith’s office, JP Cooney, is running for Congress in Virginia.A federal judge has blocked Trump's effort to transfer 20 former death row inmates commuted by President Biden to the notorious ADX Supermax Prison.Plus listener questions…Do you have questions for the pod?Thank you, ShopifySign up for a $1/month trial period at http://shopify.com/unjust 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 Trump Questions for the pod?https://formfacade.com/sm/PTk_BSogJ We 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.SW Media.
Janine Piro gets shut out by a federal grand jury trying to indict six members of Congress for their video asking military members to disregard illegal orders.
Judges in the Northern District of New York appointed Donald Kinsella, U.S. attorney, to replace John Sarkone, and Todd Blanche promptly fired him.
Former Special Counsel Deputy in Jack Smith's office, J.P. Cooney, is running for Congress in Virginia.
And a federal judge has blocked Trump's effort to transfer 20 former death row inmates commuted by President Biden to the notorious ADX supermax prison.
This is Unjustified.
Hey, everybody. Welcome to episode 56 of Unjustified. It is Sunday, February 15th, 2026. I'm Allison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe. All right, Allison, this week, I think we should start with the latest DOJ failure.
year. How's that sound? Sounds good to me. All right. So I'm talking about the federal grand jury in
D.C., refusing to return an indictment against Mark Kelly and five other members of Congress for a video
they recorded urging members of the military to refuse to obey unlawful orders. Ah, yes, I remember this.
And to add insult to injury, by the way, a federal judge also granted Mark Kelly's motion for a
preliminary injunction against Pete Hegseth for trying to break him down in rank and go after his
pension. But yeah, let's start with the failed indictment, adding to the long list of failed indictments.
This is from the Associated Press.
Grand jurors in Washington declined to sign off on charges in the latest of a series of rebukes of
prosecutors by citizens in the nation's capital. And that's according to a person who spoke
on a condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter.
It wasn't immediately clear whether prosecutors had sought indictments against all six of the
lawmakers or what charges the prosecutors attempted to bring?
Grand jury rejections are extraordinarily unusual, but have happened repeatedly in recent months
in Washington as citizens who have heard the government's evidence have come away
underwhelmed in a number of cases. Prosecutors could try again to secure an indictment.
The FBI in November began contacting the lawmakers to schedule interviews, outreach that came
against the backdrop of broader Justice Department efforts
to punish political opponents of the president.
President Donald Trump and his aides labeled the lawmakers' videos as seditious,
and Trump said on his social media account
that the offense was, quote, punishable by death.
Ah, right. Okay.
Although this week, though, I think it was Rep Ilhan Omar, Andy,
who had mentioned that in Somalia, where she is from,
they execute pedophiles, to which the RNC responded,
she wants to execute President Trump.
Like, she said pedophiles.
You said Trump.
Oops.
That was like when that Ford factory worker was like, pedophile.
And he was like, hey, F you know, like, I don't.
Why didn't he just assume the dude was yelling at some other actual pedophile?
Like, I don't answer to pedophile, but apparently...
If the shoe fits, Allison, I'm just saying.
If the shoe fits.
Now, besides Slotkin and Kelly, Alyssa Slotkin and Mark Kelly,
the other Democrats who appeared in the video are rep Jason Crow of Colorado,
Christy Houlihan of Pennsylvania, Maggie Goodlander of New Hampshire and Chris Deluzio, Pennsylvania.
In November, the Pentagon opened an investigation into Mark Kelly,
citing a federal law that allows retired service members to be recalled to active duty
on orders of the defense secretary for possible court-martial or other punishment.
Now, he abandoned that court-martial fever dream,
but instead censured Kelly for participating in the video
and tried to retroactively demote Kelly from his retired rank of captain.
And Ryan Riley has some additional information about this grand jury.
He says, none of the D.C. grand jurors who heard the Trump administration's pitch on why they
should indict democratic lawmakers over a video urging members of the military and intelligence
communities to uphold their oaths believed the Justice Department had met the low threshold of
probable cause, two sources familiar with the matter told NBC news. Okay, that's incredible.
They had two sources who were aware of the actual vote of the grand jurors and shared that
put the media, and the vote was zero to whatever, whatever being something between, you know,
16 and 23, which is 16 is the least you can have in 23 is the month. Okay, he goes on to say it's
exceedingly rare for a federal grand jury to reject prosecutors' attempts to secure an indictment,
since the process is stacked in the government's favor. Federal grand juries need a minimum of
16 members to have a quorum, and they max out at 23 members. Just 12 grand jurors, just 12 grand jury,
need to agree that the government had probable cause to indict,
a threshold much lower than the unanimous beyond a reasonable doubt standard
that a pedigree needs to convict.
And I should add to that, Alison,
not only do you need 12 grand jurors in a trial,
a pedit jury to find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,
but it has to be unanimous, right?
So in a grand jury, you could have as many as 23 grand jury
as you only need 12 to get you over the hook.
Yeah.
And the government attorneys assigned to this case.
So zero.
Zero voted for this.
And that's usually you get at least a couple.
Yeah.
Even if you don't reach 12.
But to be completely shut out like that.
