Jack - Reading of The D.C. Indictment
Episode Date: August 6, 2023Allison and Andy read the entire D.C. indictment of Donald TrumpIN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v.DONALD J. TRUMP, Defendant. CRIMINAL NO.�...�GRAND JURY ORIGINAL VIOLATIONS: Count 1: 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Conspiracy to Defraud the United States) Count 2: 18 U.S.C. § 1512(k) (Conspiracy to Obstruct an Official Proceeding) Count 3: 18 U.S.C. §§ 1512(c)(2), 2 (Obstruction of and Attempt to Obstruct an Official Proceeding) Count 4: 18 U.S.C. § 241 (Conspiracy Against Rights) INDICTMENTThe Grand Jury charges that, at all times material to this Indictment, on or about the dates and at the approximate times stated below:https://www.justice.gov/storage/US_v_Trump_23_cr_257.pdf Â
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M.S.W. Media.
I signed in order appointing Jack Smith.
And nobody knows you.
And those who say Jack is a finesse.
Mr. Smith is a veteran career prosecutor.
What law have I grew?
The events leading up to and on January 6th.
Classified documents and other presidential records.
You understand what prison is? Send me to jail. You understand what prison is?
Send me to jail.
Send me to jail.
You understand what prison is?
Send me to jail.
Send me to jail.
Send me to jail.
Welcome to the Jack Podcast Reading of the indictment of Donald
John Trump by the Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith.
I'm Allison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
This indictment was issued on August 1, 2023 in the United States District Court for
the District of Columbia, United States of America versus Donald John Trump defendant.
Indicment.
The grand jury charges that at all times material to this indictment, honor about the dates and at the approximate time stated below.
Introduction.
The defendant, Donald J. Trump, was the 45th president of the United States
and a candidate for re-election in 2020.
The defendant lost the 2020 presidential election.
Despite having lost, the defendant was determined to remain in power.
So for more than two months following election day on November 3, 2020, the defendant spread
lies that there had been outcome-determinative fraud in the election and that he had actually
won.
These claims were false and the defendant knew they were false. But the defendant repeated and widely disseminated them anyway
to make his knowingly false claims appear legitimate,
create an intense national atmosphere of mistrust
and anger in a road public faith
in the administration of the election.
The defendant had a right like every American
to speak publicly about the election
and even to claim falsely that there had been outcome-determinative fraud during the election and that he had won.
He was also entitled to formally challenge the results of the election through lawful
and appropriate means, such as by seeking recounts or audits of the popular vote in states
or filing lawsuits, challenging ballots and procedures.
Indeed, in many cases, the defendant did pursue these methods of contesting the election results.
His efforts to change the outcome in any state through recounts, audits, or legal challenges
were uniformly unsuccessful. Shortly after election day, the defendant also pursued unlawful means of
discounting legitimate votes and subverting the election results. In doing so, the defendant
perpetrated three criminal conspiracies. A, a conspiracy to defraud the United States by using
dishonesty, fraud and deceit to impair, obstruct, and defeat the lawful federal government
function by which the results of the presidential election are collected, counted, and certified
by the federal government in violation of 18 USC Section 371.
B, a conspiracy to corruptly obstruct and impede the January 6 congressional proceeding,
at which the collected results of the presidential election are counted and certified, the certification
proceeding, in violation of 18 USC, section 1512K, and C, a conspiracy against the right
to vote and to have one's vote counted in violation of 18
USC section 241.
Each of these conspiracies, which built on the widespread mistrust the defendant was creating
through pervasive and destabilizing lies about election fraud, targeted a bedrock function
of the United States federal government, the nation's process of collecting, counting, and certifying
the results of the presidential election.
Quote the federal government function.
Close quote.
Count one, conspiracy to defraud the United States.
18 US code section 371.
The allegations contained in paragraphs one through four of this indictment are re-elected
and fully incorporated here by reference.
The conspiracy.
From on or about November 14, 2020, through on or about January 20, 2021, in the District
of Columbia and elsewhere, the defendant, Donald J. Trump, did knowingly combine, conspire, confederate, and agree with co-conspirators
known and unknown to the grand jury to defraud the United States by using dishonesty, fraud,
and deceit to impair, obstruct, and defeat the lawful federal government function by
which the results of the presidential election are collected, counted, and certified by the
federal government.
Purpose of the conspiracy. The purpose of the conspiracy was to overturn the
legitimate results of the 2020 presidential election by using knowingly false
claims of election fraud to obstruct the federal government function by which those
results are collected, counted, and certified. The defendant's co-conspirators,
the defendant and listed co-conspirators. The defendant enlisted co-conspirators
to assist him in his criminal efforts
to overturn the legitimate results
of the 2020 presidential election and retain power.
Among these were, A, co-conspirator one,
who we will now refer to as Rudy Giuliani,
an attorney who was willing to spread knowingly false claims and pursue
strategies that the defendant's 2020 re-election campaign attorneys would not.
B. Coken Spiritor 2, who we will now refer to as John Eastman, an attorney who devised
and attempted to implement a strategy to leverage the vice president's ceremonial role, overseeing
the certification proceeding to obstruct the
certification of a presidential election.
See, Coken Spiritor III, who we will now refer to as Sidney Powell, an attorney whose unfounded
claims of election fraud, the defendant privately acknowledged to others sounded, quote, crazy,
unquote, nonetheless, the defendant embraced and publicly amplified Powell's disinformation.
D. Coken Spiritor IV, who we will now refer to as Jeffrey Clark,
a Justice Department official who worked on civil matters and who, with the defendant,
attempted to use the Justice Department to open sham election crime investigations
and influence state legislatures with knowingly false claims
of election fraud.
E. Cokenspirator V, who we will now refer to as Kenneth Cheesebro, an attorney who assisted
in devising and attempting to implement a plan to submit fraudulent slates of presidential
electors to obstruct the certification proceeding.
And Cokenspirator VI, who we believe to be Boris Epstein, but since that has not been
confirmed, will continue to refer to them as Co-Conspirator 6, a political consultant
who helped implement a plan to submit fraudulent slates of presidential electors to obstruct
the certification proceeding.
The Federal Government Function. The Federal Government Fun, by which the results of the election for President of the United States
or collected, counted and certified, was established through the Constitution
and the Electoral Count Act, which we will now refer to as the ECA,
a federal law enacted in 1887.
The Constitution provided that individuals called electors select the president and that
each state determined for itself how to appoint the electors apportioned to it.
Through state laws, each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia choose to select
their electors based on the popular vote in the state.
After Election Day, the ECA required each state to formally determine or quote, ascertain, unquote,
the electors who would represent that state's voters by casting electoral votes on behalf
of the candidate who had won the popular vote and required the executive of each state
to certify to the federal government the identities of those electors.
Then on a date set by the ECA, each state's ascertained electors were required to meet
and collect the results of the presidential election, that is, to cast electoral votes
based on their state's popular vote, and to send their electoral votes along with the
state executive certification that they were the state's legitimate electors to the United
States Congress to be counted and certified in an official proceeding.
Finally, the Constitution and ECA required that on the 6th of January, following election day,
the Congress meet in a joint session for a certification proceeding,
presided over by the Vice President, as President of the Senate,
to count the electoral votes, resolve any objections,
and announce the result, thus certifying
the winner of the presidential election as President-elect.
This federal government function, from the point of ascertainment to the certification,
is foundational to the United States' democratic process, and until 2021 had operated in a peaceful
and orderly manner for more than 130 years.
Manner and Means. The defendant's conspiracy to impair, obstruct, and defeat the federal government function
through dishonesty, fraud, and deceit, included the following manner and means.
A. The defendant and co-conspirators used knowingly false claims of election fraud
to get state legislators and election officials to subvert the legitimate election results
and change the electoral votes for the defendant's opponent, Joseph R. Biden Jr.
to electoral votes for the defendant. That is, on the pretext of baseless fraud claims,
the defendant pushed officials in certain states to ignore the popular vote, disenfranchised millions of voters, dismiss legitimate electors, and ultimately
cause the ascertainment of and voting by illegitimate electors in favor of the defendant.
B. The defendant and co-conspirators organized fraudulent slates of electors in seven targeted states.
Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Attempting to mimic the procedures that the legitimate electors were supposed to follow
under the Constitution and other federal and state laws.
This included causing the fraudulent electors to meet on the day appointed by federal
law on which legitimate electors were to gather and cast their votes, cast fraudulent votes
for the defendant, and sign certificates falsely representing that they were legitimate electors.
Some fraudulent electors were tricked into participating based on the understanding that their
votes would only be used if the certification proceeding on January 6.
See.
The defendant and co-conspirators attended the meeting on January 6, and the defendant and co-conspir at the certification proceeding on January 6.
