Jack - Jack Smith’s Final Report Volume 1 (Part 2)
Episode Date: January 15, 2025Allison and Andy read the first volume of Jack Smith’s final report. Final Report on the Special Counsel's Investigations and Prosecutions Volume OneThe co-conspirators:1 - Rudy Giuliani 2 - John ...Eastman 3 - Sidney Powell4 - Jeffrey Clark5 - Kenneth Chesebro6 - Boris EpshteynQuestions for the pod Submit questions for the pod here https://formfacade.com/sm/PTk_BSogJ 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 knowRule 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
MSW Media.
Welcome to Jack, the podcast about all things special counsel.
This is the special audio bonus version where Andy and I now Andy has joined me since it's
not midnight on this second episode to read to you, present to
you the audio version of volume one of Jack Smith's final report. As we know, volume two
can't be released yet because the case against Nauda and Deo Lavera is still ongoing. And
so there's a hearing is supposed to be a hearing this Friday in Cannon's courtroom, although
I still don't understand why she's under any illusion
of having jurisdiction. But you know, Andy, you and I'll talk about that on the regular
episode of the Jack podcast, which will happen this Sunday. But here we go. We're going to
start where I left off last night in the wee hours of the morning. And we're at the top of page 23, which is section one, subsection E. It's called Mr.
Trump's Supporters Attack the United States Capitol. It says, Mr. Trump's efforts to
remain in power converged and culminated on January 6th, the day that Mr. Biden was to
be certified president. That day, Mr. Trump was scheduled to speak at the ellipse to a
crowd of supporters he had summoned to Washington with false claims of election fraud.
Around 1 a.m. on the morning of January 6, Mr. Trump tweeted, quote, if Vice President
Mike Pence comes through for us, we will win the presidency.
Many states want to decertify the mistake they made in certifying incorrect and even
fraudulent numbers in a process not
approved by their state legislatures which it must be, Mike can send it back."
Just before he left the White House to give his speech at the
ellipse, Mr. Trump phoned Mr. Pence one last time when Mr. Pence told Mr. Trump
that he planned to issue a public statement making clear that he lacked the
authority to do what
Mr. Trump wanted.
Mr. Trump expressed anger at him.
He then directed staffers to reinsert into his planned ellipse speech some language that
he had drafted earlier targeting Mr. Pence.
During his speech at the ellipse, Mr. Trump made one more attempt to retain power.
In his remarks, Mr. Trump
repeated many of the same lies he had been telling for months regarding dead voters,
non-citizen voters, and vote dumps. And he told newer ones, lies that targeted states
wanted to change their electors and that Mr. Pence had the authority and might be persuaded
to change the election results. The lie regarding Mr. Pence was particularly deceptive because Mr. Trump knew what his
supporters in the crowd did not, that Mr. Pence had just told him in no uncertain terms
that he would not do what Mr. Trump was demanding.
Mr. Trump told the crowd, a crowd of his supporters that he had remarked to advisors the night before was angry, that the election had been stolen and the country would no longer exist
if this purported crime were not stopped, and that the discovery of quote, fraud, licensed
them to quote, go by very different rules.
Although Mr. Trump at one point also told his supporters to, quote, peacefully and patriotically make their voices heard,
he used the word fight more than 10 times in the speech
before concluding by directing his supporters
to march to the Capitol to give allied members of Congress,
quote, the kind of pride and boldness they need
to take back our country.
He also told the angry crowd, quote,
if you don't fight like hell,
you're not going to have a country anymore.
Throughout the speech, Mr. Trump gave his supporters
false hope that through such action,
they could cause Mr. Pence to overturn the election results,
even improvising new lines directed at Mr. Pence
as the speech went on.
At Mr. Trump's urging, thousands of his supporters marched from the ellipse to the Capitol building.
There, Mr. Pence began the certification around 1 p.m.
Outside the building, the crowd swelled and broke through the barriers cordoning off the
grounds.
The crowd that attacked the Capitol was filled with Mr. Trump supporters,
as made clear by their Trump shirts, signs, and flags.
As described in detail below, the crowd violently attacked the law enforcement officers attempting to secure the building.
And here's where an audio version of the podcast doesn't quite do this report justice because there are, let's see, one, two, three, four, five, six photos of the attack on the Capitol.
And all of the photos are credited to the photographers.
So you really need to, if you're able to download the report just to see these photos,
they are harrowing pictures of the attack on the Capitol that day.
Yeah. And a righteous and necessary part of this historical record.
I agree. All right, we are now headed to page 29. It says, after his speech, Mr. Trump returned
to the White House and at around 1.30 p.m.,
settled in the dining room off the Oval Office.
There, he watched television news coverage of the events at the Capitol and reviewed
Twitter on his phone.
When the angry crowd advanced on the Capitol building and breached it around 2.13 p.m.,
forcing the Senate to recess, several of Mr. Trump's advisors rushed to the dining room
and told
him that a riot had started at the Capitol and that the rioters were in the building.
Over the course of the afternoon, they forcefully urged Mr. Trump to issue calming messages
to his supporters. Mr. Trump resisted, repeatedly remarking that the people at the Capitol were
angry because the election had been stolen. Just before 2 24 p.m. the news channel playing
on the television in the dining room where Mr. Trump was sitting aired an interview with an
individual marching from the ellipse to the Capitol who expressed his anger at Mr. Pence and stated
quote but I still believe President Trump has something else left unquote Then at 2 24 sitting alone, Mr. Trump issued a tweet
attacking Mr. Pence and fueling the riot. Quote, Mike Pence didn't have the
courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our
Constitution, giving states a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the
fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth."
Unquote. One minute later, the United States Secret Service was forced to evacuate Mr. Pence to a
secure location at the Capitol. When an advisor at the White House learned this, he rushed to the
dining room and informed Mr. Trump, who replied, so what? And Andy, that's a little bit of new information.
That detail that he saw one of his supporters
say that the president still has something left
and then tweeted attacking Mike Pence.
It's not something that we knew before,
that particular order of events.
Yeah, the order of the texts
based compared to what's happening in the Capitol is really an interesting
piece of this.
It goes on to say, the rioters at the Capitol had been motivated and directed by Mr. Trump,
and he continued to resist advisors' requests to direct them to leave.