But more on this, the government attorneys assigned to the case or political appointees,
not career justice department prosecutors.
One is named Carlton Davis and the other is Stephen Vandervelden.
And they're both listed as special counsel at the U.S.
attorney's office for D.C. They work in the front office alongside Piro and her principal assistant
U.S. attorney special counsels for policy and legislative affairs and director of external affairs.
Now, Vander Veldon spent 34 years as a local prosecutor in Westchester County, New York,
working under Janine Piro during her time as a DA in the 90s and 2000s. Most recently,
he works as a dance photographer. Oh, wow. Now, Davis, Davis, Davis, Carls.
Also. Carlton Davis.
And also totally irrelevant to what he's doing now.
But okay, never mind.
Live in his dream.
Whatever you want to do there, buddy.
Carlton Davis worked as a Republican staffer on several committees, including the House
Select Committee on Benghazi.
He worked under, you ready?
Rep. Darryl Issa.
Former rep, Trey Gowdy.
Former rep Doug Collins.
Former rep Jim Jordan.
And current rep, sorry, Jim Jordan.
I wish he was former.
And current rep Jamie Comer.
So he's worked for those people as staffers.
So you got him.
Him and the county prosecutor who's now a photographer.
All right.
That sounds like a really high-speed federal prosecutorial team.
So according to NBC, Preet Bahara, who's an attorney for Michigan Democratic Senator, Alyssa Slotkin,
is urging the Justice Department to shut down the investigation.
quote, the grand jury has spoken loudly, clearly, and unanimously.
Bahara, a former federal prosecutor wrote in the letter,
citing an NBC news report that zero grand jurors thought that the Justice Department
had reached the low probable cause threshold needed to indict.
Bahara went on to say, quote,
indeed, continuing to pursue this matter would violate clear ethical duties
and Justice Department policy.
Yeah, and I think the policy he's referring to is in the first.
rules of criminal procedure that say, even though you only need probable cause to get in a grand
jury to return an indictment, to return a true bill, you shouldn't go to a grand jury, per the
rules. You aren't even supposed to go to the federal grand jury unless you're sure you can
obtain a conviction with a unanimous pedigree beyond a reasonable doubt and maintain that conviction
on appeal. So I think those are the rules he's referring to. But in addition to all of that,
Andy. CBS reports a federal judge on Thursday blocked the Pentagon from downgrading the military
retirement rank and pay of Mark Kelly of Arizona, finding that the government had, quote,
trampled on Senator Kelly's First Amendment freedoms. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon's order
prohibits the Defense Department and the Trump administration from taking any adverse action
against Kelly to reduce his retirement rank and pay. And here's a quote from Judge Leon.
This court has all it needs to conclude that defendants have trampled.
pulled on Senator Kelly's First Amendment freedoms and threatened the constitutional liberties of
millions of military retirees. After all, as Bob Dylan famously said, you don't need a weather
man to know which way the wind blows. Wow. Wow. Wow. I mean, that's, that's legendary.
And he had a footnote, too. He put a little footnote. And the footnote was like, Bob Dylan,
on subterranean homesick blues, or so 1965.
Like he footnoted it.
Oh, my God.
Judge Richard Leon for president.
This guy just leveled up.
Holy cow.
He's going with the Dylan quotes.
Of course they're going to appeal this.
And when they lose there, of course, they'll file for a cert in the Supreme Court.
It's just ridiculous.
I want to know, like, they,
Kelly now has a judge who found,
conclusively and unambiguously that the Department of Justice violated his constitutional rights.
Why not now turn around and file a civil suit against those people?
This has got to get you over the hurdle of a Bivens suit, right?
I'm no civil lawyer.
We all know that.
But even I know, you know, the standard to basically pierce the qualified immunity that federal employees have,
is a constitutional violation, violation of constitutional rights.
So let's go.
Let's go, Senator Kelly.
Let's go.
Let's get it on.
And I hope that future law professors will teach the subterranean homesick blues doctrine
that was so eloquently pointed out in this ruling.
I mean, if they do, law students all over the country will be like waking up in class going,
oh my God, did he just say Bob Dellen?
Yeah, what?
Yeah, that's awesome.
Zero.
Zero, zero voted.
And those two anonymous sources, I assume, are grand jurors.
But we don't know.
We don't know.
I don't think it was, I don't think it was Vandervelden and, you know, Carlton.
So we'll see what ends up.
I don't imagine either of those guys came back to the office and were going, we got zero.
How's that even get out?
Yeah.
Like going nil in spades, right?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You don't get anything for zero.
Right.
Unfortunately, no points for you. You're awarded no points and may God have mercy on your soul.
All right. Thank you all. We have to take a very quick break. We have more news to get to today on Unjustified. But like I said, we're going to do it on the other side of this quick break. Stick around. We'll be right back.
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Hey, everybody. Welcome back.
All right. Next up from the Post, federal judges in Albany, New York,
appointed a new U.S. attorney on Wednesday, exercising a rarely invoked legal authority to appoint
top prosecutors in regions without a Senate-confirmed nominee. It's rarely invoked because they rarely
have to do this, because usually the president will put forward somebody who can get enough
votes to be confirmed in the Senate. Their choice for U.S. attorney lasted about five hours.