C. The defendant and co-conspirators attempted to use the power and authority of the Justice Department
to conduct sham election crime investigations and to send a letter to the targeted states
that falsely claimed that the Justice Department had identified significant concerns that may have
impacted the election outcome,
that sought to advance the defendant's fraudulent Elector Plan by using the Justice Department's authority
to falsely present the fraudulent electors as a valid alternative to the legitimate electors,
and that urged, on behalf of the Justice Department, the targeted state's legislatures to convene to create the opportunity to choose the fraudulent electors over the legitimate electors.
D. The defendant and co-conspirators attempted to enlist the vice president to use his
ceremonial role at the January 6th certification proceeding to fraudulently alter the election
results. First, using knowingly false claims of election fraud,
the defendant and co-conspirators attempted to convince the vice president
to use the defendant's fraudulent electors, reject legitimate electoral votes,
or send legitimate electoral votes to state legislatures for review rather than counting them.
When that failed, on the morning of January 6th,
the defendant and co-conspirators repeated knowingly false claims of election fraud to gathered supporters,
falsely told them that the vice president had the authority to and might alter the election
results and directed them to the Capitol to obstruct the certification proceeding and exert
pressure on the vice president to take the fraudulent actions he had previously refused.
And E, after it became public on the afternoon of January 6th that the vice president would not fraudulently alter the election results,
a large and angry crowd, including many individuals whom the defendant had deceived into believing the vice president could and might change the election results, violently attacked the Capitol and halted the
proceeding. As violence ensued, the defendant and co-conspirators exploited the disruption
by redoubling efforts to levy false claims of election fraud and convinced members of Congress
to further delay the certification based on those claims.
The defendant's knowledge of the falsity of his election fraud claims.
The defendant, his co-conspirators and their agents, made knowingly false claims
that there had been outcome-determinative fraud in the 2020 presidential election.
These prolific lies about election fraud included dozens of
specific claims that there had been substantial fraud in certain states, such as that large
numbers of dead, 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.
For that voting machines had changed votes for the defendant to votes for Biden. These claims were false, and the defendant knew that they were false.
In fact, the defendant was notified repeatedly that his claims were untrue, often by people
on whom he relied for candid advice on important matters, and who were best positioned to know
the facts.
And he deliberately disregarded the truth.
For instance, a, the defendant's vice president who personally stood to gain by remaining
in office as part of the defendant's ticket and whom the defendant asked to study fraud
allegations told the defendant that he had seen no evidence of outcome-determinated fraud.
B, the senior leaders of the Justice Department appointed by the defendant and responsible
for investigating credible allegations of election crimes told the defendant on multiple
occasions that various allegations fraud or unsupported.
C, the director of National Intelligence, the defendant's principal advisor on intelligence matters related to national security
Disabuse the defendant of the notion that the intelligence community's findings regarding foreign interference would change the outcome of the election
D
The Department of Homeland Security, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, quote, CESA,
cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency, quote, Sissa, whose existence the defendants signed into law to protect the nation's cybersecurity infrastructure from attack, joined
an official multi-agency statement that there was no evidence any voting system had been compromised,
and that declared the 2020 election, quote, the most secure in American history.
Days later, after the CISID director,
whom the defendant had appointed,
announced publicly that election security experts
were in agreement that the claims of computer-based election
fraud were unsubstantiated, the defendant fired him.
E. Senior White House attorneys selected by the defendant
to provide him candid advice informed the defendant that there was no evidence of outcome determinative election fraud
and told him that his presidency would end on an auguration day in 2021.
F. Senior staffers on the defendant's 2020 re-election campaign, quote, defendants campaign, or quote, campaign, whose sole mission
was the defendant's re-election told the defendant on November 7, 2020 that he had only a
five to 10% chance of prevailing in the election, and that success was contingent on the defendant
winning ongoing vote counts or litigation in Arizona, Georgia, and Wisconsin.
Within a week of that assessment, the defendant lost in Arizona, meaning he had lost the
election.
G, state legislators and officials, many of whom were the defendant's political allies,
had voted for him and wanted him to be reelected, repeatedly informed the defendant
that his claims of fraud in their states were unsubstantiated or false and resisted his
pressure to act based upon them.
H. State and federal courts, the neutral arbiters responsible for ensuring the fair and even-handed
administration of election laws rejected every outcome-determinative
post-election lawsuit filed by the defendant, his co-conspirators, and allies, providing the defendant
real-time notice that his allegations were meritless. The defendant widely disseminated his false
claims of election fraud for months, despite the fact that he knew, and in many cases, had been informed directly, that they were not true.
The defendant's knowingly false statements were integral to his criminal plans to defeat
the federal government function, obstruct the certification, and interfere with others
right to vote, and have their votes counted.
He made these knowingly false claims throughout the post-election time period, including those
below that he made immediately before the attack on the Capitol on January 6th.
A. The defendant insinuated that more than 10,000 dead voters had voted in Georgia.
Just four days earlier, Georgia's Secretary of State had explained to the defendant that
this was false. B, the defendant asserted that there had been 205,000 more votes than voters in Pennsylvania.
The defendant's acting attorney general and acting deputy attorney general had explained
to him that this was false.
C, the defendant said there had been a suspicious vote dump in Detroit, Michigan.
The defendant's attorney general had explained to the defendant that this was false, and the
defendant's allies in the Michigan State legislature, the speaker of the House of Representatives
and majority leader of the Senate had publicly announced that there was no evidence of substantial
fraud in the state.
D.
The defendant claimed that there had been tens of thousands of double votes and other
fraud in Nevada.
The Nevada Secretary of State had previously rebutted the defendant's fraud claims by publicly
posting a, quote, fax versus myths document, explaining that Nevada judges had reviewed
and rejected them, and that the Nevada Supreme Court had rendered a decision denying
such claims.
E. The defendant said that more than 30,000 non-citizens had voted in Arizona.
The defendant's own campaign manager had explained to him that such claims were false, and that
the speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives, who had supported the defendant in the election,
had issued a public
statement that there was no evidence of substantial fraud in Arizona.
F, the defendant asserted that voting machines in various contested states had switched votes
from the defendant to Biden. The defendant's attorney general, acting attorney general,
and acting deputy attorney general all had explained to him that this
was false, and that numerous recounts and audits had confirmed the accuracy of voting machines.
The criminal agreement and acts to affect the objects of the conspiracy.
The defendant's use of deceit to get state officials to subvert the legitimate election
results and change electoral votes.
Shortly after Election Day, which fell on November 3rd, 2020, the defendant launched his criminal scheme.
On November 13, the defendant's campaign attorneys conceded in court that he had lost the vote count in
the state of Arizona, meaning based on the assessment
of the defendant's campaign advisors
had given him just a week earlier,
the defendant had lost the election.
So the next day, the defendant turned to Giuliani,
whom he announced would spearhead his efforts
going forward to challenge the election results.
From that point on, the defendant and his co-conspirators
executed a strategy to use knowing deceit in the targeted states
to impair, obstruct, and defeat the federal government function,
including as described below.
Arizona.
On November 13, 2020, the defendant had a conversation
with his campaign manager who informed him
that a claim that had been circulating that a substantial number of non-citizens had
voted in Arizona was false.
On November 22, eight days before Arizona's governor certified the ascertainment of
the state's legitimate electors based on the popular vote. The defendant and Giuliani called the speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives
and made knowingly false claims of election fraud aimed at interfering with the ascertainment of
and voting by Arizona's electors as follows.
A. The defendant and Giuliani falsely asserted among other things that a substantial number
of non-citizens, non-residents, and dead people had voted fraudulently in Arizona.
The Arizona House Speaker asked Giuliani for evidence of the claims, which Giuliani
did not have, but claimed he would provide.
Giuliani never did so.
The defendant and Giuliani asked the Arizona House Speaker
to call the legislature into session to hold a hearing based on their claims of election fraud.
The Arizona House Speaker refused, stating that doing so would require a two-thirds vote of its
members, and that he would not allow it without actual evidence of fraud. See, the defendant and Giuliani asked the Arizona House Speaker to use the legislature
to circumvent the process by which legitimate electors would be ascertained for Biden based
on the popular vote and replace those electors with a new slate for the defendant.
The Arizona House Speaker refused, responding that the suggestion was beyond
anything he had ever heard or thought of as something within his authority.
On December 1st, Giuliani met with the Arizona House Speaker. When the Arizona House Speaker
again asked Giuliani for evidence of the outcome, determinative election fraud he and the
defendant had been claiming, Giuliani responded with words to the effect of, quote,
we don't have the evidence, but we have lots of theories.
On December 4, the Arizona House Speaker issued a public statement that said,
in part, no election is perfect.
