Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Legal AF - 6/20/2026
Episode Date: June 21, 2026The award winning Legal AF podcast with Ben and Popok at the controls covers breaking legal and political news from Iran, Miami, DC, Chicago, and Virginia, as federal judges across the country conside...r whether to appoint special prosecutors to bring the Trump Department of Justice to Justice. Support our Sponsors: HoneyLove: Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to https://honeylove.com/LEGALAF! #honeylovepod Qualia: Go to QualiaLife.com/legalaf for up to 50% OFF! Magic Spoon: Save $5 OFF your next order when you go to http://magicspoon.com/LEGALAF Sunday for Dogs: Get 50% OFF your first order of Sundays. Go to https://sundaysfordogs.com/LEGALAF50 or use code: LEGALAF50 at checkout. Become a member of Legal AF YouTube community: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgZJZZbnLFPr5GJdCuIwpA/join Learn more about the Popok Firm: https://thepopokfirm.com Subscribe to Legal AF Substack: https://michaelpopok.substack.com/subscribe?coupon=c0fc8f5c Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast Cult Conversations: The Influence Continuum with Dr. Steve Hassan: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show The Ken Harbaugh Show: https://meidasnews.com/tag/the-ken-harbaugh-show Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor,
free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario.
We've got a lot to discuss on this episode of
Legal AF, we'll talk about how the Trump regime is now refusing to submit a declaration,
surprise, surprise, under penalty of perjury to a federal court,
affirming in a court document that they will not be funding $1.8 billion to January 6th,
insurrectionist as part of Donald Trump's collusive settlement.
And not only that, but the Trump regime attacked the federal judge for even making the request
that, hey, if you're claiming you're going to get rid of this Lush Fund, why don't you submit a declaration?
How dare you?
That violates separation of powers, says the Trump DOJ.
We'll get into that.
We have Democrats in the House Judiciary Committee now accelerating their investigation into Donald Trump's cognitive and physical decline.
A letter from the ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, Jamie Raskin, demanding information from Donald Trump's personal physician about the 22 other special.
who apparently were with Donald Trump at Trump's purported physical,
also demanding information about the various tests that Donald Trump took
and asking information about what we all observed at Donald Trump's disastrous G7 appearance
where he couldn't walk, he barely could talk.
And when he did talk, he said some of the oddest, most vilous things,
a combination of incoherent rambling, disinhibition.
I mean, how many times was he telling the various,
male leaders around him, how attractive he thought they were.
Prime Minister Modi, El Sissy, the reporters, talking about staying in the hotel rooms with them
longer than he should and how handsome they are.
I mean, it was some very unique behavioral to say that.
Then we'll talk about what we're now seeing as federal judges fighting back against the
Trump regime, beginning to appoint or talk about appointing special councils that report
to the federal judge to...
investigate both kind of criminally, administratively, civilly, all of the above the behavior of this
rogue DOJ that's being, you know, that's been run into the ground by Todd Blanche, but which has zero
credibility. We've seen this grand jury misconduct that was identified in high-profile cases,
but now that's led to a domino effect where we've seen grand jury misconduct infecting almost
every case that this Trump DOJ has been involved with. So just kind of run-of-the-mill criminal cases
that may, and cases that are big but aren't really getting the attention of some of the other
ones, I mean, are getting dismissed left and right because Trump prosecutors are going in there
and just misbehaving in front of the grand jury. Almost anybody who's able to get copies of
grand jury transcripts, which used to be hard, but now with the presumption of regularity going
away with the DOJ when a criminal defendant's lawyer gets these transcripts inevitably like leads to
the dismissal of charges because these Trump DOJ lawyers are like, yo, let me tell you what you need to do.
It's Friday.
We're all tired here.
Let's not get on with all the evidence.
I'm going to vouch for this case, okay?
And I'm going to vow to say these words.
I'm going to just let's get out of here.
Sign this document.
I'll get you out of here in the next half hour.
That's like the most egregious form of vouching, which if I put on a.
law exam for my students. The students would be like, really, you made this the easiest exam ever
about grand jury misconduct. We'll talk about that and more on this episode of Legal A.F. Michael Popak,
so good to see you right now. How are you doing? Sometimes when you do your intro, I'm on the edge of
my seat about what we're going about to talk about. But I'm very interested in all the things that
you just laid out and the way that you laid out. I'm considering you're a co-host. That's a good thing.
I'm like, what are we doing today? And shout out to the,
Midas, Canadians. My wife and I are in Montreal. What a warm and beautiful welcome that we've had here in Montreal. My wife's first time and we're with our daughter. Ran into a couple of Midas fans at a restaurant last night. Shout out to Colin at the Monarch Restaurant, who was very excited that I was actually in there. We did a lot of talking about. He had a great line. I told him I would repeat with his permission, which is he said, he lives in Canada. He says, I don't follow sport.
The sport I follow is American politics.
And I know every play and every player.
And I thank you and Midas and Legal Aaf for giving me the knowledge that I need to enjoy that sport.
You know, I thought I was like, okay, well, at least I can contribute to that.
But anyway, I'm on the road. As everybody knows, when Ben and I go on the road,
we do lots of videos as if we're not on the road. Some people may not have noticed
except for the change in scenery that I was doing that. But, you know, listen, just to jump ahead for a
a minute. The whole G7, if the Democrats didn't open an investigation or try to about the mental
decline, continued mental decline of the President of the United States after what they observed
at the G7 summit, it would be professional and political malpractice. I mean, they have no choice.
When you combine the Walter Reed Hospital missing for eight days, I mean, the only way Donald
Trump is missing for eight days during a critical time during a war from public appearance is a
let's be frank he's getting a procedure or treatment or something of the kind it's another reason why you
don't fly to go to your son's uh wedding because you can't take a cap a pressurized cabin because you've
just had some sort of a treatment or or uh or procedure i mean that explains eight days missing as opposed
to oh you're just taking some time off okay 22 specialists and then the thing i mean besides going
after all of the male leaders in a weird way, as you outlined. How about his attack on Maloney of Italy?
He used to be one of his closest allies saying to her, again, another narcissistic, misogynist
attack on a woman and a woman leader, where he says, she was begging me from my photo. She wanted to an
Italian reporter. She was begging me, and she went off. I just, my wife speaks Italian, so we were
watching it at breakfast. She, she went off. I said, I don't speak Italian. She seems very angry.
Is she very angry in this video?
And my wife was like she is beside herself.
Italians and Maloney don't beg.
And, you know, that's an indication of how he craps all over allies.
This is basically her paraphrase.
And this is the reason he's lost the war.
The other thing, as we talk about, we'll touch on the war.
New York Post, run by Rupert Murdoch editorial board,
just declared what we've all known, which is Trump lost the Iraq.
war and it's worse than Obama. That's a headline from the New York Post, not from a liberal
rag sheet, from the rightest of right wing controlled by Rupert Murdoch. So he's got that problem right
now, which is he is the thing he hates. He's a loser and he's wasted valuable resources and human
lives in America upended the economy here and around the world for no reason whatsoever,
other than to try to run interference for failing poll numbers.
Look, Iran forced him to do something he really often refuses to do,
which is to put in writing an agreement.
And Donald Trump hates that because he always wants to use the lack of agreement
or oral understandings to defraud people.
That's what he's done his whole life.
When he has to sign a written agreement,
He then tries to prey on the ambiguity of the language in agreements or things that aren't always spelled out in agreements, but which rely on something called implied covenants of good faith and fair dealing.
And what Trump will often do if there is an agreement, whether it is a failed real estate deal, failed businesses, he'll immediately try to go on the offense, just file scorched earth litigation.
regardless of its merits and then try to bog down people in the insanity and in the chaos
and in just the depravity of his life where most people don't want to even be.
So he's used to not winning litigations in lawsuits when people actually confront him in
lawsuits and cases go before the jury.