Donald T. Kinsella, 79-year-old former prosecutor, registered Republican, was a president.
summarily fired via an email from the White House later that evening. Yikes.
The move underscored a growing point of tension between the Trump administration and courts
in parts of the country where the president's controversial picks for U.S. attorney have been
unable to win Senate support. Kinsella's swift termination also sent a signal to judges in several
other federal court districts, including the Eastern District of Virginia, who have recently
announced plans to make similar replacements of Trump-installed prosecutors.
whose appointments have been determined invalid by the courts.
Quote, judges don't pick U.S. attorneys.
At POTUS does.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a social media post late Wednesday.
Quote, see Article 2 of our Constitution.
You are fired, Donald Kinsella.
Wow, that was so mature.
Like, ever raising the gravitas and the respectability
of the position of Deputy Attorney.
General. He's got to get on social media and throw some snarky barb at someone he just fired. I mean,
whatever. Yeah. Well, next time I can't get a good seat at the restaurant I want to go to, I'm going to say
Article 2 of the Constitution says otherwise. Now, when administration officials similarly fired a new
U.S. attorney whom federal judges in New Jersey appointed in July to replace Alina Haba, Trump's former
personal lawyer and pick for the position there, there was little formal response from the courts.
So this has happened before and the courts really didn't do anything. Typically, U.S. attorneys who wield
broad prosecutorial discretion to pursue civil and criminal matters in their districts are
nominated by the president and confirmed or rejected by the Senate. But federal law empowers judges
to name acting U.S. attorneys when there is no lawfully serving appointee or Senate-confirmed
presidential pick serving in the role. Before his appointment Wednesday,
Kinsella had most recently worked as a senior counsel to Albany-based law firm Whiteman, Osterman, and Hannah.
He had served a previous stint in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Albany from 1989 to 2002.
The judges named him to lead the office as a replacement for John A. Sarkone, the third,
a Trump loyalist whom the Justice Department appointed to serve in the position on an interim basis in March.
Before his appointment, Sarkone had never worked as a prosecutor
and most recently had served as a regional administrator
for the General Services Administration.
Wow. All right. Yeah, that's the guy who appointed himself
his own deputy so that he could be moved up. Yeah, on an interim basis.
Of course he thought that was a good idea. I mean, you know,
that you picked the guy who has no experience and then within five hours
you fired the guy who had how many years?
I mean, 13 years in prosecuting in that office?
Okay.
Yeah.
Now, his tenure as interim U.S. attorney was marked by controversies.
This is Sarkone, including an incident in June in which he announced that a knife-wielding undocumented immigrant from El Salvador had tried to kill him outside an Albany Hotel.
Surveillance footage later showed the man did not come close to Sarkone with his weapon and charges brought by a local prosecutor were downgraded from attempted murder to a misdemeanor.
Sarkone had also launched an investigation over the summer into New York Attorney General Letitia James,
probing whether her office had violated Trump's civil rights when it secured a multi-million dollar fraud judgment against him in his real estate empire in 2024.
I wonder how that investigation is going.
As a part of a legal challenge from James, a federal judge ruled in January that Sarkone had been serving unlawfully in his position for months,
well beyond the 120-day limit federal law places on an interim U.S. attorney pick.
But like other interim U.S. attorney picks by Trump, who have faced similar disqualification rulings in Los Angeles, Nevada, New Mexico, and Alexandria, Virginia, Sarkone refused to immediately vacate the job.
He continues leading the office.
He's sitting in his office at a desk with one of those little play school steering wheels like I'm in charge of this office.
Now, until recently, judges in districts like Sarkoans have been reticent to exercise their authority to appoint prosecutors counter to the Trump administration's wishes.
Last month, though, the chief federal judge in the Eastern District of Virginia announced that the courts would be accepting applications for a U.S. attorney to replace Lindsay Halligan, another former Trump lawyer named interim U.S. attorney only to be disqualified by the courts.
She left her post in January.
So this firing, you're fired by the DAG, right, the Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, is a signal to the judges in the Eastern District of Virginia trying to replace her, the judges in Nevada who might be trying to replace Segal Chata, who was the person that was redeemed, disqualified by the courts there that Trump had installed his interim U.S. attorney.
So this is a shot across the bow, and it's just, I think, you know, it's one of the, it's one of these situations where, again, he's just seeing what he can get away with. It's the, what are you going to do about it legal theory? Right. Because he's faced no consequences for pretty much anything. Well, I have a suggestion for the judges up there in the Northern District of New York or whatever it's called. I think they should just stop taking matters. I don't think they should accept.
any new cases on their dockets that are sent to them by a U.S. Attorney's Office that has no U.S.
attorney's office where the leader has already been declared to be unlawfully serving.
They should just refuse to docket any new cases.
Wrap up the old ones that came in under, you know, maybe Sarkone when he actually was there lawfully
or anyone before him, but don't take any new ones.
And just see, now let's see what happens.
Let's see what DOJ does then.
You can't get a case prosecuted in New York, in Northern New York.
Yeah, that judge did that sort of with Lindsay Halligan.
Like, I'm not taking any more of your stop signing things.
And if you continue to sign things, oh, and I also show cause.