And if there were evidence of illegal votes or an improper count, then Arizona law provides
a process to contest the election, a lawsuit under state law.
But the law does not authorize the legislature to reverse the results of an election.
As a conservative Republican, I don't like the results of the presidential election.
I voted for President Trump and worked hard to re-elect him,
but I cannot and will not entertain a suggestion
that we violate current law to change the outcome
of a certified election.
I and my fellow legislators swore an oath to support
the U.S. Constitution and the Constitution and laws of the state of
Arizona. It would violate that oath, the basic principles of Republican government and the
rule of law, if we attempted to nullify the people's vote based on unsupported theories of fraud.
Under the laws that we wrote and voted upon, Arizona voters choose who wins and our system requires that their
choice be respected.
On the morning of January 4, 2021, Eastman called the Arizona House Speaker to urge him
to use a majority of the legislature to decertify the state's legitimate electors.
Arizona's validly ascertained electors had voted three weeks earlier and sent their votes
to Congress, which was scheduled to count those votes in Biden's favor in just two days time
at the January 6 certification proceeding. When the Arizona House Speaker explained that the state
investigations had uncovered no evidence of substantial fraud in the state. Eastman conceded that he, quote,
didn't know enough about the facts on the ground in Arizona, but nonetheless told the Arizona House
Speaker to desertify and, quote, let the courts sort it out. The Arizona House Speaker refused,
stating that he would not, quote, play with the oath he had taken to uphold the United States
Constitution and Arizona law. On January 6, the defendant publicly repeated the knowingly false claims
that 36,000 non-citizens had voted in Arizona. On November 16, 2020, on the defendants behalf, has executive assistant sent Powell and others
a document containing bullet points critical of a certain voting machine company, writing,
quote, see attached, please include as is or almost as is in lawsuit.
Powell responded nine minutes later, writing, quote,
it must go in all suits in GA and PA immediately with a fraud claim that requires the entire
election to be set aside in those states and machines impounded for nonpartisan professional
inspection.
On November 25, Powell filed a lawsuit against the governor of Georgia falsely alleging,
quote, massive election fraud, accomplished through the voting machine companies election
software and hardware.
Before the lawsuit was even filed, the defendant retweeted a post promoting it.
The defendant did this despite the fact that when he had discussed Powell's far-fetched
public claims regarding
the voting machine company in private with advisors, the defendant had conceded that they were
unsupported and that Powell sounded, quote, crazy.
Powell's Georgia lawsuit was dismissed on December 7.
On December 3, Giuliani orchestrated a presentation to a Judiciary Subcommittee of the Georgia
State Senate with the intention of misleading state senators into blocking the ascertainment
of legitimate electors.
During the presentation, in Agent of the Defendant and Giuliani falsely claimed that more than
10,000 dead people voted in Georgia.
That afternoon, a senior adviser to the defendant told the defendant's chief of staff through text messages,
quote,
just an FYI,
a campaign lawyer and his team verified that the 10K plus supposed dead people voting in Georgia is not accurate.
It was alleged in Giuliani's hearing today.
The senior advisor clarified that he believed the actual number was 12.
B, another agent of the defendant and Giuliani played a misleading excerpt of a video recording
of ballot counting at State Farmer Reena in Atlanta
and insinuated that it showed election workers counting suitcases of illegal ballots.
Let's see.
Eastman encouraged the legislators to decertify the state's legitimate electors based on false
allegations of election fraud.
Also on December 3, the defendant issued a tweet amplifying the knowingly false claims
made in Giuliani's presentation to Georgia, quote,
Wow, blockbuster testimony taking place right now in Georgia,
ballots stuffing by Dems when Republicans were forced to leave the large counting room.
Plenty more coming, but this alone leads to an easy win of the state.
On December 4, the Georgia Secretary of State's chief operating officer debunked the claims
made at Giuliani's presentation the previous day, issuing a tweet stating, quote, the
92nd video of election workers at state farm arena, purporting to show fraud was watched in its entirety
perenns hours by at Georgia's Secretary of State
investigators.
Show's normal ballot processing, here is the fact check on it.
On December 7th, he reiterated during a press conference
that the claim that there had been misconduct
at State Farm arena was false. On December 8, the defendant called the Georgia Attorney
General to pressure him to support an election lawsuit filed in the Supreme Court by another
state's Attorney General. The Georgia Attorney General told the defendant that officials
had investigated various claims of election fraud in the state and were not
seeing an evidence to support them.
Also on December 8, a senior campaign adviser who spoke with the defendant on a daily basis
and had informed him on multiple occasions that various fraud claims were untrue expressed
frustration that many of Giuliani and his team's claims could not be substantiated.
As early as mid-November, for instance, the senior campaign advisor had informed the
defendant that his claims of a large number of dead voters in Georgia were untrue.
With respect to the persistent false claim regarding state-form arena, on December 8, the
senior campaign advisor wrote in an email, quote,
when our research and campaign legal team can't back up any of the claims made by our elite
strike force legal team, you can see why we're 0 and 32 on cases. I'll obviously hustle
to help them on all fronts, but it's tough to own any of this when it's all just conspiracy shit beamed down from the mother ship.
On December 10, four days before Biden's validly ascertained electors were scheduled to cast votes
and send them to Congress, Giuliani appeared at a hearing before the Georgia House of Representatives
government affairs committee. Giuliani played the state-farm video again and falsely claimed that it showed, quote,
voter fraud right in front of people's eyes and was, quote, the tip of the iceberg.
Then he cited two election workers by name, baselessly accusing them of, quote,
quite obviously surreptitiously passing around USB ports as if they are vials of heroin or cocaine
and suggested that they were criminals whose, quote, places of work, their homes, should have
been searched for evidence of ballots for evidence of USB ports for evidence of voter fraud.
Thereafter, the two election workers received numerous death threats.
On December 15, the defendant summoned the incoming acting attorney general, the incoming
acting deputy attorney general, and others to the Oval Office to discuss allegations of
election fraud.
During the meeting, the Justice Department officials specifically refuted the defendant's
claims about state farm arena, explaining to him that the activity shown on the
tape Giuliani had used was, quote, benign. On December 23, a day
after the defendant's chief of staff personally observed the
signature verification process at the Cobb County Civic Center
and notified the defendant that's the state election
officials were, quote, conducting themselves in an exemplary fashion
and would find fraud if it existed.
The defendant tweeted that the Georgia officials
administering the signature verification process
were trying to hide evidence of election fraud
and were, quote, terrible people.
In a phone call on December 27,
the defendant spoke with the acting attorney general
and acting deputy attorney general.
During the call, the defendant again
pressed the unfounded claims regarding state farm arena
and the two top justice department officials
again rebutted the allegations,
telling him that the justice department
had reviewed
the videotape, interviewed witnesses, and had not identified any suspicious conduct.
On December 31, the defendant signed a verification of firming false election fraud allegations
made on his behalf in a lawsuit filed in his name against the Georgia governor. In advance of the
filing, Eastman, who was advising the defendant on the lawsuit, acknowledged in an email that he
and the defendant, since signing the previous verification, quote, been made aware that some of the
allegations and evidence proffered by the experts has been inaccurate.
And that signing a new affirmation, quote,
with that knowledge and incorporation by reference
would not be accurate.
The defendant and Eastman caused the defendant's signed
verification to be filed nonetheless.
On January 2, four days before Congress's certification proceeding,
the defendant and others called Georgia Secretary of State. During the call,
the defendant lied to the Georgia Secretary of State to induce him to alter Georgia's popular
vote count and call into question the validity of the Biden electors votes, which had been transmitted to
Congress weeks before, including as follows. A, the defendant raised allegations regarding the
State Farm Arena video and repeatedly disparaged one of the same election workers that Giuliani
had maligned on December 10, using her name almost 20 times, and falsely referring
to her as a, quote, professional vote scammer and hustler. In response, the Georgia Secretary of
State refuted this, quote, you're talking about the state farm video. And I think it's extremely
unfortunate that Giuliani or his people, they sliced and diced that video and took it out of context.
When the Georgia Secretary of State then offered a link to a video that would disprove Giuliani's claims,
the defendant responded, quote, I don't care about a link. I don't need it. I have a much better link. The defendant asked about rumors that paper ballots cast in the election
were being destroyed. And the Georgia Secretary of State's counsel explained to him that the
claim had been investigated and was not true. See, the defendant claimed that 5,000 dead
people voted in Georgia, causing the Georgia Secretary of State to respond, quote, well, Mr. President,
the challenge that you have is the data you have is wrong. The actual number were two,
two, two people that were dead and that voted. And so your information's wrong. That was two.
D, the defendant claimed that thousands of out-of-state voters had cast ballots in Georgia's election,
which the Georgia Secretary of State's council refuted, explaining, quote,
we've been going through each of those as well.