He loses almost every time when you have unanimous juries ruling against him.
but what he tries to do in cases is just,
and this is what he's done his whole life,
and this is what he tried to do in the war but failed,
just relentlessly turn the fire hose on,
push lies, push fraud, annoy, be weird, be gross, be threatened,
and show love, hate, you know, just, oh, a whole,
it's all based on fraud.
Let me be very clear, just fake them.
Oh, now I like you.
Oh, now I hate you.
Now we're going to be, you know, all of that.
you know, all of that. So it kind of, he's used to that wearing people down and being like,
all right, just what do you want? Can we just get this predator the hell out of our lives?
That's his whole schick. But when you stand up, E. Gene Carroll wins. When you stand up,
Letitia James win. When you stand up, Alvin Bragg wins. I mean, that's the history of all of this.
You know, and so now Trump signed this memorandum of understanding, which is not the full agreement,
but it is what we would refer to in the legal profession as a,
binding short-form agreement that the terms are binding.
There would be a broader long form, what we would say in the law in the future,
but he has to abide by this.
And the United States has to abide by it.
And to the extent the United States has made representations that others will abide by it,
Israel and Lebanon, that's a representation that the United States,
if we use contract principles, is essentially telling Iran that we will be against,
for certain representations, that there will be a full ceasefire in Lebanon, period,
that there will be a $300 billion fund that will be created that Iran will have access to.
So, you know, you may want to ask some of the Arab nations whose entire GDP is in that amount
of money, are you aware that you're going to be paying Iran X billions of dollars and this and that?
So Trump has built in into this MOU a lot of terms and provisions that he doesn't even really have the authority for, yet alone the congressional authority for because the removal of all sanctions from Iran based on our laws here in the United States requires in the contract, you know, requires congressional approval in order to withdraw the sanctions.
Like, there's literally a law that says, if you're going to do anything that impacts sanctions involving Iran's nuclear capabilities at all, any type of side deal.
It requires Congress to vote.
So Trump's made promises that he doesn't even have the legal rights to.
And so, Popak, I'll bring you in right now.
So what is Trump?
What is Trump doing, though?
So now Trump and Sentcom do, it just, it so follows his behavior and all others that it's just,
It's too on point.
So what does he do now?
Just lies.
And defraud and say, look, look what we've got everybody.
So we all know that earlier today, Iran closed down the straight of Hormuz again.
Because Donald Trump's promise that, you know, that he would be able to rein in Israel's attacks in Lebanon.
Trump has not been able to do that.
And Iran said, okay, that's whether you like or don't like that as provision number one,
That's what provision number one of the MOU says.
And so Iran says, right, we're closing the straight of removes.
So what CENTCOM now says, though, is that we, as of Saturday, have full control over the
Strait of Ramos.
Not only that, Popak, 17 million barrels of oil cross the waterway today.
That's more than basically pre-war levels.
They pick a number that's so ridiculous.
And that, to me, is like painting the reflecting blue blue.
When we see green algae, they go, oh, the Democrats.
vandalized that's why it's green. It's ridiculous. The sun, the sun and biosynthesis
vandalized the pool. The headline for the New York Post, this is the New York Post,
with the Strait of Harmuse held hostage, Trump's Iran deal is worse than Obama's. I mean,
this is how they put it. As he prepared to sign his memorandum of understanding with the Islamic
dictatorship of Iran, President Trump again insisted that his deal was much different than that of his
predecessor Barack Obama. He's right, the editorial board writes. It's probably worse. Obama's
treaty did not prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. It simply punted the issue down the road
in exchange for cash. Trump's agreement has the same vague promises, the same payouts, but with an
added twist that Iran can and will take the world hostage by shutting the straight of Harmuz
at will. And they point to the deal. Point number five of the 14-point deal. Of which,
which only two are in favor in some way about the United States.
We continue to not want a nuclear weapon.
Oh, they've said that before.
The rest of the 14 points is all in favor of Iran
and getting the money either now and funds released now
on the signing of the MOU or $300 billion or $400 billion down the road.
Point number five, the post article says,
the Islamic Republic of Iran will conduct dialogue with the Sultanate of Oman to define the future
administration and maritime services in the Strait of Hormuz, to which the paper now says,
why would opening the door for administration of a previously free international waterway be part of the agreement?
And it goes on from there.
It is, it is.
But here's why, too, I want to pass it back to you.
Applying our legal principles to this framework in.
a mediation, right? The understanding often reflects the balance of power of who won and who lost.
And the incongruity, perhaps to people out there who aren't fully paying attention to this,
is U.S. lost the war. But Trump and the regime and lots of propaganda, including Fox,
was saying, we won. And their Navy's at the bottom of the sea. So then you look at the document
and look, the document makes sense if you're the losing side, right? And that's what we see in our
types of mediated settlements sometimes.
And that's the incongruity.
The deal makes sense.
There is no doubt that if you showed that document, which we're doing, to an
impartial group of people, like your classes, the students in your class or somebody,
you said, who do you think is, tell me who the winner of this deal is and tell me who
the loser is.
There is no doubt that Iran is the winner of the deal.
And not by a little, but by a lot, they get hundreds of billions of dollars to, for,
reparations to repair the 70,000 bombing runs by Israel and the United States.
Trump, you know, Trump made a big deal out of Obama releasing $1.7 billion, this is a million
years ago, to Iran, like, oh, he released it. He released it because we had an arms deal to sell
to Iran. We never delivered the weaponry because we were at, you know, we were at odds with
them, but we kept the money. All Obama did was.
give them back money for weapons we never delivered and then released about $50 billion from another
account. We're talking 10 times that, 30 times that, and taxpayer dollars being released to them.
There is no doubt in my mind that the world believes that Donald Trump just lost the Iranian war.
And more importantly, even MAGA believes it. You don't trot out J.D. Vance to go with Megan Kelly or on the
view to start pushing this narrative that Iran is a win, okay, which he's, which he's failing to do
if you don't think you have a major political and PR problem. And you put that, this will segue
to something, I'm sure, against this spoon feeding that we're getting, the slow drip, drip,
drip of the chapters and pages from Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan's book, regime change.
you know, the first bombshell was they ran the article about the Situation Room being the site of the cover-up
at the highest levels of the Trump administration of the Epstein files.
But now we're getting all sorts of things about Iran, about, you know, every day I get like another.
I feel like I read the book already.
And it hasn't even been released.
Right.
And here's the thing, though.
I don't want this deal to fall apart because I don't want us to be in this war.
or more war. I don't want to see more death. I don't want to see more war crimes. I don't want,
I want, I want, as much as I must obviously reflect on the reality that America lost the war,
that this is a weaker deal than Obama's actual deal, because this isn't even a deal. It's a
MOU. It has binding provisions, but it's not an actual deal like the JCPOA, which was, I think,
over a thousand pages in length, which had very specific requirements and did all.
lot to specify how multilateral organizations and nations
interacted it brought in China it brought in Russia it brought in Europe it brought in
Asia brought in all of these these people but I want now that there is an
MOU of all of the options this to me is an option that reflects if you break
something you have to fix it and that's what the US did and lost so let's abide by the
MOU but then as we talked
through this episode, Michael Popak, about Donald Trump's behavior, even when we'll talk about
what happened in this Virginia federal court, where a judge is saying, ah, okay, we're hearing from the
DOJ and Todd Blanche that you are not going forward with the J6 Slush Fund or this agreement that
Donald Trump entered into with the Trump government, the regime with this collusive settlement
after some $10 billion lawsuit that was frivolous that Trump filed against the United States government.
I don't even know how I'm going to be able to explain this to my daughter, like this era,
you know, but that's what happened.
Okay, so just put it in writing.
So we all know that you're going to abide by the terms.
Even if you put it in writing, we don't think that you'll abide by the term.
But let's put it in writing.
And we'll talk about in the next segment that the Trump regime's like, no, we don't want to put it in writing.
going to tell you we're not going to go forward with it. And so what Iran very sophisticatedly did
in this 14-point memorandum of understanding, they built in mechanisms to test Trump at each level
as you go down with the first test being the Lebanon test, which Donald Trump has not been
able to create a lasting ceasefire in Lebanon, which is something that Trump promised. And again,
Whatever your view on that prop, that's what it says in the agreement.