I'm requiring you to show cause why you're not lying to me from these other indictments
that you signed as U.S. attorney since you're not U.S. attorney after Judge Curry disqualified you.
And I will hold you in contempt.
And since she finally left, right?
So what are they going to do?
Impeach all those judges.
That'll never happen.
Can't happen.
And Sarkoni, this guy reminds me of, do you remember Morton Downey Jr.?
Yeah.
The crazy talk show host who like went in a bathroom somewhere, a public bathroom and wrote
like anti-smending words on his face and came out and claimed he's been beat up by skinheads or something.
It was like the end of his career.
I'm like, that's what this guy did.
No, homeless guy tried to kill me.
Actually, no.
No, he didn't at all.
You made it up pretty much.
How'd you know he was from El Salvador did he say?
I am an illegal immigrant from El Salvador on guard.
Like what happened?
Defending the honor of El Salvadorans everywhere, I shall vanquish thee.
Oh, my God.
Well, I just can't believe he's still sitting in there like, I'm the real U.S. attorney.
You can't make me leave.
No, no, no.
Yeah, I mean, but really, is anyone going in there, like asking him questions?
They're all probably like, just don't go near the boss's office.
I don't even know if he is the boss anymore, but whoever is, he's mad in there.
And it's, he can't do anything anyway.
Yeah, we just let him think he's in charge is fine.
Exactly.
All right.
Yeah, I think that's what we should do with Donald Trump.
We should Truman show Donald Trump, put him, make a little oval office, put him in there.
Yeah.
We have actors call him like they're world leaders and just keep sending in Diet Coke.
Doing a thing, yeah.
Yeah, that's right. You're the president. Okay, doke.
Good job. Meanwhile, we've 25thed him and he's...
Hit him with one of Homer Simpson's rules of life.
Good idea, boss.
One can dream. All right, we've got more news to get to. We've got a story coming up from the New York Times about...
Do you remember when Joe Biden commuted the sentences of the death row inmates, about 20 of them?
Yes.
to life sentences and Donald Trump wanted to move them all to ADX supermax.
Well, a judge is saying no, but the judge also acknowledges it's a long shot that he's saying no.
So we'll talk about that after this break.
Stick around.
Welcome back.
Okay, our next story comes from the New York Times.
A federal judge on Wednesday temporarily barred the Trump administration from transferring 20 former death row inmates who were granted clemency by former President Joseph R. Biden Jr.,
to the country's most restrictive supermax prison facility in Colorado.
The ruling halted an effort by the Trump administration to follow through on promises
to make the conditions of the men's incarceration as punishing as possible
in response to the show of leniency by Mr. Biden.
It also set aside, for now, larger questions about the Trump administration's authority
to insert itself into procedures set by the Bureau of Prisons
to move specific prisoners within the system at will.
This is Judge Timothy R. Kelly, who was nominated by Mr. Trump.
He wrote that despite the heinous nature of the crimes the men were convicted of,
they appeared likely to succeed in showing that they were denied due process.
Quote, that is so because it is likely their redesignations were determined
before their process even began.
And that, despite their hearings and appeals,
they had no meaningful opportunity to challenge them.
He went on to say,
but the Constitution requires that whenever the government
seeks to deprive a person of liberty or property interest,
that the due process clause protects
whether that person is a notorious prisoner
or a law-bying citizen,
the process it provides cannot be a sham.
So basically, you made this decision.
There was no process,
due process in your decision,
and it's a sham.
And so he has issued a preliminary injunction stopping.
this. I like his calling out the fact that this applies equally to whatever litigant or defendant
is making the claim. Like, it doesn't matter if you're a good guy likely to win or a bad person
who's done regretful things. The whole point here is the process has to be the same for everyone.
It has to be legitimate, genuine, meaningful, and equal, right? Not just for one process
for people who the administration likes,
and a different one for people it doesn't.
All right, before the decision on Wednesday,
Judge Kelly had declined in May
to preemptively halt any transfer
to the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility
in Florence, Colorado,
also known as ADX, and, quote,
the Alcatraz of the Rockies.
At the time, he ruled that the prisoners
had not exhausted more routine options
for appealing their transfers
under the Bureau of Prison Standard Procedures,
But while the Trump administration previously committed to not moving any of the men until October 31st,
because of delays in processing, several of the men involved in the case said that they had failed to exhaust their appeals before the date that the government had set.
On October 28, Judge Kelly had ordered the government to provide the court with 48 hours written notice before attempting to move any of the men,
preserving their chance to lodge an emergency challenge after the deadline had passed.
Yep, and that was October 28th.
And then on February 4th, the Trump administration filed a notice in the lawsuit,
saying that it's going to go ahead and transfer almost all of the men who received commutations
no sooner than 10 days from the date of this filing.
Less than a month before leaving office, Biden commuted the sentences of 37 men
who had been convicted of murder and sentenced to death,
taking up the calls from human rights activists and nearly clearing death row.
Biden left office with just three federal inmates left facing execution,
making an exception for those whose cases involve terrorism and hate-motivated mass murder.
On Christmas Day in 2024, Trump protested that act on social media,
telling the men to go to hell.