Throughout the afternoon, crowds at the Capitol hunted for Mr. Pence and other lawmakers, with some chanting, hang Mike Pence. At 2 38 p.m. and 3 30 p.m., Mr. Trump issued
two tweets falsely suggesting that the events at the Capitol were, quote, peaceful and asking
individuals there, whom he termed we, to remain that way. Quote, please support our Capitol police and law enforcement.
They are truly on the side of our country.
Stay peaceful.
And quote, I am asking for everyone at the U.S. Capitol to remain peaceful.
No violence.
Remember, we are the party of law and order.
Respect the law and our great men and women in blue.
Thank you.
At 417 p.m., he tweeted a video message
in which he, for the first time,
asked his supporters to leave the Capitol,
while at the same time falsely claiming that, quote,
"'We had an election that was stolen from us,
a landslide election,'
and embracing the people who had attacked the Capitol,
telling them, quote, "'We love you.
You are very special.'" And at 6 o 1 p.m.
he tweeted quote these are the things and events that happen when a sacred
landslide election victory is so unceremoniously and viciously stripped
away from great Patriots who have been badly and unfairly treated for so long
go home with love and in peace. Remember this day forever."
At around the same time as he issued the 6.01 PM tweet,
Mr. Trump tried to reach two United States senators,
and he also directed co-conspirator one
to call the members of Congress
and attempt to enlist them
in further delay of the certification.
When Mr. Trump's White House counsel called him
at around 7 PM and asked him to withdraw any objection to the certification. When Mr. Trump's White House counsel called him at around 7 p.m. and asked him to withdraw any objection
to the certification, Mr. Trump refused.
Nonetheless, the certification resumed
late in the evening of January 6th,
and at 3.41 a.m. on January 7th,
Mr. Pence announced the certified results
of the 2020 presidential election in favor of Mr. Pence announced the certified results of the 2020 presidential election in favor
of Mr. Biden.
Yep.
And co-conspirator one there is Rudy.
Remember, he dialed the wrong senator?
Yes.
This report goes on to say, and now we're at the top of page 32, as he did in his 4
17 p.m. and 6 0 1 p.m. tweets on January 6th, Mr. Trump has provided additional evidence
of his intent by continuing to support and ally himself with the people who attack the
Capitol. He's called them patriots and hostages, reminisced about January 6th as a beautiful
day and championed the January 6th choir, a group of January 6th defendants who, because
of their dangerousness, are detained
at the District of Columbia jail.
So that ends section one.
And now we're going to go on to page 33, which is section two, and this section is entitled
The Law.
Based on above facts and after analyzing the relevant criminal statutes, the office sought
and a grand jury found probable cause for an indictment of Mr. Trump on four federal
charges.
Conspiring to obstruct the governmental function of selecting and certifying the President
of the United States in violation of 18 U.S. Code Section 371.
Obstructing and attempting to obstruct the official proceeding on January 6, 2021, in violation of 18 U.S. Code Section 1512C2,
conspiring to obstruct the official proceeding in violation of 18 U.S. Code Section 1512K,
and conspiring to violate the federal rights of citizens to vote and have their votes counted in violation of 18 U.S. Code Section 241.
Because of the unprecedented facts and the variety of legal issues that would be litigated
in this case, the Office was aware that the case would involve litigation risks, as would
any case of this scope and complexity.
However, after an exhaustive and detailed review of the law, the Office concluded that
the charges were well supported and would survive any legal challenges
Absent a change in the law as it existed at the time of indictment
little foreshadowing there as
Set forth in section 5d below
After the original indictment was returned the Supreme Court ruled in Trump United States that Mr. Trump had absolute immunity for core presidential conduct, enjoyed a rebuttable
presumption of immunity for other official presidential acts, and had no immunity for
unofficial conduct.
The Supreme Court's decision required the office to reanalyze the evidence it had collected.
The original indictment alleged that Mr. Trump, as the incumbent president, used all available
tools and powers, both private and official, to overturn the legitimate results of the
election despite notice, including from official advisors, that his fraud claims were false
and he had lost the election.
Given the Supreme Court's ruling, the office reevaluated the evidence
and assessed whether Mr. Trump's non-immune conduct,
either his private conduct as a candidate
or official conduct for which the office could rebut
the presumption of immunity, violated federal law.
The office concluded that it did.
After doing so, the office sought and a new grand jury issued a superseding indictment
with identical charges, but based only on conduct that was not immune because it was
either unofficial or any presumptive immunity could be rebutted.
This section reviews the federal laws violated by Mr. Trump's non-immunized conduct.
Yeah, and that's interesting there that the office concluded that he violated the law.
That's a big difference between this report and the Mueller report.
For sure.
Who refused to say you violated the law.
You and I talked about this, Andy.
We were both like, well, he's already accused him of violating the law.
He indicted him twice and had two trials on the calendar ready to go.
So that ship had sailed.
So right.
No reason to pull that punch here.
There's no there's no kind of courtesy of avoiding making the accusation
because it'll never have the chance to defend it in court.
He has defended it in court for the last year
or more and would have continued defending it had the Supreme Court not weighed in.
Yeah, agreed. All right, section A, subsection A in part two, the law, this is called conspiracy
to defraud the United States, Title 18, US Code Section 371. The defraud clause of the
general conspiracy statute makes it a crime, quote,
if two or more persons conspire to defraud the United States or any agency
thereof in any manner or for any purpose and one or more of such persons do any
act to affect the object of the conspiracy. The defraud clause applies
not just to schemes to cheat the government out of money or property,
but also to schemes, quote, to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful governmental
functions by deceit, craft, or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest, unquote.
Under long-standing established precedent, the government must prove the following elements
to establish a violation of the defraud clause.
One, the defendant entered into an agreement.
Two, to obstruct a lawful function of the government or an agency of the government.
Three, by deceitful or dishonest means.
And four, at least one overt act was taken in furtherance of that conspiracy.
The office concluded that Mr. Trump's conduct satisfied each of these established elements
of a defraud clause offense.
The process of selecting and certifying the president as described above and prescribed
by the constitution and federal law is plainly a lawful function of the federal government.
And then there's a quote, a citation here from Ray V. Blair, noting that the presidential
electors exercise a federal function.
And then there's a few other citations too.
This is well established law.
Indeed, Mr. Trump never challenged the indictment on that basis, though he filed more than a
hundred pages in support of dismissal motions.
As the Court of Appeals found in the context of the immunity litigation in this case, quote,
former President Trump's alleged efforts to remain in power despite losing the 2020 election
were, if proven, an unprecedented assault on the structure of our government.