And those numbers that we got, that defendant's council was just saying, they're not accurate. Everyone we've been through are people that lived in Georgia,
moved to a different state,
but then moved back to Georgia legitimately.
They moved back in years ago.
This was not like something just before the election.
E, in response to multiple other of the defendant's allegations,
the Georgia Secretary of State's council told the defendant
that the Georgia Bureau of Investigation was examining all such claims and finding no merit to them.
F. The defendant said that he needed to, quote, find 11,780 votes and insinuated that the Georgia
Secretary of State and his council could be subject
to criminal prosecution if they fail to find the election fraud as he demanded, stating,
quote, and you were going to find that they are, which is totally illegal.
It's, it's, it's more illegal for you than it is for them because you know what they
did and you're not reporting it.
That's a criminal, you know?
That's a criminal offense.
And you know, you can't let that happen.
That's a big risk to you
and to the Georgia Secretary of State's council, your lawyer.
The next day, on January 3rd,
the defendant falsely claimed
that the Georgia Secretary of
State had not addressed the defendant's allegations, publicly stating that the Georgia Secretary
of State, quote, was unwilling or unable to answer questions such as the ballots under
the table scam, ballot destruction, out of state voters, dead voters, and more.
He has no clue.
On January 6, the defendant publicly repeated the knowingly false insinuation that more than
10,300 dead people had voted in Georgia.
Michigan. On November 5, 2020, the defendant claimed that there had been a suspicious dump
of votes, purportedly illegitimate ballots, stating, quote, in Detroit, there were hours of unexplained delay in
delivering many of the votes for counting.
The final batch did not arrive until four in the morning and even though the polls closed
at eight o'clock.
So they brought it in and the batches came in and nobody knew where they came from, unquote.
On November 20, three days before Michigan's governor signed a certificate of ascertainment
notifying the federal government that, based on the popular vote, Biden's electors were
to represent Michigan's voters, the defendant held a meeting in the Oval Office with the
speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives, and the majority leader of the Michigan Senate.
In the meeting, the defendant's raised his false claim, among others, of an illegitimate
vote dump in Detroit.
In response, the Michigan Senate Majority Leader told the defendant that he had lost
Michigan, not because of fraud, but because the defendant had underperformed with certain
voter populations in the state.
Upon leaving their meeting, the Michigan House Speaker and Michigan Senate Majority Leader
issued a statement reiterating this.
Quote, the Senate and House Oversight Committees are actively engaged in a thorough review of Michigan's elections process,
and we have faith in the committee process to provide greater transparency and accountability to our citizens.
We have not yet been made aware of any information that would change the outcome of the election in Michigan,
and as legislative leaders, we will follow the law and follow the normal process regarding Michigan's electors just as we have said
throughout this election.
On December 1, the defendant raised his Michigan vote-dump claim with the Attorney General,
who responded that what had occurred in Michigan had been the normal vote-counting process
and that there was no indication of fraud and detroit.
Despite this, the next day, the defendant made a knowingly false statement that in Michigan
quote, at 6.31 in the morning, a vote dump of 149,772 votes came in unexpectedly.
We were winning by a lot.
That batch was received in horror.
Nobody knows anything about it.
Its corrupt, Detroit is corrupt.
I have a lot of friends in Detroit,
they know it, but Detroit is totally corrupt." On December 4, Giuliani sent a text message
to the Michigan House Speaker, reiterating his unsupported claims of election fraud and
attempting to get the Michigan House Speaker to assist in reversing the assortment of
legitimate Biden electors, stating, quote, looks like Georgia may well hold some factual hearings and change the certification
under Article 2, Section 1, clause 2 of the Constitution.
As Eastman explained, they don't just have the right to do it, but the obligation
helped me get this done in Michigan, unquote.
Similarly, on December 7, despite still having established no fraud in Michigan,
Giuliani sent a text intended for the Michigan Senate Majority Leader quote, so I need
you to pass a joint resolution from the Michigan legislature that states that the election
is in dispute. There's an ongoing investigation by the legislature and the electors sent
by Governor Whitmer are not the official electors of the state of Michigan and do not fall within the safe harbor deadline of December 8 under Michigan law."
On December 14, the day the electors and states across the country were required to vote and
submit their votes to Congress, the Michigan House Speaker and Michigan State Majority Leader
announced that, contrary to the defendant's request, they would not decertify the legitimate
election results or electors in Michigan.
The Michigan Senate Majority Leader's public statement included, quote,
we have not received evidence of fraud on a scale that would change the outcome of the election in Michigan.
Unquote.
The Michigan House Speaker's public statement read in part, quote,
we've diligently examined these reports of fraud to the best of our ability.
I fought hard for President Trump.
Nobody wanted him to win more than me.
I think he's done an incredible job, but I love our Republic too.
I can't fathom risking our norms, traditions, and institutions to pass a resolution retroactively
changing the electors for Trump simply because some think there may have been enough widespread
fraud to give him the win.
That's unprecedented for good reason, and that's why there is not enough to support the
House to cast a new slate of electors.
I fear we'd lose our country forever.
This truly would bring a mutually assured destruction for every future election in
regards to the Electoral College, and I can't stand for that.
I won't."
On January 6, 2021, the defendant publicly repeated his knowingly false claim regarding an elicit
dump of more than 100,000 ballots in Detroit.
Pennsylvania On November 11, 2020, the defendant publicly
maligned a Philadelphia City Commissioner for stating on the news that there was no evidence of widespread fraud in Philadelphia.
As a result, the Philadelphia City Commissioner and his family received death threats.
On November 25, the day after Pennsylvania's governor signed a certificate of ascertainment
and thus certified to the federal government that Biden's electors were legitimate electors
for the state, Giuliani orchestrated an event at a hotel in Gettysburg, attended by state
legislators.
Giuliani falsely claimed that Pennsylvania had issued 1.8 million absentee ballots and
received 2.5 million in return.
In the days thereafter, a campaign staffer wrote internally that Giuliani's
allegation was, quote, just wrong, and, quote, there's no way to defend it. The deputy
campaign manager responded, quote, we have been saying this for a while. It's very frustrating.
On December 4, after four Republican leaders of the Pennsylvania legislature issued a public
statement that the General Assembly lacked the authority to overturn the popular vote and appoint its own slate of electors,
and that doing so would violate the state election code and constitution, the defendant
retweeted a post labeling the legislators cowards.
On December 31 and January 3, the defendant repeatedly raised with the acting attorney general
and acting deputy attorney general the allegation that in Pennsylvania there had been 205,000
more votes than voters.
Each time the Justice Department officials informed the defendant that his claims were false.
On January 6, 2021, the defendant publicly repeated his knowingly false claim that there had been
205,000 more votes than voters in Pennsylvania.
Wisconsin On November 29, 2020, a recount in Wisconsin that the defendant's campaign
had petitioned and paid for did not change the election result and, in fact, increased
the defendant's margin of defeat.
On December 14, the Wisconsin Supreme Court rejected an election challenge by the campaign.
One justice wrote, quote, nothing in this case casts any legitimate doubt that the people
of Wisconsin lawfully chose Vice President Biden and Senator Harris to be the next leaders
of our great country.
On December 21, as a result of the state Supreme Court's decision, the Wisconsin
governor, who had signed a certificate of ascertainment on November 30 identifying
Biden's electors as the state's legitimate electors, signed a certificate of final determination
in which he recognized that the state Supreme Court had resolved a controversy regarding
the appointment of Biden's electors and confirmed that Biden had received the highest number
of votes in the state and that his electors were the state's legitimate electors.
The same day, in response to the court decision that had prompted the Wisconsin governor
to sign a certificate of final determination, the defendant issued a tweet, repeating his
knowingly false claim of election fraud
and demanding that the Wisconsin legislature overturn the election results that had led
to the ascertainment of Biden's electors as a legitimate electors.
On December 27, the defendant raised with the acting Attorney General and acting deputy
Attorney General a specific fraud claim that there had been more votes than voters in Wisconsin, the Acting Deputy Attorney General informed the defendant
that the claim was false.
On January 6, 2021, the defendant publicly repeated knowingly false claims that there had been
tens of thousands of unlawful votes in Wisconsin.
The defendant's use of dishonesty, fraud, and deceit to organize fraudulent slates of electors
and cause them to transmit false certificates to Congress.
As the defendant's attempts to obstruct
the electoral vote through deceit of state officials
met with repeated failure,
beginning in early December 2020,
he and his co-conspirators developed a new plan.
To Marshall individuals who would have served as the defendant's electors, had he won the popular vote
in seven targeted states, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin,
and caused those individuals to make and send to the Vice President and Congress false certifications
that they were legitimate electors.