The day he returned to office, he promptly signed an executive order directing the Attorney General
to categorically seek the death penalty, regardless of other factors,
in a number of cases, including any capital crime committed by an undocumented migrant.
The executive order also directed the Attorney General to see to it that the 37 men granted clemency
be, quote, imprisoned in conditions consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes and the threats they pose.
Lawyers representing the men have argued that despite the serious nature of their crimes,
under the Bureau's criteria, transfer to ADX is typically reserved for, quote,
inmates who have demonstrated an inability to function in a less restrictive environment without being a threat.
From 1988 and 2024, at least 18 other death row inmates have had their sentences reduced to life in prison,
and after being reevaluated and moved off of death row, none were sent to ADX,
according to a sworn statement filed in April.
Ah, so with that executive order on his first day in office,
he sort of signed away their due process for a consideration.
Now, lawyers for the men also said that the extremely restrictive conditions at ADX
complicate medical care, making it unsuitable for prisoners with serious health problems.
Several of the men involved in the case had been receiving treatment for conditions,
including various cancers, traumatic brain injuries, and chronic mental illness.
filings by the men's lawyers described prisoners being held behind two sets of doors in a single occupancy cell
smaller than an average parking space for 22 to 24 hours a day in a way that expert psychologist said was certain to exacerbate mental health issues.
The Bureau of Prisons conducted a review of the men after the commutation of their sentences last year and determined all could be housed at other high security facilities, but not ADX.
Yet in February, Pam Bondi ordered that those determinations be overruled.
Despite the ruling, Judge Kelly noted serious concerns about the strength of the men's case.
Though he blocked the transfer for the duration of the lawsuit, he described most of the other claims in the suit as, quote, long shots at best.
Quote, at least for now, they will remain serving life sentences for their heinous crimes where they are currently imprisoned, he wrote.
So I imagine what's going to happen here is that they'll go through some sort of a due process
and then perhaps have to file individual points of relief if they feel that the ADX is like cruel and unusual.
I'm not sure. We'll see. We'll follow it though.
Yeah. Yeah, for sure.
All right. We've got one more story and then listener questions, but we have to take another quick break.
So everybody stick around. We'll be right back.
All right, everybody, welcome back. We have one more story before we take your listener questions.
If you have a question, there's a link in the show notes you can click on to submit one.
Now, this story comes from the Times.
The former top deputy to Jack Smith, the special prosecutor who twice indicted Donald Trump,
is expected to announce on Wednesday.
This is last week, and he has announced, that he is running for Congress in Virginia,
pitching himself as the only Democrat who actually prosecuted the president.
J.P. Cooney, a veteran of the public corruption division in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington,
was fired in January 2025 after Trump purged all prosecutors associated with Jack Smith.
In an interview ahead of his announcement, Mr. Cooney said he decided to enter the political arena
because he wanted to push back against what he described as the democracy-threatening
lawlessness of the Trump administration.
Quote, never has there been a Congress that has been such a weak and ineffective check
on a president's abuses of power, Mr. Cooney said.
I lie awake every night worrying that Donald Trump does not have the best interests of our
country in mind.
And that's a seismic shift in American leader.
leadership and politics.
Now, Mr. Cooney said that the biggest catalyst for his decision to run was the killing of
Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis last month.
And what he described as despicable lies slandering him told by Christy Noem, the Homeland
Security Secretary, when she described Mr. Pretti as a domestic terrorist.
In that moment, Mr. Cooney said, I realized Americans like me need to stand up.
Mr. Cooney said he was prepared for an onslaught of Republican attacks questioning his record as a
nonpartisan federal prosecutor.
Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio, the Republican chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
who deposed Mr. Cooney last year in his investigation of the special counsel's office,
did not respond to a request for comment about his run.
Quote, my work speaks for itself, Mr. Cooney said, noting that he prosecuted not only Mr.
Trump, but also former Senator Robert Menendez, a Democrat of New Jersey,
who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for his role in an international bribery
scheme. Quote, when it comes to democracy in the rule of law, I want my children and my community to know
exactly where I stand. Yes, now, Jack Smith has made a statement about J.P. Cooney running for this Virginia
seat. He says, I've known JP for a long time, and I think the world of him as a person and as a public
servant. He's a man of integrity who has committed his career to upholding the rule of law, and he's the
model for who our country needs in public service. Mr. Cooney plans to run in a district that does not
technically exist yet. He will seek a House seat in the 7th Congressional District, which is currently
held by Representative Eugene Vindman, a Democrat. But Mr. Vindman's district, like those throughout the
Commonwealth, would change under a newly drawn political map that the Democrats in Virginia have
proposed, which still must survive legal challenges and be approved in an April ballot referendum.
That aggressive gerrymander, which could leave Republicans with just one seat in Virginia,
is part of the Democratic response to a bid by Mr. Trump and Republicans
to redraw congressional districts to gain an edge
in their battle to keep control of Congress in this year's midterm elections.
Yeah, for real. Hey, Supreme Court, Leonard Leo, Donald Trump, Republicans,
if you're going to say that political gerrymandering is okay, we're on board too.