You go down deeper and deeper and deeper into this agreement and you see these other terms.
And we know that Trump is the ultimate contract breacher.
And now Trump has trapped himself in this 14-point memorandum of understanding where his instinct is to do the Trump instinct.
Fraud, lie.
However, as he's admitted, we are days away from tank bottom when it comes to,
oil reserves. We are days away from global economic attack. Trump has said that publicly now. And so
Iran heard him say that. Donald Trump showed that he may hold cards, but he's showing the worst
hand ever to the world right now. And Iran holds the cards. Iran has worked with Oman to
sophisticatedly build this authority to govern the strait of Hormuz. They've been solidifying their
alliances with China and elsewhere, and the U.S. is left alone. The analogies, and we'll talk about this
as the episode continues, though, to Trump litigation, again, it's so on point. Trump would try
to throw everything at Abrago Garcia, and all Abrago did was stand up, and it's not all he did,
it's impressive, and he's a hero that deserves far more attention than he's getting.
But Abrago wins. E. Jean Carroll, she wins. Again, Alvin Bragg and Letitia James, you could go through all of these cases. If you just can deal with the Trump Relentless, you will win the litigation. No doubt Iran saw that. And they know they can continue to wait him out. And he'll flail and he'll project and he'll do all of these things. But these are contract. You know, this is our purview, Popak. This is contract principles. Here's what the MOU says.
You're going to follow it or you're not going to.
Here's the thing.
There's not a lot of gray.
I read the MOU.
The Trump regime tried to deny that there was this MOU or that the points were the points.
But now that it's been published, we all see it.
So you either follow it or you don't follow it with the ramifications being global catastrophe that are, you know, that's right here.
Let's talk more about that Popak.
I want to also now bring this into Virginia, federal court, because it ties right into what Trump's doing.
Yeah. I'm just going to defraud the court. Before we get in there, I want to remind everybody to please hit subscribe to our YouTube channel, but more importantly, subscribe to Michael Popock's YouTube channel. It's called Legal AF. Obviously, you know that. It's the name of this podcast. Subscribe to Legal AF, get Legal AF 2 million subscribers, the award winning Legal AF, of course, winner of multiple Webby awards. Subscribe on Substack to Legal AF as well. Go on Substack and search Legal AF. And then also, if you are
somebody know has been injured in like a car accident or a trucking accident or because of the
negligence of others. If you're looking for a lawyer, Popok, Popok still practices law and he's got a firm
that handles cases for legal a.fors. Go to 877 Popak AF or visit the Popak firm.com. The
consultation is free. See if you have a case. Popock mostly handles catastrophic types of cases,
real serious injury. So if you or somebody knows who has been injured because of the negligence
of someone else or a company or something, call 877 Popak AF or visit the Postop.
Opachfirm.com. All right, let's take our first quick break of the show.
Look, the magnesium, it's something most of us lack. And if you're taking that drugstore variant,
you're still not getting the full picture. Industrial farming, chronic stress, and everyday aging all make
it worse. Most supplements only use one form of magnesium, but magnesium comes in many forms that
support your body in different ways. That's why you need to try qualia magnesium plus. It combines
10 bioavailable forms of magnesium with more than 70 trace minerals for comprehensive full-spectrum
support. Sleep deeper. Think sharper. Recovery faster. Support muscle strength, a steadier mood
and balanced energy metabolism. It's not just a sleep supplement. Oh no. It's a full-body magnesium
system built for modern living so you can feel your best every day. Since adding qualia magnesium,
plus to my routine, I'm feeling easier recovery from workouts and a calm, more centered,
wind down at night. It's been a supportive addition to my daily wellness routine.
Experience the most trusted magnesium for purity, potency, and performance, plus it's non-GMO,
vegan, and gluten-free, making it a choice you can feel good about. Go to qualiaLife.com
slash legal AF for 50% off, and here's a bonus. Use the code legal AF for an additional
15% off your order.
That's Q-U-A-L-A-L-A-L-A-L-A-L-A-L-L-A-F.
and then use code legal A-F.
Thanks to Qualia for sponsoring this episode.
Oh, have you ever actually looked at the ingredient list on your dog's food?
After that first ingredient, well, good luck.
You see, Kibble is made using extreme high heat to keep its shelf stable and inexpensive.
So brands have to add back synthetic vitamins and minerals
in the form of strange chemicals whose names you,
you don't understand and definitely cannot pronounce.
Is that really what you want your dog eating?
Sundays for dogs is different.
They start with more than 80% all-natural meats
and then finish with superfoods like kale, ginger, and blueberries
and gently air dries them instead of using high heat.
Sundays doesn't look or smell like dog food.
It looks like high quality.
Human grade jerky.
No fillers, no nutritional blends, no chemicals,
just simple, complete nutrition.
Founded by Dr. Torrey Waxman, Sundays was created to meet her high standards as a veterinarian and as a dog parent.
And the best part, Sundays requires no fridge, no freezer, no prep, no mess.
You get the quality of a home-cooked meal with a scoop and serve ease of kibble.
It's what dog food should have been all along.
Over 100,000 dogs are eating Sundays and the reviews speak for themselves,
especially from owners of picky eaters who had never seen their dog get this in.
excited about meal time before, like My Lilly, make the switch to Sundays. Go right now to
Sundays for Dogs.com slash legal AF50 and get 50% off your first order. Or you can use code
legal AF50 at checkout. That's 50% off your first order at Sundaysforogs.com slash legal
AF50. One more time, Sundaysfor Dogs.com slash legal AF50 or use code legal AF50 at checkout.
Welcome back to Legal AF. Thank you to all of our sponsors who make this show possible.
Link to the discount codes for those sponsors is in the description below.
Make sure you subscribe to Legal AF on YouTube, on audio, and subscribe to the Midas Touch YouTube channel as well.
All right, Popak, now that we've kind of, I think, set the framework for Donald Trump not being a deal maker.
He's a deal destroyer.
He uses negotiations to lure people into good faith discussions to sucker punch, right?
Then if he is end up signing his name to something, I think he said this in the art of
the deal, which he didn't even write, is that for him, the deal is not actually a binding document.
It's the beginning of a discussion as a tool to manipulate, which is not what it should be.
And I think this is why he's gone bankrupt so many times.
And he's bringing us on the brink of that as a country right now.
And there are many people, not his right-wing oligarch friends, who may be impacted soon,
but the rest of the country who's feeling this pain right now and they feel that they're a casualty of the Trump bankruptcy MO.
But let's talk about it in the context now of this Virginia case.
And when Trump is refusing now to sign a very basic declaration that Judge Brinkham has said
and arguing it's a separation of powers issue, Popak,
which would seem to also mean that any judge order
is a separation of powers issue to the Trump regime
if it's a simple request.
Talk to us about it.
Yeah, there's a number of things here.
It shouldn't be the art of the deal.
It's the art of deception.
That's all Donald Trump perpetrates.
And I got another way to tie things together
that you and I are gonna talk about in this segment,
which is the Trump administration has made a decision.
They do not want Todd Blanche,
and he will not testify under oath,
in any case, even if you and if,
it means the Department of Justice will lose that case. Let me repeat that. Trump has ordered
Blanche not to testify in any case even when order to do so or it's obvious that he has to testify
in order to salvage a case. He would rather lose the case, dismiss the indictment, be found to have
been vindictively prosecuting or committing a fraud on the court, then submit an affidavit.
We've got a case involving two major cases involving the anti-weaponization.
Fund, one in front of Judge Brinkema, which is brought by Democracy Forward, on behalf of a very
diverse group of plaintiffs.
That is currently being indefinitely blocked the fund by Judge Brinkema.
We got the case, the companion case, I call it, the parallel case, in front of Judge Williams
in Miami.
And yesterday was a red-letter day for both of those cases, because two major things happened
in those cases.
And they actually, it's almost like call-in response.