Under the plan, the submission of these fraudulent slates would create a fake controversy
at the certification proceeding and position the Vice President presiding on January 6th as President of the Senate to supplant legitimate electors
with the defendant's fake electors
and certify the defendant as President.
The plan capitalized on ideas presented
in Memoranda drafted by Cheesebro,
an attorney who was assisting the defendant's campaign
with legal efforts related to recounts in Wisconsin.
The Memoranda evolved over time from a legal strategy to preserve the defendant's rights
to a corrupt plan and subvert the federal government function by stopping Biden-electors'
votes from being counted and certified as follows.
A. The November 18th Memorandum, quote, Wisconsin memo, advocated that because of the ongoing
recount in Wisconsin, the defendant's electors there should meet and cast votes on December
14th.
The date the ECA required appointed electors to vote, to preserve the alternative of the
defendant's Wisconsin electors slate in the event that the defendant ultimately prevailed
in the state. B, the December 6 memorandum, quote,
fraudulent Elector memo, unquote,
marked a sharp departure from cheesebro's Wisconsin memo,
advocating that the alternate electors originally conceived of
to preserve rights in Wisconsin
instead be used in a number of states
as fraudulent electors to prevent Biden
from receiving the 270 electoral votes necessary
to secure the presidency on January 6.
The fraudulent elector memo suggested that the defendant's electors in six purportedly
contested states, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, should
meet and mimic as best as possible the actions of the legitimate Biden electors.
And that on January 6th, the Vice President should open and count the fraudulent votes,
setting up a fake controversy that would derail the proper certification of Biden as President elect.
See, the December 9 memorandum, quote, fraudulent elector instructions, unquote,
nine memorandum, quote, fraudulent elector instructions, unquote, consisted of cheese bros instructions on how fraudulent electors could mimic legitimate electors in Arizona,
Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Cheesebrough noted that in some
states, it would be virtually impossible for the fraudulent electors to successfully
take the same steps as the legitimate electors, because state law required formal participation in the process by state officials
or access to official resources.
The plan began in early December, and ultimately,
the conspirators and the defendant's campaign took the Wisconsin memo
and expanded it to any state that the defendant claimed was, quote, contested,
even New Mexico, which
the defendant had lost by more than 10% of the popular vote. This expansion was forecast
by emails, the defendant's chief of staff sent on December 6th, forwarding the Wisconsin
memo to campaign staff and writing, quote, we just need to have someone coordinating the
electors for states, unquote. On December 6 6, the defendant and Eastman called the chairwoman of the Republican National
Committee to ensure the plan was in motion.
During the call, Eastman told the chairwoman it was important for the RNC to help the
defendant's campaign gather electors in targeted states and falsely represented to her that
such electors' votes would be used only if ongoing litigation
in one of those states changed the results in the defendant's favor. After the R&C chairwoman
consulted the campaign and heard that the work on gathering electors was underway, she called
and reported this information to the defendant who responded approvingly. On December 7,
Giuliani received the Wisconsin memo
and the fraudulent Elector memo.
Giuliani spoke with Co-Conspirator 6,
regarding attorneys who could assist
in the fraudulent Elector effort and targeted states.
And he received from Co-Conspirator 6 an email,
identifying attorneys in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan,
Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
The next day on December 8, Cheesebro called the Arizona attorney on co-conspirator 6's list.
In an email after the call, Arizona attorney recounted his conversation with Cheesebro as follows,
quote, I just talked to the gentleman who did the memo. Cheesebro. His idea is basically
that all of us, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona, Pennsylvania, etc., have our electors send in their votes,
even though the votes aren't legal under federal law, because they're not signed by the governor,
so that members of Congress can fight about whether they should be counted on January 6th.
They could potentially argue that there's no binding federal law because they're Congress and they make the law, etc. Kind of wild and creative,
I'm happy to discuss. My comment to him was that I guess there's no harm in it, legally at least,
i.e. we would just be sending in fake electoral votes to Pence so that someone in Congress can
make an objection when they start counting votes and Pence so that someone in Congress can make an objection
when they start counting votes and start arguing that the fake vote should be counted.
At Giuliani's direction, on December 10, Cheesebro sent to points of contact in all targeted
states except Wisconsin, which had already received his memos, and New Mexico, a streamlined
version of the Wisconsin memo, which did not reveal the intended fraudulent use of the defendant's electors and the fraudulent elector instructions
along with fraudulent elector certificates that he had drafted.
The next day on December 11th, Cheesebro and Giuliani suggested that the Arizona lawyer
file a petition for Cersherari in the Supreme Court as a pretext to claim that litigation was pending in the state
to provide cover for the convening and voting of the defendant's fraudulent
electors there. Cheesebro explained that Giuliani had heard from a state
official and state provisional elector that quote,
it could appear treasonous for the Arizona electors to vote on Monday
if there's no pending court proceeding.
To manage the plan in Pennsylvania on December 12th, Giuliani and Cheesebro
and Co-Conspirator 6 participated in a conference call organized by the
defendants campaign with the defend's electors in that state.
When the defendant's electors expressed concern about signing certificates representing
themselves as legitimate electors, Giuliani falsely assured them that their certificates
would be used only if the defendant succeeded in litigation.
Subsequently, co-conspirator 6 circulated proposed conditional language to that effect for potential inclusion
in the fraudulent elector certificates.
A campaign official cautioned not to offer the conditional language to other states because
quote, the other states are signing what he prepared, if it gets out we changed the
language for Pennsylvania it could snowball.
In some cases the defendant's electors refused to participate in the plan.
On December 13th, cheesebro sent Giuliani an email memorandum that further confirmed
that the conspirators' plan was not to use the fraudulent electors only in the circumstances
of the defendant's litigation being successful in one of the targeted states. Instead,
the plan was to falsely present the
fraudulent slates as an alternative to the legitimate slates at Congress's certification
proceeding. On December 13, the defendant asked the senior campaign advisor for an update
on, quote, what was going on with the Elector Plan and directed him to, quote, put out a statement
on electors. As a result, Giuliani directed the senior campaign advisor
to join a conference call with him,
Co-Conspirator 6, and others.
When the senior campaign advisor related these developments
and text messages to the deputy campaign manager,
a senior advisor to the defendant and campaign staffer,
the deputy campaign manager responded, quote,
here's the thing, the way this has morphed, it's a crazy play.
So I don't know who wants to put their name on it." The senior advisor
wrote, quote, certifying illegal votes, unquote, in turn, the participants
in the group text message refused to have a statement regarding
electors attributed to their names, because none of them could quote,
stand by it. Also on December 13th, at a campaign staffer's request, Cheesebroh drafted and sent
fraudulent elector certificates for the defendant's electors in New Mexico, which had not been previously
among the targeted states and where there were no pending litigations on the defendant's behalf. The next day, the defendant's campaign filed an election challenge suit in New Mexico
at 11.54 a.m. six minutes before the noon deadline for the electors' votes, as a pretext
so that there was pending litigation at the time of the fraudulent electors' voting.
On December 14, legitimate electors of all 50 states and the District of Columbia met
in their respective jurisdictions to formally cast their votes for president, resulting
in a total of 232 electoral votes for the defendant and 306 for Biden.
The legitimate electoral votes that Biden won in the states that the defendant targeted
and the defendant's margin of defeat were as follows.
Arizona, 11 electoral votes, 10,457 votes Georgia 16
electoral votes 11,779 votes Michigan 16 electoral votes 154,188 votes Nevada 6
electoral votes 33,596 votes New Mexico 5 electoral votes 99 33,596 votes, New Mexico, 5 electoral votes, 99,720 votes, Pennsylvania,
20 electoral votes, 80,555 votes, and Wisconsin, 10 electoral votes, 20,682 votes.
On that same day, at the direction of the defendant and Giuliani, fraudulent electors convened
sham proceedings in the seven targeted states to cast fraudulent electoral ballots in favor
of the defendant.
In some states, in order to satisfy legal requirements set forth for legitimate electors under state
law, state officials were enlisted to provide the fraudulent electors' access to the state
capital buildings so that they could gather and vote there.
In many cases, however, as Cheesebro had predicted in the fraudulent elector instructions memo,
the fraudulent electors were unable to satisfy the legal requirements.
Nonetheless, as directed in the fraudulent elector instructions,
shortly after the fraudulent electors met on December 14,
the targeted states fraudulent elector certificates were mailed to the president of the Senate, the archivist
of the United States, and others.
The defendant and co-conspirators ultimately used the certificates of these fraudulent
electors to deceitfully target the government function and did so contrary to how fraudulent
electors were told they were being used.
Unlike those of the fraudulent electors consistent with the ECA, the legitimate electors
signed certificates were annexed to the state's executive certificates of ascertainment
before being sent to the president of the Senate and others.