If the Democrats proposed map in Virginia survives,
Mr. Vindman would move to an adjacent district
and a new more heavily democratically
leaning seventh congressional district,
a lobster-shaped area stretching from the Washington suburbs
to up north and west as far as the West Virginia border
and all the way south to the outskirts of Richmond
would not have an incumbent.
It's a brand new district.
Some Virginians have already begun to refer to the new district
as the lobster.
So that's where he's running.
It's in the seventh,
it will be the new seventh district.
And we just got word today
that the Virginians,
Supreme Court has approved the ballot referendum.
There was a challenge to it.
It had been blocked by a lower court in Virginia,
but the Virginia Supreme Court has overturned that
and approved this ballot initiative to go forward.
Yeah, and I hear the word in Virginia is this is going to be
a very crowded field running for this,
assuming the district stands, which I think it will.
Super blue seat, super blue seat.
Very blue.
So a lot of people are going to be taking a shot at that.
He will not be alone in running for that.
I want to go back really to one piece of this real quick, though, because I got confused about this when I read it the first time, just when it came, when I saw it on the website.
This comment that Cooney makes about his work.
So the quote from The Times is, my work speaks for itself, Mr. Cooney said, noting that he prosecuted not only Mr. Trump, but also former Senator Robert Menendez, a Democrat of New Jersey, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for his role in an international bribery scheme.
Okay, so I'm not alleging that Cooney said something inaccurate,
but the way the story is written, it really, this is not accurate.
So J.P. Cooney brought the original case against Menendez,
which had nothing to do with what he was later convicted for.
It was a case in which Menendez was alleged to have conspired with a doctor named Solomon Melgin.
They brought the case, the investigation in Miami,
because that's where Melgin lived and where his practice was and where all these offenses took place.
They did this long investigation.
They brought the case, and it was no true billed.
It's one of the only cases before all this Trump-era no-true billing that I'd ever heard about, before my own no-true bill that I'd ever heard about.
And by the way, when Andy refers to his own no-true bill, he's talking about when the Justice Department went after him to try to try to, Trump's first Justice Department to try to indict him for, was it a 1001 charge?
Well, we don't know.
We don't know.
He never told me.
But they know true billed you, and I think it was multiple grand juries.
I'm not sure if that was ever confirmed either.
Yeah, they couldn't get an indictment.
The grand jury actually expired and was not even seated anymore.
And then they brought it back months later.
But anyway, and the guy who did that was J.P. Cooney.
So full disclosure here, I'm not a fan of J.P. Cooney.
We have a lot of history.
But nevertheless, he went after Menendez.
for what he allegedly did with Meljohn, they tried to indict the case in Miami, failed.
So what did he do? He brought it back in New Jersey.
Brought the case in New Jersey. It was indicted. It went to trial. And I think hung jury or a mistrial.
They ultimately declared a mistrial because the jury could not agree on anything. And then DOJ decided not to retry the case.
So that very long effort resulted in nothing.
Years later, in 2023, Menendez was indicted for this other foreign involved conspiracy
where he had the gold bars in his house and all the payoff money and all this other stuff
with his new wife who received a Mercedes-Benz as payment from someone who's making a bribe,
all these things.
Totally different case.
That's the case that he was sentenced to 11 years on.
So the way it comes out in this paragraph, I think, is really...
Did J.P. Cooney prosecute that case with the gold bars?
No. No, because in 2023, Cooney is working for Jack Smith.
Right. Right. So...
Interesting.
You know, for him to throw out there, I prosecuted Menendez.
If that's the way the conversation went, maybe the reporter didn't get it quite right.
I don't know. But he's a very aggressive guy.
He was absolutely, you know, one.
When the whole thing fell apart with the Menendez and Melgin case, he left DOJ and came to the DC U.S. Attorney's Office as the head of their public integrity section.
One of the cases they were investigating at that time was mine.
And it had completely run aground because even the people in the office felt that it was entirely being politically demanded by above.
The two AUSAs who conducted the investigation, one of them quit the office over it, left D.O.J.
entirely. The other one quit the case, asked to be reassigned. And amid this wreckage,
J.P. Cooney was all in with Trump's desire to fire me. I don't know what that says about him.
All I know is I didn't appreciate it then. And I don't have much faith in him now. But
that's just my own personal experience. And, you know. Well, thanks for setting the record state.
We will say, I will say about J.P. Cooney is that he was one of the first people to push real hard,
even before Merrick Garland got there in 2021 to investigate the top of the coup,
meaning not just the boots on the ground.
He did.
He did.
The people in charge of the coup all the way up to and including Donald Trump.
And it was because of a read-in from J.P. Cooney right after Merritt Garland got there,
that in June of 2021, there was about a month and a half after Garland had been there,
that Garland put together what he called the Investigations Unit,
which was a very small group of people that were to charge.
with investigating the coup going all the way up to Donald Trump.
And at first they were focused on the Willard War Room
and the connections between the Oathkeepers and the proud boys
and like Bannon and all those people at the Willard War Room
and the White House going up to Trump.
They eventually abandoned that tack,
which was J.P. Cooney's original tack and went on the fraudulent elector scheme
and the other conspiracies that led to January 6th.
So that was the role J.P.