Mr. Trump also sought to obstruct the certification.
His sole objective was to ensure that no one other than himself was certified as the president.
Nor is there any doubt that Mr. Trump conspired with others to achieve his goal,
and that at least one overt act was committed.
With three of the four elements of a Section 371 violation established,
the office anticipated that a central dispute at trial
would be whether Mr. Trump pursued his obstructive purpose
by, quote, deceit, craft, or trickery,
or at least by means that are dishonest.
The office concluded that the evidence established
beyond a reasonable doubt that he did.
The core of Mr. Trump's obstructive scheme was a false narrative of outcome-determinative
voter fraud, which he and his surrogates frequently repeated and widely disseminated over the
course of two months.
Crucially, not only was Mr. Trump's voter fraud narrative objectively false, he knew
that it was false.
Mr. Trump's false claims were repeatedly debunked, often directly to him, by the very people
best positioned to ascertain their truth.
Campaign personnel told Mr. Trump his claims were unfounded.
So did state officials, a White House official who engaged with Mr. Trump in his capacity
as a candidate, and even his own running mate.
For example, Mr. Trump's campaign manager informed him
that a claim that had been circulating,
that a substantial number of non-citizens
had voted in Arizona, was false.
State officials issued public statements
dispelling Mr. Trump's claims of widespread election fraud.
Georgia's Secretary of State refuted multiple false claims
of election fraud directly to Mr. Trump,
including the false allegation that 5,000 dead people
had voted in Georgia.
When Mr. Trump raised various fraud allegations
with Michigan's Senate Majority Leader,
he was told that he had lost
because he had underperformed with educated females.
Vice President Pence told Mr. Trump
that he had seen no evidence of outcome determinative fraud
in the election.
And tellingly, a senior advisor reiterated to Mr. Trump
that co-conspirator one would be unable to prove
his false fraud allegations in court,
to which Mr. Trump responded, quote, the details
don't matter.
Oh, the details don't matter, huh?
Actually they do.
Anyway, they do.
And we're going to talk about that was all of the different people in his sphere telling
him that he lost the election.
And this again goes toward that fourth standard, that fourth element that has to be met to prosecute under Title 18 of the US Code, Section
371. And we're going to continue with the stuff that he tried in court, but we have
to take a quick break. So everybody stick around. We'll be welcome back. We left off, let's see, at the bottom of page 36, we're
going to get into the court stuff now that we've established that everybody and their
mother told Donald Trump he lost the election. It says, and this is again, it goes toward
that deceit and dishonesty, the trickery, right? Courts in which Mr. Trump brought numerous lawsuits all rebuffed his
claims, which in some instances prompted him to issue public rebukes, acknowledging those
decisions. Still other federal and state officials, some appointed by Mr. Trump and others who
publicly supported and voted for him, publicly debunked
allegations of outcome-determinative voter fraud.
Mr. Trump did not reach out to any of those officials to ask relevant questions about
the election because he was not seeking honest answers.
This was a pattern revealed throughout the investigation.
Mr. Trump unquestioningly accepted at face value and amplified election fraud claims
that benefited his quest to retain power.
Conversely, he avoided consulting informed sources,
such as state election officials,
who possessed evidence that could debunk his claims.
The office concluded that this consistent pattern
would constitute powerful proof at trial
that Mr. Trump knew the claims
he was making were false. Mr. Trump's false claims were often divergent from
one day to the next and otherwise internally inconsistent. For example, in
Arizona, the conspirators started with the allegation that 36,000 non-citizens
voted in the state. Five days later, it was beyond credulity that a few hundred thousand
didn't vote. And three weeks later, the bare minimum was 40 or 50,000. The reality is about
250,000. And then days after that, the assertion was 32,000. And ultimately, the conspirators
landed back where they started at 36,000, a false figure that they never verified or corroborated.
And in Georgia, the conspirators initially suggested that a large enough number of dead voters had cast ballots
to overcome Mr. Trump's losing margin of about 12,000 voters.
A month later, the number was 10,315.
Three days after that, the assertion was close to 5,000 people. Then two days later,
the number bounced back to 10,315. Mr. Trump bears legal responsibility for each of these
false claims because they were made by him and his co-conspirators in furtherance of
the conspiracy that he led.
The office developed further evidence of Mr. Trump's knowledge that his claims were untrue from
witnesses who reported that he planned to use fraud
claims before the election even happened. For
instance, in advance of the election, advisors told
Mr. Trump that the election would be close and
that the initial returns might be misleading,
showing an early lead for Mr.
Trump that would diminish as mail-in ballots were
counted. In response, Mr. Trump suggested that if that prediction were true, which it ultimately
was, he would simply declare victory before all ballots were counted and a winner was
projected.
He also made repeated public statements in the lead-up to Election Day in which he sowed
public doubt in the election results, setting the stage for his later fraud claims.
And Mr. Trump made his first statement claiming fraud in the election only hours after the polls closed,
when no investigations had begun, much less concluded.
Mr. Trump's intent in spreading knowing falsehoods was further evidenced by statements he made to
those around him. In private, in contrast with his public
false claims, Mr. Trump made admissions that reflected his understanding that he
had lost. In a private moment, Mr. Trump confessed to his family members that
quote, it doesn't matter if you won or lost the election, you still have to
fight like hell. When President-elect Biden appeared on
television in November, Mr. Trump said to a staffer,
quote, can you believe I lost to this effing guy?
And when his own vice president declined to join the conspiracy, Mr. Trump berated him
for being, quote, too honest.
Because the evidence showed that Mr. Trump knew his claims were false, it amply satisfied
the mens rea standard for Section 371 charge, which would be satisfied by evidence that
Mr. Trump either knew his fraud claims are false or that he acted with deliberate disregard for their truth or falsity.
The concept of deliberate disregard, sometimes referred to as
reckless disregard or reckless or deliberate indifference, has deep roots in the law of fraud.
They go on to cite a case that said,
whether the party thus misrepresenting a material fact
knew it to be false, or made the assertion
without knowing whether it were true or false,
is wholly immaterial.
For the affirmation of what one does not know
or believe to be true is equally in morals and law as unjustifiable
as the affirmation of what is known to be positively false.
That concept is reflected in case law
and jury instructions for the District of Columbia,
as well as precedent from every other circuit.