They actually, smartly, the lawyers, whether it was the lawyers for the 35 former federal judges in Miami, or it was the democracy forward lawyers, they know about each other and they know what's going on in the respective courts.
In Brinkama, the issue was she blocked the anti-weaponization fund.
The Trump administration ran back in and said, you don't have to block anything because we, the case is moot because didn't you hear.
when Blanche was testifying in Congress, he said it was dead on arrival.
Now, let me back up for a minute because this plays on the Miami case as well.
Allegedly, this was begun by a lawsuit between two adverse parties, according to the government,
Donald Trump on one side and Donald Trump's own IRS on the other with the Department of Justice in the middle.
And they tried to argue to Judge Williams in Miami that that was not a collusive lawsuit
because all these were independent parties.
Therefore, the lawsuit was legit,
the settlement of the lawsuit was legit.
The Department of Justice unlocking the judgment fund to pay out
under the slush fund was legit,
all under the imprimatur of the lawsuit.
Problem with that is, as we've seen in the last couple of weeks,
the only party or person that either amended the agreement
or announced it was over was one party to the deal,
not even a party of the deal, a guy named Todd Blanche for the Department of Justice.
So if you're not, if you're fully diverse or fully separated,
you would have needed the Treasury Department,
the Department of Justice, and Donald Trump's lawyers to all announce the end of the deal.
And you'd need those same three parties in order to amend the deal,
which Todd Blanche did unilaterally the day after the deal was announced
to give Donald Trump and his family a superimmunity.
So the fact that Planch is acting unilaterally
actually reinforces the argument
that there is collusion
because how could he do it all himself?
Where are the other parties?
So Judge Brinkum has said in her hearing
and we did a great set of reporting on that on Legal A.F.
I had Sky Perryman in an interview last week.
She was in the room because her organization had brought the case
and I had Adam Kassfeld from All Rise News
who was in the room reporting.
And so they all, we kind of put it together for our audience.
And what Judge Brincoma said when Andrew Block, the lawyer for the Department of Justice,
came in, who had just argued a similar case in front of Judge Leon in the District of Columbia,
the ballroom judge, she said, this is how the hearing started.
You're a very brave man to enter my courtroom with these arguments.
That's how she started the hearing.
And she eventually said to him, I read the transcript with Judge Leon.
And you said that Todd Blanche had walked away from the deal or have you spoken?
At the time, Judge Leon asked you, had you spoken to Blanche recently?
And you said you hadn't.
All right, it's three days later.
The eyes of the world are upon this case.
I can't believe you haven't spoken to him since.
And Block's like, well, I really haven't spoken to him.
I really don't know his opinion.
He says, yeah, that's not going to do it.
So here's what we're going to do.
I'm going to block indefinitely the fund.
And if the fund is really dead as you say it is,
in terms of the balance of equities, public interest,
why do you care that I'm blocking a fund that's dead?
That I don't understand.
So here's what we're going to do.
If it's really dead, we're a court of law.
She said this.
In the court of law, I need facts and evidence that are induced in my courtroom,
like in front of me, not a statement that's made somewhere in Congress
by one of the parties, especially when the president has said
he would be sorely disappointed if the fund were lost.
And she said, when he says things like that,
that usually leads to the Department of Justice doing something in response.
So here's what we're going to do.
I want an affidavit, sworn statement under oath from Todd Blanche on the DOJ side,
Scott Besson on the Treasury side,
and Stan Woodward, who participated from the Department of Justice in the signing.
If you give me those three things, I'm done.
I will dismiss this case.
You will never see me again, as my paraphrase.
Jurisdiction over case moot.
If you don't do that, I'll see you next month with your response.
The block stays on and we go from there.
And so we waited patiently.
You know, Scott McFarland invited us.
I was doing a good foot tap in his social media post.
Still no filing.
Well, they finally filed a piece of paper.
But it wasn't the one that Judge Brickhamel wanted.
it was one that we expected, which was Todd Blanche announcing to the world,
I am not testifying under oath in any court.
I don't care if we lose.
See, and Judge, you mentioned Kilmer Obrigo-Garcia.
In the Kilmer case, the judge was on the precipice of dismissing prosecution against Kilmer
for finding a vindictive prosecution and that the government didn't carry its burden
to show they didn't vindictively prosecute.
And he basically told the government, you need to get me,
testimony from Todd Blanche, where you're going to lose this case, and they refuse to give him testimony,
they'd rather lose on vindictive prosecution that have Todd Planch testify. Same thing when you and I turn
to it in Chicago, and we talk about what's going on in two courtrooms over the corrupted grand jury
by the Department of Justice there and whether it goes back to Blanche in the White House. He will never
testify there. They'd rather dismiss indictments than to have Todd Blanche exposed to being sworn under oath
in a court of law.
So here with Judge Brinkum,
we get a piece of paper file late last night
that says,
you don't have the power.
It implicates separation of powers.
Not one case law cited underneath that filing.
We put the filing up on legal AF substack.
And you cannot command three cabinet members
to file anything.
It should be good enough for you
that he said it in Congress.
Good day.
I mean, that's my version.
So, I mean,
they came up with their own version of what they wanted to tell the judge to go pound sand
and that he's never going to testify and now she's already in her order said what's going to happen
you don't file those those affidavits i'm going to just see you in a month with your response now if
they don't like all of this i guess they could do what they've threatened to do which is take an
appeal um i would normally segue over to williams what do you want to do ben yeah segue over to
williams but you know the point on the appeal that they're arguing
is, I don't think it's going to fly if it goes to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, right?
I mean, they are saying this case should be dismissed because it's moot, because we've, you heard
Todd Blanche in Congress, he said, we are not going forward with it. And we have said, in open
court, we are not going forward with the fund. Notably, they also don't address Donald Trump's
super pardon of himself of all tax liabilities, tax evasion.
criminal investigations into his own potential tax fraud, all of the things that are included in that
waiver of all the past civil and criminal claims against his tax fraud. But they said, just trust me,
bro. Just trust me. And the federal judge says, trust but verify, and you've lost your
presumption of regularity. We don't trust you. Your statements in open court don't matter and don't
have meaning anymore. Your words are meaningless, right? The same way Trump's words are meaningless
to the world. They don't, I mean, it's all a bunch of just nonsense. So you can put it in writing.
And if you put it in writing, then I will dismiss the case. I will have a written document
where I'll be able to hold Todd. I may not be able to, you know, fortunately, the Supreme Court gave
Trump absolute immunity, which is ridiculous. But I will be able to hold Todd Blanche accountable
and you accountable as the lawyers. And if you violate this, so there will be some level of
accountability. Although I think in perhaps a few years, and I won't belabor the point here,
I've done other takes on it, the idea of absolute immunity for Trump as it relates to his
filing of this case in his personal capacity versus as the president of the United States actually
means that he probably doesn't have absolute immunity regarding his behavior here. But at least
during this term itself, I don't think that. Yeah. Yeah, I was just going to say, because you and are going to
you a lot of this over the next year. When the Democrats take control, hopefully, of the House and the
Senate and springboard to the presidency in 2028, do not be shocked by a future Department of Justice
in the hands of adults who are ethical, challenging the absolute immunity ruling by the United States
Supreme Court frequently, and maybe even about Trump, taking cases up to purposely argue to find
out the proper contours of this freewheeling decision that you and I have said is about as clear as
mud when it came out three years ago. So even though you and I sometimes and others will short hand
it by saying the absolute immunity decision, you know, it's not done. There's going to be challenges.
I'm not sure what the Supreme Court does with them, but they're going to be a future Department
of Justice and Solicitor General's arguments that things that Donald Trump has done fall outside
even their version of immunity.
Let's talk about Judge Williams in Florida, and this will tie into our other view in segment three about special counsels that are going to be appointed by federal judges to investigate the DOJ's behavior, ultimately tying into what you just said, Popak, with Todd Blanche, who's really the architect gives him too much credit because the term architect makes it feel like there's architecture happening, really the destroyer than the architecture.