That evening at 6.26pm, the RNC chairwoman, forwarded to the defendant, through his executive assistant,
an email titled, quote, electors recap, final, unquote, which represented that in six contested
states, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, the defendant's
electors had voted in parallel to Biden's electors.
The defendant's executive assistant responded, quote,
it's in front of him.
Unquote.
The defendant's attempt to leverage the Justice Department
to use deceit to get state officials
to replace legitimate electors and electoral votes
with the defendants.
In late December 2020, the defendant
attempted to use the Justice Department to make knowingly
false claims of election fraud to officials in the targeted states through a formal letter
under the acting Attorney General's signature, thus giving the defendant's lies the backing
of the federal government and attempting to improperly influence the targeted states to
replace legitimate Biden electors with the defendants.
On December 22, the defendant met with Clark at the White House.
Clark had not informed his leadership at the Justice Department of the Meeting,
which was a violation of the Justice Department's written policy,
restricting contacts with the White House to guard against improper political influence.
On December 26, Clark spoke on the phone
of the Acting Attorney General and lied about the circumstances of his meeting
with the defendant at the White House, falsely claiming that the meeting had been unplanned.
The Acting Attorney General directed Clark not to have unauthorized contacts
with the White House again,. Clark said he would not.
The next morning on December 27, contrary to the acting attorney general's direction, Clark spoke with the defendant on the defendant's cell phone for nearly three minutes.
That afternoon, the defendant called the acting attorney general and acting deputy attorney general
and said, among other things, quote, people tell me Clark is great.
I should put him in, close quote.
The defendant also raised multiple false claims
of election fraud, which the acting attorney general
and acting deputy attorney general refuted.
When the acting attorney general told the defendant
that the Justice Department could not and would not
change the outcome of the election,
the defendant responded, quote, just say that the election was corrupt and leave the
rest to me and the Republican Congressman, close quote.
On December 28, Clark sent a draft letter to the Acting Attorney General and Acting
Deputy Attorney General, which he proposed they all sign.
The draft was addressed to state officials in
Georgia, and Clark proposed sending versions of the letter to elected officials in other
targeted states. The proposed letter contained numerous knowingly false claims about the
election and the Justice Department, including that, A, the Justice Department had, quote,
identified significant concerns that may have impacted
the outcome of the election in multiple states.
B, the Justice Department believed that in Georgia and other states, two valid slates of
electors had gathered at the proper location on December 14, and that both sets of ballots
had been transmitted to Congress.
That is, Clark's letter sought to advance the defendant's fraudulent electric plan
by using the authority of the Justice Department to falsely present the fraudulent electors
as valid alternatives to the legitimate electors.
See, the Justice Department urged that the State state legislature convene a special legislative session
to create the opportunity to, among other things,
choose the fraudulent electors over the legitimate electors.
The acting deputy attorney general promptly responded
to Clark by email and told him that his proposed letter
was false, writing, quote,
despite dramatic claims to the contrary,
we have not seen the type of fraud
that calls into question
that reported and certified results
of the election, close quote.
In a meeting shortly thereafter,
the Acting Attorney General
and Acting Deputy Attorney General
again directed Clark not to have
unauthorized contact with the White House.
On December 31,
the defendant summoned to the
Oval Office the Acting Attorney General, Acting Deputy Attorney General, and other advisors.
In the meeting, the defendant again raised claims about election fraud that Justice Department
officials had already told him or not true, and that the senior Justice Department officials
reiterated her false and suggested he might change the leadership in the justice department.
On January 2, 2021, just four days before Congress's certification proceeding,
Clark tried to coerce the acting attorney general and acting deputy attorney general
to sign and send Clark's draft letter, which contained false statements to state officials.
He told them that the defendant was considering making Clark the new acting attorney general,
but that Clark would decline the defendant's offer if the acting attorney general and
acting deputy attorney general would agree to send the proposed letter to the targeted
states.
The Justice Department officials refused.
The next morning, on January 3rd,
despite having uncovered no additional evidence of election fraud,
Clark sent to a Justice Department colleague
an edited version of his draft letter to the states,
which included a change from its previous claim
that the Justice Department had, quote, concerns
to a stronger false claim that, quote,
as of today, there is evidence
of significant irregularities that may have impacted the outcome of the election in multiple
states. Also, on the morning of January 3, Clark met with the defendant at the White
House, again, without having informed senior justice department officials
and accepted the defendant's offer that he become acting attorney general.
On the afternoon of January 3rd, Clark spoke with a deputy White House counsel.
The previous month, the deputy White House counsel had informed the defendant that, quote,
there is no world, there is no option in which you do not leave the White House
on January 20th. Now, the same Deputy White House Council tried to dissuade Clark from assuming
the role of acting attorney general. The Deputy White House Council reiterated to Clark that there
had not been outcome-determinative fraud in the election, and that if the defendant remained in office nonetheless, there would be, quote, riots in every major city in the United
States, close quote.
Clark responded, quote, well, Deputy White House Council, that's why there's an insurrection
act.
Also on that afternoon, Clark met with the acting attorney general and told him that
the defendant had decided to put Clark in charge of the Justice Department.
The acting attorney general responded that he would not accept being fired by a subordinate
and immediately scheduled a meeting with the defendant for that evening.
On the evening of January 3, the defendant met for a briefing on an overseas national
security issue with the chairman of the Joint for a briefing on an overseas national security
issue with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other national security advisers.
The chairman briefed the defendant on the issue, which had previously arisen in December,
as well as possible ways the defendant could handle it.
When the chairman and another adviser recommended that the defendant take no action because
inauguration day was only 17 days away and any course of action could trigger something
unhelpful, the defendant calmly agreed, stating, quote, yeah, you're right, it's too late
for us.
We're going to have to give that to the next guy.
The defendant moved immediately from this national security briefing to the meeting that the
Acting Attorney General had requested earlier that day, which included Clark, the Acting Attorney General,
the Acting Deputy Attorney General, the Justice Department's Assistant Attorney General for the
Office of Legal Counsel, the White House Counsel, the Deputy White House Council, and a senior adviser.
At the meeting, the defendant expressed frustration with the Acting Attorney General for failing
to do anything to overturn the election results, and the group discussed Clark's plans to investigate,
purported election fraud, and to send his proposed letter to state officials, a copy of which
was provided to the defendant during the meeting.
The defendant relented and his plan to replace the acting attorney general with Clark only when he was told that it would result in mass resignations at the Justice Department and of his own White House
Council. At the meeting in the Oval Office on the night of January 3rd, Clark suggested that
the Justice Department should opine
that the Vice President could exceed his lawful authority
during the certification proceeding
and change the election outcome.
When the Assistant Attorney General
for the Office of Legal Counsel began to explain
why the Justice Department should not do so,
the defendant said, quote,
no one here should be talking to the Vice President. I'm talking to the vice president and ended the discussion.
The defendant's attempts to enlist the vice president to fraudulently alter the election
results at the January 6th certification proceeding.
As the January 6th congressional proceeding approached, and other efforts to
impair, obstruct, and defeat the federal government function failed, the defendant sought
to enlist the vice president to use his ceremonial role at the certification to fraudulently
alter the election results.
The defendant did this first by using knowingly false claims of election fraud to convince
the vice president to accept the defendant's fraudulent electors, reject legitimate electoral votes, or send legitimate electoral votes to state
legislatures for review rather than count them.
When that failed, the defendant attempted to use a crowd of supporters that he had gathered
in Washington, D.C. to pressure the Vice President to fraudulently alter the election results.
On December 19, 2020, after cultivating widespread anger and resentment for weeks with his knowingly false claims of election fraud,
the defendant urged his supporters to travel to Washington on the day of the certification proceeding, tweeting,
quote,
big protest in DC on January 6, be there, will be wild."
Throughout late December, he repeatedly urged his supporters to come to Washington for
January 6.
On December 23, the defendant retweeted a memo titled,
Operation Pence Card, which falsely asserted that the vice president could, among other
things, unilaterally, disqualify legitimate electors from six targeted states.
On the same day, Eastman circulated a two-page memorandum outlining the plan for the vice
president to unlawfully declare the defendant, the certified winner of the presidential election.