Here, the evidence showed that Mr. Trump decided,
even before the election, that he would allege
outcome-determinative fraud, whether it occurred or not, if he were not declared the winner,
and he adhered to that plan, repeating false claims that he knew to be untrue.
Yeah, and I remember you and I talking about that mens rea standard and how that willful blindness is, meets that standard just as much as knowing
falsity, you know?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Like, knowing it's true is one thing, saying something, knowing that you don't know what
you're saying is true, that's also false, right?
Right.
Putting your fingers in your ears and going, la la la la. Exactly. Um, reminds me of those two reports he paid $1.5 million for and then ignored.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On voter fraud. It goes on here, uh, by the way, now we're at, uh, just about the bottom
of page 40. Although Mr. Trump's conduct fell comfortably within the established elements
of a defraud clause offense, the office noted that the Supreme Court
has in several recent decisions limited
the reach of other federal fraud and obstruction statutes.
There is a Ciminelli v. United States
that says reversing conviction of construction contractor
for wire fraud for scheming with public officials
to tailor bid requirements for government contracts to favor himself because the government did not prove the defendant deprived the victim
of a traditional property interest. And then Kelly v. United States, reversing convictions
for wire fraud and federal program fraud, where defendants aimed to inflict political
retribution on the mayor by closing lanes of a bridge that served
the mayor's city because the object of the scheme was not to obtain money or
property. There's several other Supreme Court hits here talking about how it's
restricted to money and property, right? And it goes on to say given these
decisions restricting the reach of other fraud and corruption statutes
The office considered whether the Supreme Court might also adopt a new construction of the defraud clause in section 371
Such as one that would for the first time
Limit it to money or property fraud and this is interesting because you and I talked about
Him anticipating the Fisher case on 1512 C2.
But here we're learning for the first time
that he was anticipating the Supreme Court
to limit the scope of 371.
Yeah, really interesting.
And that of course didn't happen,
which is I think a good thing,
but just shows you how careful they were
in every aspect of this.
Yeah, and it goes on to say,
the office concluded, however,
that the creation of such a new rule
would not be supported in the law,
given that the well-established elements of a defraud clause
offense are firmly grounded in the statute's text, history,
and longstanding judicial precedent.
I thought that about immunity, too.
For more than 100 years, the Supreme Court has
quote stated repeatedly that the fraud covered by the statute reaches any conspiracy for
the purpose of impairing, obstructing or defeating the lawful function of any department of government
and that this branch of liability is distinct from money or property limitations in other
areas of fraud law. And then there's a ton more of these case citations. I mean,
Glasser, Hammershmett, like there's a ton. Hass Henkel, right? And what I think is really
fascinating here is like, he actually tailored his indictment in case because he felt that
the Supreme Court could narrow 1512 C2. but when he thought about 371 and looked at some recent cases he
actually thought meh. We're good. We're good and he was right. That is pretty
baller. But you also have to wonder what if Trump had challenged it on that
grounds and that case gets in front of the Supreme Court. Now, knowing what we know now about the court's willingness
to heave all this sort of precedent out the window,
they might have gone that way for Trump on that issue as well.
They might have.
All right.
We're going to pick up at the bottom of page 42
after this next quick break.
So everybody, stick around.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back. Okay, we're at the bottom of page 42. Against the backdrop of that Supreme Court precedent, Congress has
reenacted and indeed expanded the scope of the defraud clause
reflecting congressional ratification of the defraud clause, reflecting
congressional ratification of the court's construction of it.
In 1948, for instance, when Congress codified the General Conspiracy Statute 18 U.S.C.
Section 371, where the defraud clause currently resides, it was already settled that defrauding
the United States by depriving it of its lawful government functions by dishonest means is a defrauding within the meaning of the defraud clause.
That's from Glasser.
Congress added the words, or any agency thereof in the defraud clause after the United States. The House report from the Judiciary Committee accompanying the pertinent bill
specifically stated that the amendment was designed, quote, to reflect the construction
placed upon the predecessor statute by the courts. And it has consistently been the department's
position in litigation that the defraud clause prescribes conspiracies to obstruct a lawful
function of the federal government through deceit.
And there's several cases cited here and it continues with,
Accordingly, the office concluded that Mr. Trump's conduct fell within the scope of Section 371,
given the statute's long-standing, congressionally ratified construction and its historic use by the Justice Department.
Well, he would have been ready to go to court
if they tried to narrow that statute.
All right, we're at the top of page 44.
The office also recognized various,
they're limiting principles in the application
of Section 371 that separate Mr. Trump's conduct
from more hardscrabble
politics. A defraud clause violation, as honed by years of judicial decisions, including
repeated applications by the Supreme Court, requires not only an agreement among co-conspirators,
but identification of a specific function of the federal government to the intent to
obstruct that function through deceit and an overt act.
And then there's more case citations and he explains first a defraud clause conspiracy must be targeted
at a lawful function of the United States or an agency thereof. And to quote Haldeman
from 1976, the unlawful agreement to attempt to use the CIA to interfere
with the investigation of the Watergate break-in was thus fairly charged in count one of the
indictment as one of the means by which the defendants intended to accomplish one of the
principal objects of their conspiracy defrauding the United States of its rights to have its
officials and agencies transact their business honestly and partially
and free from corruption or undue influence or obstruction.
In contrast, a conspiracy targeted at a private party
or at a state or local government does not suffice,
even if the entity receives federal funds
or serves as an intermediary performing official functions
on behalf of the federal government.
Second, obstruction of the government function
must be quote, a purpose or object of the conspiracy
and not merely a foreseeable consequence
of the conspiratorial scheme, right?
So delaying Congress from certifying the vote
had to be the goal, not a byproduct of some other crime.
That's right. Which is really interesting. Thus, for example, financial crimes do not automatically
become federal conspiracies to defraud the IRS simply because the crime may have foreseeable
tax implications. And this requirement means that the conspiracy must be aimed at defeating
and obstructing the government function rather than simply participating in it.
And third, the defraud clause is limited only to wrongs done by deceit, craft, or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest.
Fourth, the overt act requirement provides another limitation, the function of which, quote, is to manifest that the conspiracy is at work
and is neither a project still resting solely
in the minds of the conspirators,
nor a fully completed operation no longer in existence.