Cooney initially played at the Justice Department. Then Windham was put in charge after we finally
got a U.S. attorney at the end of 2021 in the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office, a man named Thomas Windham was put
in charge. And he, once Jack Smith was appointed a year later, Wyndham and Cooney and everybody
that had already been working on this were just simply brought on to Jack Smith's team. So that's
sort of a little bit of a background on that.
And then the Supreme Court shut it all down.
Yep.
Gone.
Dust in the wind.
Yeah.
All right.
It is time for listener questions.
We've got time for one or two.
So again, there's a link in the show notes.
If you have a question,
you can click on that link and send it in your questions to Andy and me.
What do we have today, Andy?
All right.
So I have one question and also one correction.
This we got from a couple of people.
I always like to put the corrections out there
because it drives me crazy thinking that we inadvertently
left something in the wrong direction.
So this one comes to us from Tammy.
Tammy says, and we also got one from Rick,
and there may have been others as well.
Tammy says, this is a comment, not a question.
The chief judge in Minnesota is Schiltz, not Schlitz.
Longtime listener, love all the insights.
get.
All right.
Okay.
If your name is Schilts and you live in the Midwest, your name is Schlitz.
I'm sorry.
It's just.
I don't think probably he's ever been called Schlitz.
Yeah, that's, yeah.
Was there ever a day in grade school that he wasn't called Schlitz?
I don't know.
But Tammy, you are correct.
It's Schilts with the L before the T.
Yeah.
All right.
My old eyes are going because I didn't even see it.
It wasn't like I saw it and knew it.
Got it wrong?
Not it.
Me neither.
Just ripped right past it.
I was like, oh, the pier.
Oh, keep going.
Yeah.
Yes.
Sorry.
So Tammy is correct.
Thank you.
Thank you, Tammy and Rick at all for that correction.
Shilts.
I will do my best to say that next time we talk about that judge.
Exactly.
All right.
So on to the question.
So this comes just from Susan.
Susan says, could it be possible that someone from Congress could subpoena an FBI agent who would testify
as to what they were asked to flag in regard to Trump's name in the Epstein files
when they were asked to flag items with his name.
Is it possible there is an FBI whistleblower who might be willing to testify to such?
Is it possible they could actually identify evidence that completely incriminates Trump?
Do we have to wait until after the midterms, which I pray will actually happen unhindered?
All right, Tammy, there's a lot in there.
And so I'm going to hit a couple of these, and then I'm going to go to my partner here to see what you think.
So the first one, can they subpoena an FBI agent?
Well, they typically would not.
This one never would because this is the kind of testimony they don't want.
Only the majority can issue a subpoena.
That's right.
That's right.
And, you know, that's, they want to hear from Bill Clinton, but pretty much no one else.
So, but as a policy matter, the FBI does not allow agents to testify in Congress.
To testify, you have to be at like a GS-15 or above.
And the DOJ insists on that as well, you don't, we don't put like line agents who are like working on the streets in front of Congress.
That's been a rule for years and years.
It's not a law, but it's a policy and practice.
And Congress has always respected it.
Now, could they subpoena an agent?
I suppose they could, but DOJ could then just turn around and say, we order you not to go.
Then what does Congress do?
They could vote to hold the agent in contempt and then make a referral of contempt.
over to the DOJ, who would probably do nothing because they ordered him not to go.
So that wouldn't really go anywhere.
The next piece, though, is kind of interesting.
Let's see.
Is it possible there's an FBI whistleblower who might be willing to testify to this activity
about how the Epstein files were reviewed?
That's absolutely possible.
That could happen any time.
An FBI person, agent, analyst, somebody out in the facility,
that that handles the records.
If they felt like they had seen something
that qualified as waste, fraud, or abuse,
they could make a whistleblower disclosure
either internally to, you know,
the FBI kind of process for doing that
or they could go straight to Congress
and give it to someone, you know, over there.
So that could happen.
Probably would have happened by now
if it was going to, but so far we have.
haven't seen that. Well, that end, we still don't have the majority. And so we don't get to
pick what witnesses we call. Here's what I would recommend Congress. First, flip Congress,
flip the house. I think we're set to do that in November. And once you have the committees,
and once you have subpoena power, I would bring in former FBI agents and analysts to testify.
or you can go to muller she wrote.com and read what I've written about sources, former FBI officials who reviewed the Epstein files, what they had to say, if you want to kind of get a little insight on what they might testify to. But that's what I would do. I would go and get the form. Like right now, we had, we talked about this last week, right? Like a bunch of former prosecutors and said to Congress, wrote him a memo on how.
to do a thorough investigation on DHS, ICE, Customs, Border Protection, Use of Force. And they said,
well, we're a bunch of former January 6 prosecutors. We suggest you get a bunch of former FBI analysts
and a bunch of former DHS lawyers and get them all together and have hearings. And so that's what
I would, that's what I would say. And honestly, I think that there are going to be of the thousand
plus, maybe 1,500 information management division FBI personnel that reviewed the file
the first time, I think there's going to be a lot of those that are former, now former FBI employees.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
People are constantly doing that.
And the DOJ can't block them.
That's right.
Once you're a former, you're a private citizen.
