Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Legal AF Full Episode - 10/8/2025
Episode Date: October 9, 2025Things went terribly for Trump and his DOJ lackey Lindsey Halligan during Former FBI Director Comey’s arraignment, as the Court sets a trial date of January 5, 2026! Pam Bondi, the pathetic excuse ...for an Attorney General removed all doubt about her competence with her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, where the Epstein Coverup blew up in her face, again. The 9th Circuit hears oral argument about whether Trump can mobilize the national guard into Portland, as the 3 judges picked to hear the case are not what we expected. The Supreme Court MAGA 6 was back in action with 2 big oral arguments this week and which may hold the key to how they vote the rest of the new term. And Michael Popok and Karen Friedman Agnifilo make it make sense, on the rated Legal AF Podcast exclusively on the MeidasTouch Network. Support Our Sponsors: ONE SKIN: Get 15% off OneSkin with the code LEGALAF at https://oneskin.co/hair #oneskinpod SOUL: Go to https://GetSoul.com and use code LEGALAF to get 30% OFF your order! SUNDAYS FOR DOGS: Get 40% off your first order of Sundays. Go to https://sundaysfordogs.com/LEGALAF or use code LEGALAF at checkout. IQ BAR: Get 20% off all IQBAR products. Text LEGALAF to 64000. (Message and data rates may apply) Subscribe to Legal AF Substack: https://substack.com/@legalaf 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 The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
With the chaos and the abuse of the rule of law and the destruction of the Department of Justice that is the hallmark of the Trump administration, we could literally do a legal a half podcast every day.
But we've saved up enough. And even going on to the air today with Karen, we had to make rapid response adjustments based on rulings that are coming out, mainly not in Donald Trump's favor, although with a little twist in Oregon we'll talk about.
And Donald Trump is just, you know, he has a tell, Karen.
He has a tell.
When he knows he's going to lose or he doesn't really care about, like, the indictment of James Comey,
he automatically starts managing expectations.
Oh, Comey's a bad cop, but he pulled a crooked Biden judge.
So what am I to do?
Well, we're going to find out pretty rapidly, given the rocket docket of the Eastern District of Virginia.
So we're going to update everybody on this fast-moving story about James.
Comey. No perp walk, everybody. There's a little bit of a spoiler alert. And I think that was
a wise move by the Trump administration. And wait to hear the reports from the people inside the
room for the arraignment in front of Judge Nakmanoff of what Lindsay Halligan was doing,
or better yet, what she was not doing. She was almost in a fetal position, Karen. The people in
the room said she was rocking back and forth in her chair.
and nodding a lot, but didn't speak.
And we'll talk about who did speak on behalf of the Eastern District of Virginia,
a couple of carpet-bagger prosecutors in from North Carolina.
And then Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals don't have a great judge pull for that one.
The three judges that got pulled on whether Judge Imurgut made the right or wrong decision
to protect our democracy and our rule of law to stop Donald Trump from federalizing.
the National Guard in Oregon
and using them in a Portland
that seems to be populated
by regular law-abiding
citizens mixed in with cartoon characters
and frogs and chicken suits
does not a rebellion or insurrection make.
And we'll talk about Christy Dome's
cosplay with her entourage of
social media podcasters going to ICE
for a prayer session
and to survey
the war ravaged Portland
until the camera panned down
and sort of wrecked her whole narrative.
But the Ninth Circuit has an oral argument tomorrow.
It will be up on legal AF YouTube live
for tomorrow.
It's 9 a.m. Pacific time, 12 p.m. Eastern time.
And we'll talk about the judges
and we'll talk about the briefing.
And what is on the docket for the appeal
and what is not.
Then the Pan Bondi show came to town.
Every couple of months, she has to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
And in this one, I guess you thought it was going to be some sort of one-and-done experience.
I'll just come in.
I'll do a couple of counterpunches, a couple of feigns, a couple of jabs,
kind of wrap it up, call the Democrats disgusting and challenge them rather than answer questions.
And that really didn't go over well.
and things blew up in her face that were supposed to be softballs.
See, softballs are not, look at the face.
That was her, leave that up for a second.
That was her face for the majority, in lieu of answering questions.
That was her smarmy, you know, squinty-eyed, why do I have to be here for almost every question that she would.
This is the same person who begged, there she is, begged for the job, Karen, during her confirmation hearing,
I will be independent.
I will not be told what to.
to do by Donald Trump.
Well, that's not who showed up at the confirmation hearing.
We had a couple of great clips, including the Epstein matter,
blowing up in her face in response to a softball set of questions by a MAGA senator,
not even the Democrats.
I want to cover that, Karen, with you.
I want to cover the SCOTUS Supreme Court of the United States is back in session,
and the MAGA six are working overtime.
Two oral arguments already, and we can already see that the majority is going to be ruling for the pro-Trump positions in both.
So we're off to a rocky start on the first day or two of the Supreme Court.
We're showing those live as well, Karen, on legal AF YouTube.
Come on, Karen.
Come on in.
Let's do this.
Hi, Popak.
Great to see you.
How are you today?
I'm doing great.
I can't wait to talk about these things with you.
I can't believe what I'm seeing with my eyes these.
days. One more, one more turn of events and that TV behind you is going to be tossed out
onto whatever street you're on. Broadway. Broadway. Can't take it anymore. Comey, let's start
with good news. We got the great good news for Comey to remind everybody, in case they were
sleeping like Rip Van Winkle lately. Former FBI director, former U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, James Cohn.
was indicted, we think, it's hard to tell from the indictment, for some sort of perjury involving
we're not quite sure who, about what and when. These are all problems with an indictment, by the way.