And then case law, case law, case law,
the office was prepared to prove the materiality
of Mr. Trump's deceptive statements
and to offer a materiality instruction as
another limitation on the scope of 371. Under that limitation, even conspirators
who make knowingly false statements with an obstructive intent will not violate
the defraud clause unless their statements are material. So now he's
getting into the materiality of what Trump said. All of these requirements for establishing a conspiracy
to defraud under Section 371 taken collectively
ensure that common political conduct or political speech
does not fall within the scope of the defraud clause.
The evidence collected during the investigation
met these requirements as to Mr. Trump's conduct.
That's so fascinating, because I know later on in this report, he gets into why he didn't
charge insurrection. And a piece of that is because the delay of Congress would have been
a consequence of inciting insurrection and 371 wouldn't apply in that case. And then also, they planned on proving the requirements for establishing this conspiracy
under this law.
Also protect against Trump saying, this is my political speech.
And that's all very important and why they felt they couldn't win a prosecution on 2383,
which is inciting an insurrection.
Got it.
Okay, so we move on now to subsection B, which is titled, Obstruction and Conspiracy to Obstruct
18 United States Code Sections 1512K and C2.
The federal statute prohibiting obstruction of an official proceeding makes
it a crime to quote corruptly alter, destroy, mutilate, or conceal a record, document, or
other object or attempt to do so with the intent to impair the object's integrity or
availability for use in an official proceeding or
otherwise obstruct influence or impede any official proceeding or attempt to do so a
Separate provision defines the term official proceeding to include quote a proceeding before the Congress in Fisher versus United States
Decided during the pendency of Mr. Trump's immunity appeal, the Supreme Court clarified the scope of an obstruction offense under section 1512 C2, holding
that the statute applies only when a defendant impairs or
attempts to impair, quote, the availability or integrity for
use in an official proceeding of records, documents, objects, or other
things used in the proceeding. In language that applies directly to the
allegations in the superseding indictment, the Supreme Court explained
that section 1512 C2's criminal prohibition includes, quote, creating false
evidence. Before seeking the original indictment,
which like the superseding indictment,
alleged that one component of Mr. Trump's
and his co-conspirators obstruction
involved replacing valid elector certificates
from the contested states with false ones
they had manufactured.
The office anticipated the possibility
of such a result in Fisher and
confirmed that the evidence would prove Mr. Trump's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt even under a narrow
interpretation of section 1512 C2. I guess we got that prediction, right?
We did. I mean, he saw stuff coming we didn't think about.
That's for sure. That's for sure. Fair.
Okay. In constructing section 1512 C2 to reach impairing or attempting to impair the integrity or availability of records, documents or other objects through quote, creating false evidence.
The Supreme Court cited United States v. Reich, in which a defendant was convicted under 1512 C2
after he forged a court order
and sent it to an opposing party
intending to cause that party
to withdraw a mandamus petition,
then pending before an appellate court.
Just as the defendant in Reich violated 1512 C2 by, quote,
injecting a false order into an ongoing litigation to which
he was a party. The evidence showed that co-conspirators created fraudulent electoral certificates
that they intended to introduce into the congressional certification proceeding on January 6th to
obstruct it.
Yeah. I mean, that's to the letter of the law. Yeah. So
again not surprised he didn't foresee that. It goes on here we're now at page
47. The office was also prepared to prove that Mr. Trump willfully caused
his supporters to obstruct an attempt to obstruct the proceeding by summoning
them to DC and then directing them to march on the Capitol to cause the vice
president and legislators to reject the legitimate certificates and instead rely on
the fraudulent electoral certificates.
And then he cites some case law here that says making a defendant criminally liable
for willfully causing an act to be done, which if directly performed by him or another would
be a federal offense, and that's
HESA, and upholding a conviction for willfully causing a violation of 1001, which is, you
know, making false statements.
The Supreme Court's opinion in Fisher therefore did not undermine the viability of the Section
1512 counts.
Much of the evidence that supports the Section 371 conspiracy to defraud likewise proves
that Mr. Trump and his co-conspirators violated 1512K and 1512C2 to demonstrate a violation
of Section 1512C2 following Fisher.
The government must prove, one, the defendant obstructed, influenced, or impeded an official
proceeding or attempted to do so. Two, in the course of doing so, the defendant committed or attempted to commit an act that
impaired the integrity or rendered unavailable records, documents, objects, or other things
for use in an official proceeding. Three, the defendant intended to impair the integrity of
or render unavailable such records, documents, objects, or other things for use
in an official proceeding and for the defendant acted corruptly. Mr. Trump's conduct establishes
each of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt. That is really straightforward. That
is so much more straightforward than the Mueller report. The congressional certification proceeding
was an official proceeding for purposes of
Section 1512, as every district court judge in the District of Columbia to have considered
this question has concluded, and then case law, case law, case law, proving that point.
The evidence described above supporting the Section 371 charge also establishes Mr. Trump's
knowingly obstructive conduct, and as described described above Mr. Trump willfully caused others to attempt to obstruct the certification proceeding on January 6th
Finally the government was prepared to prove Mr. Trump's corrupt intent under any definition
Beyond a reasonable doubt to act corruptly means one acting dishonestly to
intending the use of unlawful means, three,
violating a legal duty or causing or seeking to cause someone else to violate
a legal duty, or four, seeking an unlawful or improper benefit or advantage. Acting
corruptly also means acting with consciousness of wrongdoing. And then you
have a bunch of sites here.
Mr. Trump and co-conspirators
use deceptive and dishonest means.
He intended the use of independently criminal means
to obstruct the congressional certification proceeding.
He and co-conspirators plainly sought
to cause state and federal officials
to violate a legal duty.
And Mr. Trump acted with an intent to procure an unlawful benefit either for oneself or
for some other person.
And that's from Fisher.
Most basically, Mr. Trump sought unlawfully to secure a professional advantage, the presidency,
to which he was not lawfully entitled.
Yep, that's a thing.
The presidency is a thing.
Yeah, that is a benefit.
Yep, yep.
It conveys the benefit of immunity apparently.
And that a lot of the January 6 boots on the ground guys
were like, I didn't get anything out of it.
So I couldn't have acted.
That was like their thing.
It was like, well, there's no way Trump can argue that.
Of course they lost that argument too. But all right, we'll
come back and we'll talk about 18 US code 241. But we're going to take one more quick
break. Everybody stick around. We'll be right back.