But talk about what's going on in Florida.
Yeah, absolutely.
I've been in front of Judge Williams.
I have a pretty good handle on and talking to judges and lawyers,
sorry, talking to lawyers who are handling the case, including Andres Rivera, the local council.
And Judge Michael Ludick is one of the 35 judges who, he actually is probably one of the leading forces there about their,
they're filing in what last night as well, big red letter day for Donald Trump.
And in hers, this could be the silver bullet.
Because if Judge Williams finds that she was used, that the federal court was defrauded,
and that there was the seat on the court by Donald Trump's lawyers and the Department of Justice
and the Treasury Department to give a phony imprimatur of legitimacy over the quote-unquote settlement
to allow for a settlement, to allow for a compromise of claims, to allow for the unlocking of the judgment fund by the Department of Justice,
If she finds all that phony, then the whole thing gets, she can, and the judges have reminded her late last night in their filing, she can throw, rip up the settlement and declare it a product of fraud, almost like the fruit of the poisonous tree and throw it.
It's amended settlement agreement, giving that super pardon to the Trump family and everything else and toss it all into the trash can.
And they're imploring her to do that.
Now, in the middle, a couple of days ago, Trump lawyers, a half-hearted response would be a compliment.
The thing that they filed basically told the judge to go pound sand, we're not responding to you.
You say fraud and deceit, but we don't see it, okay?
The 35 federal judges, all 35 of them are hacks, even though many of them were appointed by Republicans who are there, you know, partisan hacks.
and you don't have jurisdiction.
And oh, by the way, we didn't commit fraud and deceit.
Think about this, Ben.
No sworn statement, no under penalty perjury filing.
If I'm on the receiving it as a member of the Florida bar
and a member of the bar of the Southern District of Florida,
of a order by a judge, effectively in order to show cause,
to prove to her that I have not defrauded her
and committed deceit on the court,
I know what my response would look like.
First of all, it would lead with in no way did we ever intend, nor was the court defrauded, nor deceived.
And here's why.
And then I'd have affidavits, including my own, because, you know, she wants to hear from me.
So I got to testify.
So it wouldn't be a naked submission.
It would be a verified submission, a sworn submission.
And then I'd go get the answers to the questions for the Department of Justice, Todd Blanche,
Stan Woodward, and the head of the IRS.
And I'd submit those as well to show her that this is not a fraud on the court,
that this was all legitimate.
He doesn't do any of that.
He sends in a naked submission with no support, effectively no case law,
just ad hominem attacks on people and says, are we good now?
And the federal judges wrote late last night.
I just did a hot take that's up on Legal A.F. YouTube about it and said, it's not good.
First of all, you don't even have to worry about the 35 federal judges
and whether we have standing or not under the federal rules of civil rights.
procedure, which we do. But the judge, you have inherent authority as a federal judge. I mean,
you and I have been saying this since moment one. Judge, you have your own inherent authority.
You don't have to wait for anybody to come along. I didn't want her to dismiss the case in the
meantime, in the first instance. Use your own authority. And it is broad. It is expansive, they reminded
her, including they didn't list appointing a special counsel, hold that point for a minute,
but tossing the settlement agreement
and that she needs to police
the justice system, her own courtroom,
and only she can do it.
And it doesn't matter whether the case was mooted or not mooted.
If the fraud on the court happened,
which they say clear and convincing evidence establishes that it has,
she must act.
And they get the final word in that final brief.
Now, in there, they also say, in the last week or two,
there's more evidence that supports our position that under the circumstance of a party controlling the Department of Justice.
They can never unlock the judgment fund to pay out money, period.
That's effectively their argument.
They said the new evidence is, you wanted to know whether it was collusive or not?
Todd Blanche is telling the world that he alone can unilaterally put an end to the contract
that he alone can unilaterally amend the contract.
I mean, you and I have been practicing law for a long time collectively.
I mean, I would love to wake up the next morning after a deal is signed
and say, I think I'm going to give myself a raise.
I think I don't like this term.
I think I'm going to buy that house for a lot cheaper, like half.
I'll just do it myself.
That's not how it works.
But it is an indication that it actually supports the fraud
and the requirement, the necessity,
that the court go forward with an investigation.
And that's the final word of mic drop by those 35 federal judges.
Now, here's what I think she's going to do next.
I don't think she's got a sufficient record yet to find contempt,
to find a fraud on the court based on the filings.
And since the government didn't supply any evidence,
I think she's going to have to open up an evidentiary hearing,
a trial, if you will,
where she's going to pull the parties in.
And now lawyers are going to have to look her in the eye and say for the Department of Justice,
we're never going to testify.
And it's going to be the exact same thing they argued in Brick come up.
Separation of powers.
You can't make us.
She's going to say, I don't need, I need the Department of Justice to find out whether
I've been defrauded and you're going to testify.
So they might have a fight that goes up to the 11th Circuit.
But she's going to do that relatively soon.
I'd be shocked if it doesn't happen in the next week or two after she now,
the dust settles on this final filing. So I think, in other words, to sum it up,
the Department of Justice and Top Blanche have bought themselves, not only an evidentiary hearing,
but possibly the appointment of an independent special counsel to advise the court because she still
doesn't have adverse parties in front of her. And unlike in other countries, you know,
if you have civil code countries, where the judge can also be sort of the investigator, we don't
do that in the United States. The judge is the trier of fact if they're sitting on the bench and the
parties are expected to fight it out in discovery and otherwise and get those facts adduced in
front of the judge. So she's done it before. She's had three very established lawyers, one of former
federal judge, one of former Solicitor General and another top lawyer give her advice about the case.
I think she does something very similar, which bounces us out to Chicago where I think special prosecutors are going to be appointed by one, if not two federal judges against Todd Blanche and the Department of Justice.
Take a look at that powerful filing by those 35 retired federal judges escalating their challenge against Trump's $1.7 billion slush fund and IRS super pardon deal.
That's the language that they use.
Plaintiffs' filings only underscore the need to investigate.
whether the parties have perpetuated a fraud on this court and corrupted the integrity of the judicial process.
There is reason to believe the parties use this suit and subsequent settlement to give cover for a giveaway to the lead plaintiff,
who also controls the defendants. Plaintiff now seeks to complete that deeply concerning process by insisting that the court can do nothing.
Remember during Donald Trump's first term, as bad as it was, how horrific as it ended when
there were all of these warnings, he was so close to doing this and so close to doing that.
And could you imagine how bad it would be?
Remember all those scenarios of people saying that here's what the plans were?
And then the Trump regime would say, we didn't do that.
And when the Midas Touch network would say, here's their plans, here's what they're going to do,
we would always get those fact checks from like the Daniel Dales of the world.
and the snoops of the world.
The Trump said they didn't do that.
There's no evidence that I said, look at what they're actually doing behind the scenes.
Let's look at their actions and let's call it out.
And now that they're doing it and it's actually happening.
And you have 35 retired federal judges from all different political backgrounds who are out there.
You know, it's just fascinating to me that, you know, those types of people, you know,
kind of are silent, you know, and they kind of just move to the side.
And they don't recognize what there's no accountability for what they were doing trying to
show for Trump.
But in any event, we're going to keep on building at the Midas Touch Network and we got to build
new structures to fight back at this.
And that's what we're seeing federal judges do also, building new structures, frankly,
on a bipartisan basis.
I mean, judges from all different political backgrounds saying, how do we now deal with a DOJ
that basically is not prosecuting the criminals that are the criminals?
How do we deal with a criminal enterprise showing up, calling itself the DOJ,
but are the ones covering up the child sex traffic?
How do we deal with these people?
Talk about that when we come back.
A reminder, if you or someone you know has been injured in a car accident, a trucking
accident, if you've been injured by the negligence of a company or a third party,
and you're looking for a lawyer, call 877 Popak AF or visit thepopfirm.com.
Popok has lawyers and people across the country who will take your call to see if you have a case.
The consultation is free.
Maybe you know somebody who may have a case who was injured in a really bad accident.
Reach out to Popok.