In fact, if you could definitely be subpoenaed and you would have to comply with the subpoena,
otherwise you risk being held in contempt.
So, yeah, that could definitely happen.
We'll see.
this Epstein thing is not going away anywhere.
No. And when we get the majority, I'm assuming that the Democrats will form a commission like the 9-11 commission or like the January 6th Select Committee to investigate these matters.
And I definitely think, as you say, Tammy or Susan, excuse me, that it would be very worthwhile to bring in some of these analysts, especially former ones so the DOJ can't block them to talk about what they saw when they reviewed the Epstein files and redacted Trump's name.
Yeah, yeah.
I heard an interesting fact the other day listening to an episode of the Daily,
which is the New York Times Daily podcast on, you know, some newsworthy issue every day.
And three reporters who have been covering the Epstein thing.
And one of them said the three million documents is so massive that you could,
the Times could assign 50 reporters, 5-0, to do nothing but read 500 pages each every day.
And it would still take like six months to get through all the documents.
It's like an enormous amount of work.
And I think there's no sign that it's going to decrease in interest.
So the media is going to keep hammering away at it and coming up with these revelations, you know, day after day, week after week.
So stick around, keep watching this space because you never know what's going to come out next.
Yeah.
And Jamie Raskin said when the Department of Justice provided the members of Congress and the Senate.
for computers to search the unredacted files. And these are just the three million they've
released. It's not the six million in total that exist. He said it would take, I think he did some
back of the nap kit, back of the envelope math. And he said it would be like, take like seven years
to go for us to go through these with four computers. And now we're learning that the DOJ is actually
tracking the search terms that these senators are using. And I find that is something that needs
to be investigated, whether it's awful or lawful, I think the takeaway, at least for me,
is that the next time any Republican brings up the toll records that Jack Smith collected.
I was just going to say that.
That it should, that they should respond with this.
You spied on us.
Jack Smith had the lawful right to do that.
You didn't inform us at all.
How can you be like, oh, you didn't tell them.
You didn't tell the judge when you got your subpoena that we were members of Congress,
did you?
Well, you didn't tell the members of Congress that you were tracking their search terms either.
It's an absolute violation of the speech and debate clause, I believe.
And it's not without precedent because years ago,
when the Senate was conducting that years and years long investigation into the CIA's
rendition and detention interrogation program,
they went through all these processes to build a new computer network at CIA that
congressional investigators could come over and use to be able to access the very
sensitive reports and all the documents behind that issue.
And about halfway through, they figured out that the CIA was tracking what the investigators
were looking at on CIA systems.
And it was a huge scandal.
And CIA had to apologize.
I made up all these excuses like we didn't mean to.
You know, the machines were just doing it on their own sort of thing.
And, you know, it was people were wildly offended about it, particularly up on the hill.
This is the exact same thing.
It's just a different executive branch agency doing the same exact thing.
Terrible.
But anyway.
Yeah.
And my first thought when I was comparing these two things was, well, these are DOJ computers.
But then I immediately reminded myself that the phones where the toll records were, you know, subpoenaed by Jack Smith, were government-issued phones.
These are all government devices.
So it's not like, you know, anyway.
I mean, can DOJ track what their own employees look at on their computer systems?
Absolutely all day long.
But can they do that to congressmen, to lawmakers who have from a separate branch conducting oversight, which is absolutely.
Absolutely in the wheelhouse of the speech and debate clause.
I mean, no.
Yeah, I think it's a separation of powers issue too.
I think it tramples all over checks and balances.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm not sure what the remedy would be for that other than politically and scandaly speaking.
But anyway, there we are.
Thank you all for your questions.
Again, there's link in the show notes if you want to submit one.
I hope everybody had a safe weekend.
I hope everybody took a little bit of time for themselves to
rest, unplug, relax, recharge so that we can get back at it tomorrow.
Before we get out of here, Andy, is there anything else you would like to impart upon the
unjustified community?
Just a happy belated Valentine's Day to one and all.
Hope you had an opportunity to enjoy a little time with someone you love, whoever that might be,
however that might be good for you.
If you didn't go out and do it today.
Yeah, and a lot of you might not know this if you didn't listen to the original
Mueller-she-wrote podcast, but Andrew McCabe was
Mr. February.
Heck yes. I forgot about that myself.
In our sexy justice calendar.
Oh boy.
That was something.
I looked like some sort of.
I remember you signed my calendar when I first met you.
You signed your.
I did.
And these were all pin up like 50s pin up girls, but like with bad photoshopped heads.
So you've got Andy McCabe sitting there to like a red negligee.
And he's like, how do you know I like red so much?
I was like, I just...
On my enormous, absurd head on top of some beautiful 50s pin up.
It's like a creature from a Frankenstein movie or something.
But anyway, all good fun.
The salad days when all we had to worry about was Russian interference.
Life was so simple then.
Oh my gosh.
My goodness.
All right, everybody.
We will see you next week on Unjustified.
Thank you so much for listening.
I'm Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
Unjustified is written and executive produced by Al.
Alison Gill with additional research and analysis by Andrew McCabe.
Sound design and editing is by Molly Hawke with art and web design by Joelle Reader at Moxie Design Studios.
The theme 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.