Hey, everybody. Welcome back. We are now on page 49, subsection C, conspiracy against
rights 18 US code 241. This is one of the more fascinating charges, I think. It says
section 241 makes it unlawful for two or more persons to conspire to injure, oppress, threaten
or intimidate any person in any state, territory, Commonwealth, possession, or district in
the free exercise or enjoyment of any
right or privilege secured to him by the
Constitution or the laws of the United
States. A violation of Section 241
requires proof of three elements. One,
Mr. Trump entered into a conspiracy. Two,
to willfully injure, oppress, threaten, or
intimidate a person in the United States.
Three, in the exercise or enjoyment of a right secured by the constitution or federal law.
Basically repeating the law, just putting Mr. Trump's name in the beginning of it.
Right.
Very helpful.
Yep.
Mr. Trump's conduct meets each element.
Again, I love this straightforward no BS here.
The right to vote for president based on the determination by state legislatures to appoint electors based on their constituents votes is fundamental. And that's
Bush v Gore, Burdick v Tekushi, and United States v Robinson. There's a lot of case citation here.
It is a right rooted in the principles of accountability to and consent by the governed, which has
distinguished this nation from its founding. As the Supreme Court has recognized, quote,
the right to vote freely for the candidate of one's choice is of the essence of a democratic
society and any restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government.
And that's Reynolds v. Sims. Another, Westbury v.
Sanders says, no right is more precious in a free country than that of having a
voice in the election of those who make the laws under which as good citizens
we must live. Other rights, even the most basic or illusory if the right to vote is
undermined and I think that's why we hear so often. The, the, the, the, like voting is the right that unlocks all other rights.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Mr.
Trump acknowledged that voting in a presidential election is a fundamental
right under the constitution.
Indeed, given that all states have made the popular vote an integral
means of appointing electors,
the right to vote in a presidential election is among the most precious federal rights protected by the Constitution.
And then we have cites to United States v. Classic,
when a state makes a primary election an integral part of the procedure for the popular choice of congressmen,
it becomes a right established and guaranteed by the Constitution. Also Trump v Anderson noting the uniquely important
national interest in a presidential election because the president
represents all the voters in the nation. They go on to say, this history of the
section 241 offense with which Mr. Trump was charged, along with the court's
universal and longstanding recognition
of the voting rights protected by that statute,
confirm that protecting the right to vote
is critical to the existence of the right.
Section 241's predecessor statute was passed
as a part of the Enforcement Act of 1870,
a Reconstruction-era law to address the, quote,
continued denial of rights to black citizens, quote,
sometimes accompanied by violent assaults.
That act sought to combat widespread anti-Reconstruction
violence, which included acts of terror aimed at disenfranchising
black voters.
The same year as the act's passage,
Congress established the US Department of Justice,
and the department zealously pursued its mission
to enforce voting rights in the Reconstruction era.
Through the application and interpretation of Section 241
and its predecessor statute,
courts have repeatedly underscored the importance
of the right to vote.
Courts have held that the right encompasses the ability to cast a vote.
Ex parte Yarborough, they said, protecting a right of an emancipated person to vote and
to have that vote counted.
And US versus Mosley, they said, we regard it as equally unquestionable that the right
to have one's vote counted is as open to protectionionable that the right to have one's vote counted
is as open to protection by Congress as the right to put a ballot in a box.
They further confirmed that one's right to vote cannot lawfully be denied, destroyed,
or diluted.
See classic holding that section 241 predecessor statute applied to conspiracies to prevent
the official counting
of ballots in a primary election. And then there's several other sites here to other
kind of fundamental voting rights cases.
Mm hmm. Yep. And it goes on to say, and by the way, we're now on page 52, Mr. Trump and
co-conspirators sought to deprive, that, injure or oppress, citizens of their constitutional
right to have their presidential election votes counted. The word injure or oppress
in section 241 are not used in any technical sense, but cover a variety of conduct intended
to prevent, harm, inhibit, hinder, frustrate, obstruct, or interfere with the free exercise
and enjoyment of a right. And there's a couple more case citations talking about the definition of those two words, injure
and oppress.
Although they were not in a back room altering vote tallies in the local election or stuffing
falsified ballots into ballot boxes, as alleged in prior cases charged under this statute,
Mr. Trump and his co-conspirators nonetheless sought the same result to effectively cast aside legitimate votes in a manner that would
have deprived citizens of their right to vote and have their votes counted. As
co-conspirator one, Rudy, admitted their primary objective was to quote just
flat-out change the vote, deduct that number of votes from the, you know,
declare those votes, 300,000 votes in Philadelphia, illegal and unlawful, and reduce the number by 300,000."
Pretty straightforward.
Mr. Trump attempted to carry out this objective in multiple ways.
He urged state officials to disregard the legitimate majority of votes for Mr. Biden
and pressured and threatened Georgia's Secretary of State to find more than 11,000
votes to dilute Mr. Biden's vote count in the state.
And he urged Mr. Pence to discard the legitimate electoral certificates that reflected millions
of citizens' votes in the targeted states.
The evidence collected shows that Mr. Trump targeted this voting right with precision. He centered his false claims of election fraud on select states or cities and in
counties within those states with large numbers of voters who had not chosen to
reelect him.
And now we go to subsection D, which is titled defenses.
Before presenting the original indictment to the grand jury,
the office considered Mr. Trump's potential defenses
to these charges, including a good faith defense,
an advice of counsel defense, and constitutional defenses.
The office concluded that each of these defenses
was legally or factually flawed and thus would not prevail.
First, it was expected that Mr. Trump would argue
that he had acted in good faith when he sought
to stop the transfer of presidential power
because he genuinely believed that outcome-determinative
fraud had undermined the election's integrity
and caused him to lose.
As set forth above in Section 2A,
the office developed strong proof that Mr. Trump knew
that his election fraud claims were false.
For example, Mr. Trump made persistent claims of a large number of dead voters in Georgia,
including in his speech at the Ellipse on January 6th, even though his senior campaign
advisor and Georgia Secretary of State had told him that the claims were untrue. He spread lies, including in his speech at the ellipse of sinister,
fraudulent quote vote dumps in Michigan, even after Michigan's state, sorry, Senate
majority leader told him that nothing suspicious had occurred. And Mr. Trump
repeatedly made provably false allegations about fraud in
Pennsylvania, despite having been told by the chairman of the
state Republican Party that the vote count was occurring as
expected. Even if Mr.
Trump maintained that he sincerely believed that he had won
the election, a conclusion unsupported by the evidence
collected in the investigation, it would not provide a defense to Section 371 charge.