The worst they'll say is that you don't have a case.
877 Popak AF or visit the Popok firm.com.
And also make sure you subscribe to the Legal AF YouTube channel and the LegalAF substack.
Let's keep both the LegalAF YouTube channel and the LegalAF substack on top of all of the respective
charts. And then let's take our last quick break of the show. Let's talk about what judges are doing.
We'll talk about what Democrats are doing, calling out Donald Trump's cognitive and physical
decline as well. Let's take our last quick break of the show. If you grew up like me,
loving those classic Saturday morning cereals, you've got to check out Magic Spoon.
It's basically the grown-up version of your childhood favorites with that same nostalgic taste,
but packed with protein and made with zero to two grams of sugar per surer.
serving. Their original cereal line, it has 12 to 14 grams of protein, 4 to 5 grams in net carbs,
and a certified gluten-free, making it an easy option for breakfast, maybe an afternoon snack,
or something after a workout. They've got classic flavors like, wait for it, fruity, frosted,
peanut butter, cocoa, and cinnamon crunch. And their newer classic marshmallow and s'mores
flavors bring real marshmallows and those nostalgic childhood vibes. Magic spoon treats are also
crispy, airy snack bars with 12 grams of protein,
seven grams of fiber, and zero grams of added sugar.
Look for a MagicSpoon on Amazon or at your nearest grocery store.
If you want to try something new,
check out MagicSpoons protein pastries.
They're packed with protein and tastes like those nostalgic toaster pastries
you grew up with, but without all the sugar.
You can get $5 off your next order,
including the protein pastries at magic spoon.com slash legal a.F.
That's magic spoon.com slash legal a.f for $5 off.
All right, let's be real.
Who likes wearing a bra?
Nobody, especially when you're working out, right?
Sports bras are terrible to wear most of the time.
And they, whether it's that they dig into your shoulders on the straps or the band rolls up
and feels too tight around your rib cage or, you know, whatever it is, they're a pain to take to put on,
they're a pain to take off and they're so uncomfortable.
But Honey Love has this sports bra that is different.
And they have this wonderful new product called the Honey Love Cross Flex Activity Bra
and it immediately felt different from every other sports bra that I've worn.
It feels like a sports bra with a support, but it's also designed for all day wear.
And it's supportive without feeling too tight, too stiff or suffocating.
It has easy to take on and take off, and it's wireless using their technology called CloudFuse.
So there's no poking or digging or pressure points, which is actually what I love the most about it.
And it gives you, of course, great shape and separation instead of that Uniboop look that sports bras can often give you.
So if you find yourself reaching for a sports bra on a daily basis and you are, because you need the coverage and you need the support,
but you're looking for something comfortable that you could also wear all day.
I highly recommend the Honey Love CrossFlex activity bra as the solution you've been searching for.
So it's really fantastic.
They are now offering a crossover triple bra bundle.
So if you want a full refresh on your top drawer, you can get a huge savings by buying three at once.
They are an independent female founded brand with products designed by women who actually wear them.
including the founder, Betsy.
Honeylove doesn't just make bras and shapewear.
They've built a full line of tanks, body suits, and underwear with supportive structure,
smoothing fabrics, and premium finishes.
And they recently launched their new crossover contour bra, which features their best-selling wireless crossover bra
design plus built-in molded light foam pads for extra support and beautifully contoured shape.
Treat yourself to the most advanced bras and shapeware on the market.
use our exclusive link to save 20% off HoneyLove at Honeylove.com slash LegalAF.
That's Honeylove.com slash LegalAF.
And after you check out, they'll ask where you heard about them.
Please support our show and tell them LegalAF sent you.
Experience the new standard in comfort and support with HoneyLove.
Welcome back to LegalAF.
Thank you to all of those sponsors, the discount codes for those sponsors.
It's in the description below.
Those sponsors support our show.
so support those sponsors and some really good discount codes right there.
Popak, let's zoom in on what's happening in Illinois and specifically Chicago
where the Broadview Six prosecution, malicious prosecution,
that resulted in the dismissal there of the peaceful protesters
outside the Broadview facility when they uncovered all of this grand jury
misconduct that was taking place there,
where you had the most obvious form of prosecutorial misconduct
and grand jury misconduct called vouching,
where a prosecutor tells the grand jury,
I'm vouching for this case.
You got to just do it for me.
I wouldn't bring you a bad case.
Let's get you out of here early.
I'm giving you the most exaggerated example of it possibly.
Usually it happens in more subtle ways that are still misconduct,
but that's exactly what the Trump DOJ did in that case,
the Broadview Six case.
They literally said, we wouldn't bring you this case if it was bad.
We've got a lot more evidence that we're going to show in the future.
So just let's get you out of here quickly.
Sign your name to this document.
It's an indictment.
And then we'll get you out of it very quickly.
We got some other good cases.
We'll bring you as well.
Just do your civic duty, sign it, and then we'll be done with it.
It's obviously improper.
It's unethical.
It's criminal, perhaps, if you, you know, depending on how you do it.
And you're not, you know, and it's resulted in the dismissal of that case.
But then lots of other criminal defendants in that courtroom said, whoa, whoa, whoa.
We should find out if the prosecutor was doing that in our cases from this.
this Trump regime. That just seems to be the modus operandi for these Trump regime prosecutors.
And it's very hard to get your hands on grand jury material because it's usually viewed as
grand jury secrecy. It's protected material. But because the presumption of regularity for the DOJ
behaving ethically has been destroyed by Trump's DOJ and Blanche and Bondi, federal judges saying,
okay, we'll give the criminal defense lawyer the transcripts. And then sure enough, the transcripts
show, whoa, this is what the Trump DOJ is doing in every grand jury proceeding, it seems.
So we got to look at this entire courthouse now, and we're seeing cases get dismissed
for real serious charges of fraud and violent crimes, big million-dollar fraud cases,
and other really serious cases where, yes, everybody's presumed innocent.
the allegations against some of these other criminal defendants, not the broad view six ones,
just some of the run-of-the-mill cases that federal prosecutors are supposed to bring,
which are serious charges, trafficking cases, you know, all these cases were like,
whoa, the DOJ has now infected all of their cases with misconduct.
And now all of these cases, thousands of cases,
could potentially be getting dismissed right now.
And so one more point I'll bring in before throwing Popkin.
For grand jury proceedings, just the way our citizens,
system is, because we've never had literally a criminal enterprise as the DOJ, the system is
the prosecutor is with the grand jury, the judge is not in the room, the lawyer representing
the target that the DOJ is trying to get an indictment of is not in the room. The standard
is a lower standard than beyond reasonable doubt. It's a probable cause standard. And that's
been our system. And we've trusted the DOJ to do that work.
But now that's out the window.
So Popak, we're seeing in Chicago, you know, they're saying, we need special counsels to
investigate what's going on here.
The federal judges are we've seen other cases now, serious criminal cases involving COVID
fraud of people like creating like fake medical companies, they're alleged fake medical
companies during COVID get dismissed.
We're seeing a lot of, you know, serious charges get dismissed on technical grounds because
Trump prosecutors have engaged in rampant grand jury misconduct.
Yeah.
Well, shout out to the Broadview Six defense lawyers because they are not taking fraud on the
court for an answer.
They are continuing to push, and I think push very willing judges to in particular, Judge Perry and
Judge Coleman, about the corruption that may reach to the highest levels, including Todd Blanche
and Donald Trump.
and they want to find out about it.
So Broadview six case, Judge Perry,
Loretto Hospital case, Judge Coleman,
both occupy courtrooms inside the Chicago
Federal Courthouse, Northern District of Illinois.
The reason that they're joining together here
is there's a common denominator,
a grand jury that met every Thursday
for the last 18 months that was run by the hand-picked
eventually by the hand-picked U.S. attorney Andrew Butros for the Department of Justice.
And then from there, you know, they always say the organization rots from its head.
And then from there, you had even 12-year line prosecutors, ones that had won awards from the Federal Bar Association like Sherry Mecklenburg,
doing things that were eye-popping is not the right term.