In the memorandum, Eastman claimed that seven states had transmitted two slates of electors
and proposed that the vice president announced that because of an ongoing dispute in the seven states, there are no electors that can be deemed
validly appointed in those states." Eastman proposed steps that he acknowledged violated
the ECA, advocating that, in the end, quote, "'Pence then gavils president Trump as reelected,'
unquote." Just two months earlier, on October
11th, Eastman had taken the opposite position, writing that neither the Constitution nor the
ECA provided the vice president discretion in the counting of electoral votes or permitted him to
quote, make the determination on his own unquote. On several private phone calls in late December
and early January, the defendant repeated knowingly false claims of election fraud and directly pressured the vice president to use
his ceremonial role at the certification proceeding on January 6 to fraudulently overturn the
results of the election, and the vice president resisted, including A. On December 25, when
the vice president called the defendant to wish him a merry Christmas,
the defendant quickly turned the conversation to January 6th, and his request that the Vice President
reject electoral votes that day. The Vice President pushed back, telling the defendant,
as the Vice President already had in previous conversations, quote, you know, I don't think I
have the authority to change the outcome." B, On December 29, as reflected in the Vice President's contemporaneous notes, the defendant falsely
told the Vice President that, quote, Justice Department was finding major infractions.
See on January 1st, the defendant called the Vice President and berated him because he
had learned that the Vice President had opposed a lawsuit seeking a judicial decision that at the certification
the vice president had the authority to reject or return votes to the states under the
Constitution. The vice president responded that he thought there was no constitutional
basis for such authority and that it was improper. In response, the defendant told the Vice President,
quote, your too honest, unquote, with an hours of the conversation, the defendant reminded
his supporters to meet in Washington before the certification proceeding, tweeting, quote,
the big protest rally in Washington, DC will take place at 11 a.m. on January 6th, locational details to follow, stop the steal."
D. on January 3rd, the defendant again told the Vice President
that at the certification proceeding, the Vice President had the absolute right to reject
electoral votes and the ability to overturn the election. The Vice President responded
that he had no such authority, and
that a federal appeals court had rejected the lawsuit, making that claim the previous
day.
On January 3, Eastman circulated a second memorandum that included a new plan, under
which, contrary to the ECA, the Vice President would send the elector slates to the state
legislatures to determine which slate to count.
On January 4, the defendant held a meeting with Eastman, the vice president, the vice president's chief of staff,
and the vice president's counsel for the purpose of convincing the vice president,
based on the defendant's knowingly false claims of election fraud, that the vice president should reject or send to the states,
Biden's legitimate electoral
votes rather than count them. The defendant deliberately excluded his White House counsel from
the meeting because the White House counsel previously had pushed back on the defendant's false
claims of election fraud. During the meeting, as reflected in the vice president's contemporaneous
notes, the defendant made knowingly false claims of election fraud,
including, quote, bottom line,
one every state by hundreds of thousands of votes,
and quote, we won every state, unquote,
and asked regarding a claim his senior justice department
officials had previously told him was false,
including, as recently as the night
before, quote, what about the 205,000 votes more in Pennsylvania than voters?"
The defendant and Eastman then asked the vice president to either unilaterally reject
the legitimate electors from seven targeted states or send the question of which slate
was legitimate to the targeted states' legislatures.
When the Vice President challenged Eastman on whether the proposal to return the question to the states was defensible,
Eastman responded, quote, well, nobody's tested it before."
The Vice President then told the defendant, quote, did you hear that?
Even your own counsel is not saying I have the authority.
The defendant responded, quote,
that's okay.
I prefer the other suggestion of the Vice President
rejecting the electors unilaterally.
Also on January 4th, when Eastman acknowledged
to the defendant's senior advisor that no court
would support his proposal, the senior adviser told Eastman
quote, you're going to cause riots in the streets. Eastman responded that there had previously
been points in this nation's history where violence was necessary to protect the
republic. After that conversation, the senior adviser notified the defendant that Eastman
had conceded that his plan was, quote, not going to work.
On the morning of January 5th, at the defendant's direction,
the Vice President's Chief of Staff and the Vice President's
Council met again with Eastman.
Eastman now advocated that the Vice President
do what the defendant had said he preferred the day before,
unilaterally reject electors from the targeted states.
During this meeting,
Eastman privately acknowledged to the Vice President's
Council that he hoped to prevent judicial review of his proposal because he understood that it would be unanimously
rejected by the Supreme Court.
The Vice President's Council expressed to Eastman that following through with this proposal
would result, quote, in a disastrous situation, where the election might, quote, have to be decided
in the streets.
That same day, the defendant encouraged supporters
to travel to Washington on January 6th,
and he set the false expectation that Vice President
did have the authority and might use his ceremonial role
at the certification proceeding to reverse the election
outcome in the defendant's favor,
including issuing the following tweets.
A, at 11.06 a.m. quote, the Vice President has the power to reject fraudulently chosen
electors.
Unquote, this was within 40 minutes of the defendant's earlier reminder quote, C-U-N-D-C.
At 505, quote, Washington is being inundated with people who don't want to see an election
victory stolen.
Our country has had enough.
They won't take it anymore.
We hear you and love you from the Oval Office."
See at 543 PM, quote, I will be speaking at the Save America Rally tomorrow on the
ellipse at 11 a.m. Eastern.
Arrived early, doors open at 7 a.m. Eastern, arrive early, doors open at 7 a.m. Eastern.
Big crowds."
Also on January 5, the defendant met alone with the vice president.
When the vice president refused to agree to the defendant's request that he obstructed
a certification, the defendant grew frustrated and told the vice president that the defendant
would have to publicly criticize him.
Upon learning of this,
the Vice President's chief of staff was concerned for the Vice President's safety
and alerted the head of the Vice President's Secret Service detail.
As crowds began to gather in Washington and were audible from the Oval Office,
the defendant remarked to advisors that the crowd the following day on January 6th was going to be angry.
That night, the defendant approved and caused the defendant's campaign to issue a public
statement that the defendant knew from his meeting with the vice president only hours earlier
were false, quote, the vice president and I are in total agreement that the vice president
has the power to act.
On January 6, starting early in the morning, the defendant again turned to knowingly
false statements aimed at pressuring the Vice President to fraudulently alter the election
outcome and raised publicly the false expectation that the Vice President might do so.
A. At 1am, the defendant issued a tweet that falsely claimed, quote, "'Evice 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."
B. At 817am, the defendant issued a tweet that falsely stated, quote, states want to correct
their votes, which they know were based on irregularities and fraud, plus corrupt process
never received legislative approval.
All Mike Pence has to do is send them back to the states, and we win.
Do it, Mike.
This is a time for extreme courage.
On the morning of January 6th, an agent of the defendant contacted a United States Senator
to ask him to hand deliver documents to the Vice President.
The agent then facilitated the receipt by the Senator's staff of the fraudulent certificates
signed by the defendant's fraudulent electors in Michigan and Wisconsin, which were believed
not to have been delivered
to the vice president or archivist by mail. When one of the senator's staffers contacted
a staffer for the vice president by text message to arrange for a delivery of what the senator's
staffer had been told were, quote, alternate slates of electors for Michigan and Wisconsin
because archivists didn't receive them, unquote, the Vice President's staffer rejected them.
At 11.15 a.m., the defendant called the Vice President
and again pressured him to fraudulently reject
or return Biden's legitimate electoral votes.
The Vice President again refused.
Immediately after the call, the defendant decided
to single out the Vice President in public remarks
he would make within the hour, reinserting language
that he had personally drafted earlier that morning, falsely claiming that the vice president
had the authority to send electoral votes to the states, but that advisors had previously
successfully advocated for removal. Earlier that morning, the defendant had selected Eastman
to join Rudy in giving public remarks before his own. When they did so, based on knowingly false election fraud claims, Giuliani and Eastman intensified
pressure on the vice president to fraudulently obstruct the certification proceeding.
A. Giuliani told the crowd that the vice president could quote, cast the ECA aside and unilaterally
decide on the validity of these crooked ballots. He also
lied when he claimed to quote, have letters from five legislatures begging us to send
elector slates to the legislatures for review and then called for quote trial by combat.
B. Eastman told the crowd quote, all we are demanding a vice president Pence is this afternoon, one o'clock, he let the legislators of the states
look into this. So we get to the bottom of it. And the American people know
whether we have control of the direction of our government or not. We no longer
live in a self governing republic. If we can't get the answer to this question.
Next, beginning at 11.56 a. the defendant made multiple knowingly false statements, integral
to his criminal plans to defeat the federal government function, obstruct the certification,
and interfere with others' rights to vote and have their votes counted.
The defendant repeated false claims of election fraud, gave false hope that the vice president
might change the election outcome, and directed the crowd in front of him to go to the capital
as a means to obstruct the certification and pressure the vice president to fraudulently
obstruct the certification.
The defendant's knowingly false statements for these purposes included the following.
A. The defendant falsely claimed that based on fraud, the vice president could alter the
outcome of the election result stating, quote, I hope Mike is going to do the right thing.
I hope so.
I hope so.
Because if Mike Pence does the right thing, we win the election.
All he has to do, all this is from the number one or certainly one of the top constitutional lawyers in our country.