A defendant may not use deceit to obstruct a government function even if he believes the function itself to be unconstitutional,
because, quote, a claim of unconstitutionality will not be heard to excuse a voluntary, deliberate, and calculated course of fraud and deceit."
And that is from Dennis.
Quote, one who elects such a course as a means of self-help may not escape the consequences
by urging that his conduct be excused because of the statute which he sought to evade is
unconstitutional.
There are appropriate and inappropriate ways
to challenge perceived illegalities.
Just as the president of a company may be guilty of fraud
for using knowingly false statements of fact
to defraud investors, even if he subjectively believes
that his company will eventually succeed.
Mr. Trump could be convicted of using deceit to obstruct the government
function by which the results of the presidential election are collected, counted, and certified,
even if he established that he subjectively believed that he had reason to do so because
of his claims that the election was rigged.
Interesting. It goes on to say, it bears emphasis that Mr. Trump's knowing deceit was pervasive
throughout the charged conspiracies.
This was not a case in which Mr. Trump merely misstated a factor two in a handful of isolated
incidences.
On a repeated basis, he and his co-conspirators used specific and knowingly false claims of
election fraud
in his calls and meetings with state officials in an effort to induce them to overturn the
results of their elections in the states. To his own vice president to induce Mr. Pence
to violate his duty during the congressional certification proceeding and on January 6th
as a call to action to the angry crowd he had gathered at the ellipse and sent to the Capitol to disrupt the certification proceeding. Mr. Trump and co-conspirators used other forms
of deceit as well, including when they falsely represented that the fraudulent electoral
votes would be used only if Mr. Trump prevailed in pending contests in their states, and when
they caused the fraudulent electors to falsely swear that
they were duly certified and send those false certifications to Congress.
Regardless of any claim that Mr. Trump subjectively believed the outcome of the election was unfair
or rigged, the office concluded that these knowingly deceitful statements and acts would
overcome any good faith defense.
The office also expected that Mr. Trump might claim
that his consultation with attorneys,
several of whom were co-conspirators,
should negate the finding that he acted
with a criminal state of mind.
In pretrial litigation,
the court granted the government's motion
that Mr. Trump should be required to declare
whether he intended to employ such a defense,
and if
he did, to produce the discovery required by that attendant waiver of Mr. Trump's attorney
client privilege. A defendant's claim that he relied in good faith on his attorney's
advice is, quote, not an affirmative defense that defeats liability, even if the jury accepts
the government's allegations as true, but functions instead as,
quote, evidence that, if believed, can raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jurors
about whether the government has proved the required element of the offense that the defendant had an
unlawful intent. Under DC Circuit law, an advice of counsel defense consists of two elements. Number one, the defendant relied in good faith
on the counsel's advice
that his course of conduct was legal.
And two, made full disclosure of all material facts
to his attorney before receiving the advice at issue.
And there's where you have the problem, right?
That's where you-
Yeah, right, when your attorney is saying
in the meetings with other people that this is illegal.
What we're doing would not pass constitutional muster.
And this is a really fascinating part of this too, because we kind of figured the, I really
truly believed it was rigged defense was already built there. But the advice of counsel when
you and I talked about when it came up in those pre-trial motions and Judge Chuckin was like, yeah, no, you're going to have to tell us ahead of time because
if you remember, if you claim advice of counsel as a defense, then that waives all of your
attorney client privilege with that particular co-conspirator, I mean lawyer.
And so you then have to hand over all of your communications.
And so Trump tried to do this thing where he was like, it's not a full advice of counsel defense. It's kind of a new one that I've made up where I get
to use it, but I don't have to give you any of the communications. Do you remember that?
Not in Judge Chuck's courtroom. It's not.
She was like, excuse me?
And the government's like, Hey, if you're going to do that, you got to tell us because
we got some work to do. It's a lot of things we'll have to look into.
It's a lot more discovery we'll have to look into. It's a lot more discovery.
We got to, yeah.
Okay.
They go on to say the office concluded that if Mr.
Trump chose to raise such a defense, it would fail because an advice of counsel
defense is not available, quote, where counsel acts as an accomplice to the crime.
Oops.
That certainly makes sense.
The evidence showed that the central attorneys on whom
Mr. Trump may have relied for such a defense, such as co-conspirator one, Rudy, co-conspirator
two, John Eastman, were quote, partners in adventure with the result that any advice
of counsel defense necessarily would fail. And then there are several sites here.
They go on to say,
Co-Conspirator One assisted Mr. Trump
in using knowingly false claims of election fraud
in furtherance of charged conspiracies.
At press conferences,
at hearings before legislatures in the targeted states,
and directly with officials in the targeted states,
Co-Conspirator One made a wide range of specific,
though ever changing,
false claims of election fraud.
Co-conspirator one continued to do so after his lies were publicly or directly debunked.
Co-conspirator one's involvement spanned from his insistence that Mr. Trump declare victory
on election night to the voicemails that co-conspirator one left for senators on the night of January
6, using false claims of election fraud to ask that the legislators further delay the
certification.
Co-conspirator two, John Eastman, was instrumental in Mr. Trump's efforts to organize his electors
to cast fraudulent votes and send them to the vice president, and then to pressure the vice
president to use the fraudulent electoral certificates to overturn the election results.
Throughout his involvement in Mr. Trump's conspiracies, co-conspirator two conceded
privately to other attorneys, both private attorneys and those responsible for advising
Mr. Trump and the vice President that his plans violated federal
law and would not withstand scrutiny in court. Sorry, I can't read that without laughing.
It's so absurd.
Well, that was the best, right? Where he's like, well, you know, yeah, probably seven
to nine zero.
We go on to say here on page 58.more, Mr. Trump could not have succeeded in showing
that he relied in good faith on legal advice from these attorneys. The evidence showed
that Mr. Trump was not looking to co-conspirator one or co-conspirator two for legal advice.
Instead, Mr. Trump was the head of a conspiracy who sought legal cover from his co-conspirators.
As co-conspirator one acted repeatedly in furtherance of the conspiracies,
multiple advisors to Mr. Trump warned him that Rudy would not successfully challenge
the election results and was not acting in Mr. Trump's best interest. Mr. Trump ignored
them all because he was not relying on co-conspirator one as an attorney. Similarly, co-conspirator
two Eastman's willingness to advocate for actions that he knew and even
privately conceded were unlawful demonstrates that both he and Mr. Trump understood his
role was not that of an attorney offering legal advice on which Mr. Trump was acting.