I mean, my eyebrows like flew off my head when you and I both got copies of the transcript.
more importantly, it flew off the judge's head.
Judge Perry was like it's the worst example
of prosecutorial misconduct in a grand jury that I've ever seen.
And the one that you keep referring to,
when I reread it, I get it now.
She had been working with this grand jury for 18 months.
Could you imagine being on a grand jury for 18 months?
You get called in every Thursday.
And she starts it off with her boss in the room,
with Andrew Boutros in the room,
obviously there as an emissary from the White House.
And it's this well-worn path that we've now seen in a number of cases where Trump and the White House put pressure on Blanche, Blanche and his right-hand person, Akash Singh, who's the number, whatever, the deputy, whatever, in charge of all U.S. attorney's offices.
He puts pressure on the local U.S. attorney in that office who puts pressure on the lower-level prosecutors.
We saw the exact same blueprint, well-worn path in the Kilmer-Abreg-Garcia case.
And so what is the U.S. attorney doing sitting in on Sherry Mecklenburg's presentation
about the Broadview Six to a grand jury in which he also apparently gave a speech to the grand jury
when it looked like they weren't going to return the indictment like a pep talk,
made sure the pep talk wasn't on the record, which is already a violation of the grand jury.
of the grand jury processes and rules because he knew what he was doing was wrong.
He didn't want it reflected on a transcript.
And Sherry Mecklenberg says to them, oh, I said to my, he sucks in the young prosecutor
into her conspiracy.
I said to my buddy over here that I got to bring this to the Thursday grand jury.
Let me bring this one to the Thursday grand jury about the Broadview Six, the six, you know,
peaceful protesters against ICE, you know, trying to.
Curry favor with them. We've been in this together. We've been together for a long, long time.
You know me. You know, you know me. You know, you know me. You know, I don't bring you bad, like you
said, I don't bring you bad cases, the evidence here. And then she tries, not once, not twice,
but three times to get the indictment. The first time she brings it, they don't, they don't agree
with her. They, they return a no true bill. She tries again. And this time she says, it's my fault.
It's my fault. Like she was breaking up with the grand jury. It's not you, it's me.
It's not, I did something wrong.
I didn't explain it right to you.
Let me try it again with her boss hovering in the background.
And then she tries again.
And that's when one of the jurors famously said,
is this the same crap you brought in here last time?
Like, she's been with this grand jury so long that like,
this is the dialogue that they're having back and forth with each other.
And then she like tried to dismiss the grand jurors that were not buying what she was selling.
And then commented that she had conversations with the grand jury.
in the hallway, then had to come back and say,
now I gotta tell you about something I shouldn't have done,
because she has to admit it.
And the weirdest thing is she uses,
she has like a Freudian slip.
She says vouch during her presentation to the grand jury.
She said, my colleague here can vouch.
I'm like, does she know she's vouching?
And that's why that word just came out of her mouth,
which is when a prosecutor says,
forget the evidence, trust me.
This is good stuff.
stuff. You should indict on it, which of course you're not allowed to do. So second transcript,
no. Is this the crappy case you brought last time? Third time she finally gets an indictment.
Now, when the defense lawyers get the transcript released because they make the argument,
there must have been abuse. They heard about all these things. The judge says, send me the transcript.
And then they send her a heavily redacted transcript, like 217 lines in it. She eventually gets the
the regular transcript and she sees why because they had abused the process such prosecutorial
abuse that the judge found it like eye popping they then the defense lawyers say we want our
attorney's fees under a very little used uh rule of criminal criminal practice called the
hide amendment where if you have a bad faith prosecution against you you can get your attorney's
fees back you almost never win on a hide amendment motion so they file there
and they say, we got to show his bad faith,
we need all the emails.
We need all the emails between Todd Blanche and Andrew Boutros
and the regular prosecutor, and maybe the White House, we need them all.
And that's when the Department of Justice and Boutreux said,
no, no, we're going to agree to the attorney's fees.
We're going to agree, we're going to dismiss the indictment with prejudice,
and we're going to give you your attorney's face.
And God loved those lawyers for the Broadview Six.
They said, yeah, that only proves that we need.
the emails because this is an indicator, a badge of the fraud that you're so willing to agree.
And we should all want, they actually said this, we should all want on both sides,
prosecutor and the defense side. We should want these emails to know what happened here, right?
And then they hit the final nail in the coffin for the, for Andrew Brutroes and maybe for
top lanch, which is that we need a special prosecutor. We need a special prosecutor appointed here,
judge you have the power to do it under rule 42 you need to appoint a prosecutor and you and i have
seen this before where a judge believes that the department of justice is not going to prosecute or
investigate itself and so has to appoint somebody to be an officer of the court and that's what they're
now demanding that is now sitting with judge Perry to decide the woman the judge who said out loud
i believe this is the worst case of prosecutorial abuse ever and she wants to do something about it
Then you've got Judge Coleman, who's got a case called the Loretto Hospital case,
having to do with COVID testing, fraudulent COVID testing and reimbursement to the tune of billions of dollars.
Things are so bad with the Department of Justice that they have dismissed that indictment with prejudice,
not because the people aren't guilty, because of the prosecutorial misconduct in the grand jury.
Those two people are like, wow, we just got, we don't even have to go to trial.
So now they're dismissing, you would think, indictments that they worked hard to get
because of the prosecutorial misconduct.
And they're trying to do it to get out from under Judge Coleman.
And Judge Coleman has told them, similarly to Judge Perry, you open Pandora's box.
She literally said that.
And if you think dismissing the indictment is going to get you out from under this and the examination by this court
as to whether there is fraud and the lawyers are involved to, you've got another thing coming.
And she was also pissed off that Andrew Boutros didn't show up in her courtroom to dismiss the indictment
and sent some more respected prosecutor in the office hoping that that would do the trick.
It's not.
I think we're going to see a special counsel or prosecutor, a point more likely than not,
appointed by Judge Perry, appointed by Judge Coleman, and maybe to round out what we did earlier in front of Judge Williams in Miami.
me. This will be extraordinary, but this is the natural and inexorable next chapter when you have
a corrupted and captive and captured Department of Justice led by now, first Bonding, now Blanch,
and really by Donald Trump. This is the natural extension of that in year two of that. As finally,
finally, fed up federal judges, former and current have figured out the tools in their toolback
and what they're going to do about it to protect justice.
The days of shock and awe, and I can't believe they just did that,
and are they not going to abide by my orders?
It's over.
It is over in federal courtrooms.
And then, of course, it'll go up to the appellate court,
and we'll see what the United States Supreme Court has to say about all this
and how much they're going to bend themselves into a pretzel.
I'm talking about the MAGA 6 on the court to benefit their patron again, Donald Trump.
You know, I think about everything that's going on right now in this country.
I think about the symbolism of Donald Trump telling everybody that the reflecting pool is crystal clear,
while it is more infested than algae than ever before, as Donald Trump promised that this was going to be his main cause, the reflecting pool, which is the oddest thing in and of itself.
I think about that.
I think about on Friday, Donald Trump doing a press conference in front of a,
Qatari jet that Trump turned into a Qatari Air Force one for the United States,
which he's going to steal and make his own in the next 18 months that MAGA Republicans just let
him take a jet. We, the taxpayers, are paying hundreds and millions of dollars in renovations for a
Qatari jet so that Donald Trump could own a billion dollar plane. I think about Maggie Haberman
and Jonathan Swan's books, regime change, where they talk about Melania,
not allowing Donald Trump to sleep in the master bedroom,
even though Melania doesn't show up at the White House really
on any meaningful period of time.
But then Donald Trump sleeps in the second floor living room area,
but then anything that is decorated in the White House that looks gold,
Trump hoards and keeps in his second floor living room area.
And apparently, according to all the reporting,
he sleeps in filth.
rappers, garbage all over him.
He insists that there be rugs and carpets in the bathroom, which have mold on them,
and they're all wet and, like, disgusting.