He has the absolute right to do it. We're supposed to protect our country, support our country,
support our constitution and protect our constitution. States want to re-vote. The states got defrauded.
They were given false information. They voted on it. Now they want to recertify, they want it back. All vice president Pence has to
do is send it back to the states to recertify, and we become
president, and you are you are the happiest people. Be, after the
defendant falsely stated that the Pennsylvania legislature wanted
to quote, recertify their votes, they want to recertify, but the
only way that can happen is if Mike Pence agrees to send
it back, unquote, the crowd began to chant, send it back.
See, the defendant also said that regular rules no longer applied, stating, quote, and fraud
breaks up everything, doesn't it?
When you catch somebody in a fraud, you're allowing them to go by very different rules."
And D, finally, after exhorting that we quote, fight, we fight like hell, and if you don't
fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore.
The defendant directed the people in front of him to head to the Capitol, suggesting he
was going with them and told them to give members
of Congress, quote, the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country.
During and after the defendant's remarks, thousands of people marched toward the Capitol.
The defendant's exploitation of the violence in chaos at the Capitol.
Shortly before 1 p.m., the Vice President issued a public statement explaining that his
role as President of the Senate at the certification proceeding was about to begin and did not
include, quote, unilateral authority to determine which electoral votes should be counted
and which should not."
Before the defendant had finished speaking, our crowd began to gather at the Capitol.
Thereafter a massive people, including individuals who had traveled to Washington and to the Capitol
at the defendant's direction, broke through barriers, cordoning off the Capitol grounds,
and advanced on the building, including by violently attacking
law enforcement officers trying to secure it.
The defendant, who had returned to the White House after concluding his remarks, watched
events at the Capitol unfold on the television in a dining room next to the Oval Office.
At 2.13 pm, after more than an hour of steady, violent advancement, the crowd at the Capitol
broke into the building.
Upon receiving news that individuals had breached the Capitol, the defendant's advisors told
him that there was a riot there and that rioters had breached the building.
When advisors urged the defendant to issue a calming message aimed at the rioters,
the defendant refused, instead repeatedly remarking that the people at the capital were angry because the election had been stolen. At 2.24 pm, after advisors had left the defendant alone
in his dining room, the defendant issued a tweet intended to further delay and obstruct the
certification. 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 recertify a corrected set of
facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones, which they were asked to previously certify.
USA demands the truth."
One minute later, at 2.25 pm, the United States Secret Service was forced to evacuate the
Vice President to a secure location.
At the Capitol, throughout the afternoon, members of the crowd chanted, quote, hang Mike Pence,
where is Pence?
Bring him out and traitor Pence.
The defendant repeatedly refused to approve a message directing rioters to leave the
Capitol as urged by his most senior advisors, including the White House Council,
a deputy White House Council, the chief of the staff, a deputy chief of staff,
and a senior advisor.
Instead, the defendant issued two tweets that did not ask rioters to leave the capital,
but instead falsely suggested that the crowd at the capital was being peaceful, including
A, at 2.38 pm, quote, please support our capital police and law enforcement.
They are truly on the side of our country.
Stay peaceful.
B, at 3.13 p.m.
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 three o'clock p. PM, the defendant had a phone call with the minority leader of the United States'
House of Representatives. The defendant told the minority leader that the crowd at the
Capitol was more upset about the election than the minority leader was. At 417 PM, the defendant
released a video message on Twitter that he had just taped in the White
House Rose Garden.
In it, the defendant repeated the knowingly false claim that, quote, we had an election
that was stolen from us, close quote, and finally asked individuals to leave the Capitol while
telling them that they were, quote, very special.
And that, quote, we love you. After the 417
PM tweet, as the defendant joined others in the outer oval office to watch the attack on
the Capitol on television, the defendant said, quote, see, this is what happens when they
try to steal an election. These people are angry. These people are really angry about it. This is what happens.
At 6.01pm, the defendant tweeted, quote,
These are the things and events that happen when a sacred landslide election victory is
so unceremoniously and viciously stripped away from the great patriots who have been badly
and unfairly treated for so long.
Go home with love and in peace.
Remember this day forever.
On the evening of January 6, the defendant and Giuliani attempted to exploit the violence
and chaos at the Capitol by calling lawmakers to convince them based on the knowingly false
claims of election fraud to delay the
certification, including a the defendant through White House aides attempted to reach two United
States senators at six p.m. B from six fifty nine p.m. until seven eighteen p.m. Giuliani placed calls to five United States senators and one US representative.
See,
Co-conspirator six attempted to confirm phone numbers for six United States senators,
whom the defendant had directed Giuliani to call an attempt to enlist and further delaying the
certification. D, in one of the calls, Giuliani left a voicemail intended for a United States Senator that
said, quote, we need you, our Republican friends, to try to just slow it down so we can get
these legislatures to get more information to you.
And I know they're reconvening at eight o'clock tonight, but the only strategy we can follow is to object to numerous states
and raise issues so that we get ourselves into tomorrow, ideally until the end of tomorrow."
E. In another message intended for another United States Senator,
Giuliani repeated knowingly false allegations of election fraud, including that the vote counts certified by
the states to Congress were incorrect, and that the governors who had certified knew they
were incorrect. That, quote, illegal immigrants, close quote, had voted in substantial numbers
in Arizona. And that, quote, Georgia gave you a number in which 65,000 people who are underage voted."
Giuliani also claimed that the Vice President's actions had been surprising and asked the
Senator to, quote,, object to every state and kind of spread this out a little bit like
a filibuster.
At 7.01 pm, while Giuliani was calling United States
senators on behalf of the defendant, the White House counsel
called the defendant to ask him to withdraw any objections
and allow the certification, the defendant refused. The
attack on the Capitol obstructed and delayed the certification
for approximately six hours until the Senate and House of
Representatives came back into session separately at 8 o 6 p.m. and certification for approximately six hours until the Senate and House of Representatives
came back into session separately at 8.06 pm and 9.02 pm respectively and came together
in a joint session at 11.35 pm. At 11.44 pm Eastman emailed the Vice President's Council advocating
that the Vice President violate the law and
seek further delay of the certification.
Eastman wrote, quote, I implore you to consider one more relatively minor violation of the
ECA and adjourn for 10 days to allow the legislatures to finish their investigations, as well as
to allow a full forensic audit of the massive amount
of illegal activity that has occurred here." At 3.41am on January 7, as President of the Senate,
the Vice President announced the certified results of the 2020 presidential election in favor of Biden.
The defendant and his co-conspirators committed one or more of the acts to affect the object
of the conspiracy alleged above in paragraphs 13, 15 through 16, 18 through 22, 24, 26, 28, 30 through 33, 35, 37 through 39, 41, 43 through 44, 46, 82, 84, 85, 87 through 97, 99 through 100, 102 through 104,
111, 114, 116, 118 through 119 and 122.
In violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371, Count 2, Conspiracy to Abstruct
and Official Proceeding, 18 USC Section 1512K. The allegations contained in paragraphs one through four and eight through 123
of this indictment are re-alleged and fully incorporated here by reference. From honor about November
14, 2020, through honor about January 7, 2021, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, the defendant, Donald
J. Trump, did knowingly combine, conspire, confederate, and agree with co-conspirators, known
and unknown to the grand jury, to corruptly obstruct an impede and official proceeding.
That is the certification of the electoral vote in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1512, C2, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1512K, Count 3. Abstruction of an attempt to obstruct an official proceeding, 18 USC sections, 1512 C2 subpart
2.
The allegations contained in paragraphs 1 through 4 and 8 through 123 of this indictment
are re-alleged and fully incorporated here by reference. From Honor about November 14, 2020, through Honor about January 7, 2021, in the District of Columbia
and elsewhere, the defendant, Donald J. Trump, attempted to and did,
corruptly obstruct and impede an official proceeding, That is the certification of the electoral vote.
In violation of Title 18, United States Code, sections 1512, C2, subpart 2.
Count 4. Conspiracy against rights. 18 USC, section 241.
18 USC Section 241. The allegations contained in paragraphs one through four and eight through 123 of this indictment are re-alleged and fully incorporated here by reference. From honor about November 14,
2020, through honor about January 20, 2021, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, the defendant, Donald
J. Trump. Did knowingly combine, conspire, confederate, and agree with co-conspirators
known and unknown to the grand jury to injure, oppress, threaten, and intimidate one or more
persons in the free exercise and enjoyment of
a right and privilege secured to them by the Constitution and laws of the United States.
That is the right to vote and to have one's vote counted in violation of Title 18, United
States Code Section 241.
A true bill signed Jack Smith, Special Counsel,
United States Department of Justice.
This has been a reading of the indictment of Donald John Trump
in the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia issued August 1, 2023 for the Jack
podcast. I've been Allison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.