For instance, in a lawsuit in Georgia, co-conspirator to filed a case with a false certification by Mr. Trump, having written
to other attorneys in his email that both he and Mr. Trump knew that some of the allegations
incorporated in the filing were inaccurate.
And co-conspirator to his decision to advocate to the vice president's counsel and chief
of staff on January 5th, that the vice president should unlawfully reject the legitimate electoral certificates, an act that co-conspirator two
had previously recognized was not supported by the constitution or federal law, was a
sharp reversal from his position just one day earlier and happened only because Mr.
Trump had made clear that it was his preferred strategy, which was to just reject all the electors,
not replace them with the fraudulent ones. And I think that that's really fascinating
because I remember when he filed that Georgia lawsuit and in an email, remember we spent
forever trying to pry John Eastman emails away from Chapman University, very public
attempt to do so by the January 6th committee, but Merrick Garland had him
well before that. And that email, he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, those numbers aren't accurate.
But then he filed-
They aren't, how shall I say, true.
Yeah. But then he filed that certification anyway, signed by Mr. Trump. The office was
otherwise confident that it would be able to demonstrate that with respect to all attorneys, Mr. Trump could not meet the elements of that defense,
such as the requirement that he make full disclosure to any attorney of all relevant
facts and then rely faithfully on their advice.
Finally, the office anticipated that Mr. Trump would claim that his conduct was protected
by the First Amendment. As the district court recognized, quote, the First Amendment embodies our profound national
commitment to the free exchange of ideas, and it bars the government from restricting
expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content.
And then there are some sites here.
At the same time, it is well established that
the First Amendment does not protect speech that is used as an instrument of a crime.
Quote, many long established criminal laws permissibly criminalize speech that is intended
to induce or commence illegal activities such as fraud, bribery,ury extortion threats incitement solicitation and blackmail.
Prosecutions for conspiring directly and aiding and abetting do not run afoul of the constitution when those offenses are carried out through speech.
And that's a site to Williams. Consistent with that precedent, the original and superseding indictments recognized that
Mr. Trump, quote, had a right, like every American, to speak publicly about the 2020
presidential election and even to claim falsely that there had been outcome determinative
fraud during the election and that he had won.
They charged Mr. Trump, however, with using knowingly false
statements to defeat a government function, injure the right to vote, and obstruct an
official proceeding. That is, he made, quote, dozens of specific claims that there had been
substantial fraud in certain states, such as that large numbers of dead and non-resident,
non-citizen, or otherwise ineligible voters
had cast ballots or that voting machines
had changed votes for the defendant to votes for Biden.
Those were factual claims that were verifiably false.
And Mr. Trump knew that they were false.
Mr. Trump then used those lies as the instruments
of his four criminal offenses because he used those knowing as the instruments of his four criminal offenses, because he used those
knowingly false statements regarding specific facts to commit the crimes charged in the
superseding indictment, and they were not protected by the First Amendment.
And then they cite to, I think it's Stevens, that said, including fraud and the list of
well-defined and narrowly limited classes
of speech, the prevention and punishment of which we have never been thought to raise
any constitutional problems. There's several other sites here.
Yeah. And it's interesting because I think you and I used the example, like I can go
outside and go on TV and point to my Mazda and say everyone look
at my Bentley and that's totally legal. But if I try to sell my Mazda as a Bentley to
someone, then I am committing fraud. So that's a crime. So that's not no longer free speech.
Right. You can, you know, I can say I don't like you, you're a bad person, but if I take that
statement five steps further and allege that you're a pedophile, like that's defamation.
Yeah.
Right?
So like it's not, there's all kinds of speech that's limited and those limitations don't
run afoul of the first amendment.
Yeah.
So the final paragraph here that we'll go over today, it says in pretrial motions, Mr. Trump moved to dismiss the original indictment based on the First Amendment. Yeah, so the final paragraph here that we'll go over today, it says, in pretrial motions,
Mr. Trump moved to dismiss the original indictment
based on the First Amendment.
The office filed an opposition brief
and the district court denied Trump's motion,
finding that the indictment, quote,
properly alleges defendant's statements
were made in furtherance of a criminal scheme.
As the court explained,
Mr. Trump was not being prosecuted
for his view on a political dispute, he was
being prosecuted for acts constituting criminal conspiracy and obstruction of the electoral
process and the fact that his alleged criminal conduct involved speech does not render the
indictment unconstitutional.
Because he was, quote, not being prosecuted simply for making false statements, but rather
for knowingly making false statements in furtherance of a criminal conspiracy and obstructing the electoral process,
there was no danger of a slippery slope in which inadvertent false statements alone are alleged to
be the basis of a criminal prosecution. So that is that subsection. The next one,
which starts on page 61, is other charges. And I can't
wait to get into this, but we're going to do it on the next episode, part three of the
audio version of Jack Smith's final report, volume one, on the January 6th prosecution
of Donald Trump. So thank you for listening. We're glad you're here. Andy, any thoughts
so far on what we went over today? We touched on what we thought was new. We touched on the idea that he was prepared for 371 to be gutted
or narrowed, I should say. When we talked about these three main defenses and how Jack
Smith was prepared to rebut those. Just a really fascinating report all around. But
again, the punches of this was a crime,
he committed a crime, he met all of the elements
of this crime, very, very different
from what we got out of the Mueller report.
Right, super clear, super direct writing,
and also it gives us a look inside the black box
that has been Jack Smith from the beginning of this.
You really get that view, as you were saying,
into what they were thinking, how they analyze the law, how they apply the facts
to it. And, and then how carefully they were trying to anticipate what Trump's moves would
be, what his responses would be, what his defenses would be. So it's, it's a, it's
an important document and a worthy read. It is really good work product.
Post-election, but here we are.
And just to say something on that before we get out of here.
A lot of folks, I know it's frustrating.
We feel defeated.
We feel like there was no accountability.
There wasn't any accountability here.
There won't be any accountability here.
And so a lot of folks are like, this report, who cares? Doesn't matter. It does. The truth matters. And this work product matters. And
so I appreciate you listening so that you can hear what Jack Smith had to say about this
investigation specifically. So appreciate you taking the time. And we'll see you on
the next episode, again, where we'll start on, let's see, what page are we on here? 61,
with other charges. Everybody, thanks. We'll see you next time. I'm Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.