And I think about what I observed at the G7, his behavior, his physical and cognitive issues,
which I don't want to let him off the hook for his vile, evil, malicious behavior.
But you know one day that's where he's going to go.
I mean, you know, it's fairly easy to predict where this is going.
When accountability strikes, he's going to say that he was incapacitated.
And this was, I'm giving you my opinion now under the First Amendment.
I'm giving you my opinion.
I think he and others, it was dementia, it was Alzheimer's, it was this or that.
It was what Fred had.
And da, da, da, da, da.
You know, and all these stories are going to come out.
And, you know, and we're going to be like, yeah, we knew that.
Like, it's obvious, we're watching him.
It's a combination of all of it.
He was an evil, horrible human being.
You compound that, the malignant narcissism.
You compound that with the mental and physical decline right now.
And you have the recipe, you know, for just kind of sheer and absolute and total disaster
that we are, you know, that we're seeing right now.
And so, you know, we need the levers of government to work.
We need a function in Congress.
We need a function in Congress that does real oversight.
I've set aside this political part.
It needs to do real oversight.
The most egregious violations are taking place before our eyes that are frankly unfathomable before.
We need a re-understanding and a reimagination of the Constitution because the Constitution has in it good faith and fair dealing through the take care clause of Article 2.
And Donald Trump does not take care that laws.
are faithfully executed. He views laws as something to be broken, to put your middle finger at.
And he's involved in the most disastrous foreign policy, fathomable and imaginable.
And with all of these things happening, it is impacting the American people's lives.
And all of our reporting shouldn't get lost in all of the Trump weapons of mass distraction.
We need to reflect on them, of course, and hold them accountable.
But we should ultimately remember that the victims in all of this are the American people and people throughout the world, not just myopically talking about Americans as a result of this regime.
It's the role as the Trump regime.
But the American people, as we record this live, June 20th, are suffering.
They're the victims right now of this Trump regime.
People are psychologically tortured as a result of what Donald Trump does.
People don't know.
Am I going to be able to afford gas today?
Probably not.
When I go to the supermarket, am I going to be able to afford?
these meals. Probably not. Probably not. I mean, I'm sure you all experience this too, where you go there
and they start wringing up the items and you go, ah, you know what? Just take that back, take that back.
I'll just take these right now. Wow. I didn't realize it was that expense. It is. And we,
you know, people struggling to pay rent, people struggling with basic day-to-day stuff right now.
And Trump's out there bragging about luxurious Qatari jets and telling us the reflecting pool is blue
when we know it's algae green and worse than ever,
and giving no bid contracts to people, friends of his
who have donated to the campaign and all of this stuff.
And it is, it is, there's a lot of concern and doom and dread,
but I'll leave it on a positive note, which is we're here.
June 20th, 2026, we're here, we're standing.
We haven't fallen.
This Trumpian nightmare, it still exists.
But I think people are wise to it right now when my only hope, my project is less a political project of this party, that party, this person, or that party.
It's a generational project of we need real law and order because our systems weren't capable of addressing a Trump, an authoritarian like this, as someone who fashions himself as a Nero version of the Caesars.
We weren't equipped to deal with it.
Project 2025, all of the Federalist Society destructions of our legal system was to hoist up a Caesar.
They got right to Nero pretty freaking quickly, who as Rome Burns, he's talking about Qatari Jets.
That's what's going on here.
And we need to rethink the way we structure laws.
We need to rethink the composition of the Supreme Court and term limits.
We need to really reimagine at a generational level what makes us Americans.
and why are we in this together?
What are we trying to accomplish here?
And that's, to me, what Midas Touch is all about,
what legal a. F is all about,
which shows like this are all about.
So I'll stop preaching right there.
Popak, anything you want to say before we sign off?
No, I think you've got,
I just want people to understand
that the reason that we focus on the mental decline of Trump
is not as a counterbalance to his attacks
on Joe Biden and Joe Biden's legacy.
I mean, you know, going after the recordings that Joe Biden did with his biographer or his author,
which has now been blocked by a federal judge subject to appeal.
It's not that.
It's not because we're trying to come up with another counterpoint to President Autopin and all of that.
We're talking about serious matters that people, somebody with his finger on the nuclear button is acting out in public, in public,
in ways that are alarming and concerning.
It would indicate that somebody is in the throes of dementia,
a lot of the acting out, the cursing,
the weirdness, the lack of continuity of thought,
the physical frailty.
And for a person that says, you know,
there tries to act with gestures of transparency,
like it's the most transparent presidency of all time.
Of course, we know that's not true with the Epstein-Files situation,
room reporting that's now been done. But his medical condition, it's not normal to have 22
specialists crawl all over another human being. It's not normal to have four dementia tests over
a period of 18 months. It's not normal to disappear for eight days after that visit. And then when you
do reappear and you take a relatively simple flight to Europe, you know, with all the
the luxury of Air Force One that you showed up like something that the cat just dragged in,
who can't put a sentence together and seems beyond gassed during the G7, where he effectively,
without recognizing the historical parity of it, he, at Versailles, you know, in France,
he capitulated to Iran. I mean, you know, these kind of things are in.
important. So I think Democrats are doing their job on just as the Republicans went after Biden
and everything about his his mental state. That's the same thing here. It matters. Who's running
that government? You know, and if it's not him, God help us if it's who we think it is, which is
the combination of Stephen Miller and JD Vance and Susie Wiles and other people in the inner
circle or inner sanctum. So I'm glad that we're here.
here together doing this. And to answer the question, there's two major questions that I get asked
time and time again on this network on legal life. Is my vote secure? And the answer to that is,
I feel relatively confident in the abilities of the attorneys general, the public interest groups
to do their job inside of courtrooms and federal judges to do their job to protect the vote in real
time, starting now all the way into the day of elections. And I, and the second thing,
people are very, very concerned about is will what we're watching, will the people who are
responsible for the Trump administration, the enablers, the synchofance, the bootlickers,
who are abusing our constitution, our rule of law, will they be brought to justice one day?
And I say, yeah, it's a combination of impeachment proceedings for those in the government,
for obstruction of justice and other things.
And then prosecutions, when the Department of Justice is in the hands of the Democrats,
because many of the things we're watching now will be within the statute of limitations to allow for prosecutions.
So the justice is coming, you know, like they used to say on Game of Thrones, Winter is coming.
Justice is coming for these people. The good news for America is that the other party can walk and chew gum at the same time.
They're not going to be consumed by just doing investigation, investigation, investigation, the way this do nothing Congress has done.
They're going to be able to do both.
pass laws to help the American people around the kitchen table in the most intimate decisions of their life.
Yes, they can do all of that.
And at the same time, root out corruption, reverse all of those executive orders, most of them,
restore our position in the world and help the American people.
We can do both and do impeachment and criminal prosecution.
So that's the, you know, we always like to leave this on a, on a, not.
artificial but a high note and a call to action for audience so I'm glad that you you kick that off
everybody make sure you subscribe to our YouTube channel here but more importantly
subscribe to the Legal AF YouTube channel wherever you also listen to audio podcast why
don't you give Legal AF audio a try subscribe to Legal AF substack not just their YouTube channel
let's keep both the substack and the YouTube charts keep legal AF on top of both also if you are
someone, you know, has been injured in a car accident, an auto accident, and trucking accent,
if you've been injured by the negligence of a third party involved in a catastrophic injury,
know somebody who has, have them or you give a call 877 Popak AF or visit the Popak firm.
Call or text 877 Popak AF or visit the Popak firm.com.
And, you know, tell Popok, you know, see if you have a case.
And if worst case an error, you don't have a case.
But Popok created this firm to help.
know, and he represents a lot of people who listen and watch this show. And the consultation's
free, as I mentioned before. All right, everybody, we appreciate you. Thank you for watching this
weekend's Legal AF, or whenever you're listening or watching this. We appreciate you for hanging out
with us and learning about all of the stuff. We love spending time with you, and we'll see you next time
on Legal AF. Shout out Midas and Mike.