Problems that were pointed out by Pat Fitzgerald, the former U.S. attorney for Chicago.
And for people that were in the room, they said, Karen, it looked like the tables were switched
because you had the powerhouse team that knew what they were doing, quick on their
feet and getting everything they wanted in James Comey, former U.S. attorney, and it is lawyer,
Pat Fitzgerald, former U.S. attorney. And on the other side, you had, I told you we'd want to pay for
this, you had Lindsay Halligan, who never said a word. According to reports, I'm not making this
up. I'm not being mean more than I need to be, rocking back and forth in her chair and doing some
nodding. She better get used to, I think she's getting ready to get into the fetal position.
She, she carted in, no one in the Eastern District of Virginia's office will prosecute this case.
So they had to import two lawyers from North Carolina, one Mr. Lemons and one Mr. Garcia,
who handled trying to get Judge Nakmanoff, a Biden appointee, to slow the case down.
Because there's new reporting, and I want to talk to you about this, about these reports,
that are going to have to be turned over to the defense
that say, don't prosecute this case
because the witnesses like maybe Daniel Richmond,
the law professor at Columbia,
will provide insurmountable hurdles
to a conviction all there in a leaked report.
A lot of leaks coming out to make sure
these things are preserved for the defense.
Between that and the one we had two days ago
where John Durham, the special counsel,
said there's no case to prosecute against Kobe.
If there was, I would have done
in four years and tens of millions of dollars of my investigation. All that plays into the hands
of Pat Fitzgerald and James Comey. It's a win for them today by a lot, not a little. What was your
perspective as a former prosecutor about how this arraignment went down, the chief judge, sorry,
the judge being selected, the performance of the prosecution and all these leaks that are coming
out about don't prosecute this case because there's no case. Yeah, this was a, it was like
watching the like a minor league team play the Yankees, right? It was just unbelievable to see
the matchup in court and what's happening. I mean, so much so that even the order that the
prosecution provided to the court about when the court, when the trial date is set, had the
wrong year on it. It already passed. It's supposed to happen January 5th, 2026, and it says
January 5th, 2025. I mean, they're just rookie rushing this thing to court.
But, you know, look, just putting this into perspective, the Eastern District of Virginia is probably in the top five of the 90 judicial district or the 90 U.S. Attorney's offices across the country.
It is the cream of the crop.
It's really highly, highly respected, partly because, look, they deal with matters of the utmost importance in this country because just by jurisdiction, the Pentagon sits in the Eastern District of Virginia.
CIA, lots of government offices, because it's right by Washington, D.C., it's one of the suburbs.
So they are very highly respected. They've been around a long time. The fact that they couldn't
get a single Eastern District of Virginia prosecutor to prosecute this case, that's issue number one,
that they had to bring two guys up from North Carolina. That's telling right there, number one.
Number two, you've got this judge who, yes, he's a Biden appointee, but look, judges are picked at
random. This was a random appointee, just like sometimes Trump gets Trump judges, sometimes he gets
judges that weren't appointed by Republicans, but also a very respected judge that has a great
reputation. And the Eastern District Virginia is known as the quote, rocket docket. They are known
for having cases go at lightning speed. And this case is no different. And the judge was skeptical of
the prosecutions trying to slow this down, saying, oh, there's voluminous discovery. First of all,
two-count indictment. There can't be that much discovery. And this case has been
investigated for years, as you said, although we don't know exactly what the case is about
because the indictment is so thin and threadbare that they don't even provide notice
to the defense of who person one and person three are, or which exact statements are you
talking about that you are claiming he lied about. So nobody really knows what this is about. People
have surmised. They think it's about certain things, but if it is about the things that people think
it is, not only is there evidence to the contrary, right? There's evidence showing that he's not
guilty of that. For example, some people have surmised that one of the people, one of person one or
person three, is this guy, Daniel Richmond, who's a law professor, and he is somebody that
prosecutors have alleged that Comey authorized to leak information to the press. He,
told investigators that Comey instructed him not to engage with the media on at least two
occasions and unequivocally suggested and said, Comey never authorized him to provide information
to a reporter anonymously ahead of the 2016 election. So they have tons of information actually
that says Comey didn't do this, that Comey is not guilty. They have prosecution memos that
basically were provided to Lindsay Halligan saying all the reasons they can't even meet the
low burden of probable cause, let alone beyond a reasonable doubt. And they are just, they are just
in over their skis. I mean, they rushed to the grand jury. They rushed an indictment. The indictment
really isn't proper. I think you're going to see a superseding indictment in this case that
cures the issues in this indictment because it's pretty bad. And you've got Jim Comey and Pat Fitzgerald,
as you said, two prior United States attorneys, not assistant United States attorney.
but they were the head of the offices, one of Southern District of New York, one in Chicago.
These are legal powerhouses.
These are heavy hitters.
These are respected people, which is why Comey was appointed to be head of the FBI.
And, you know, he's a very well-respected person.
He also has a daughter and a son-in-law who, until recently, until this case, frankly.
They're on the defense team now.
Exactly.
We're very respected federal prosecutors.
they're going to be on the defense team.
I mean, they don't have a shot.
This is not, there's no case here.
And on top of that, he's already signaled, Comey's already signaled that they're going to make
a claim for vindictive or malicious prosecution or selective prosecution.
And for those of you who want to know the difference between selective prosecution
and vindictive prosecution, they are slightly different.
Selective prosecution is when the government enforces a neutral law in a disqualification.
discriminatory way. So prosecute some people, but not others, for things like their political
beliefs, right? So they're going to make that claim. And there, if they get over the hurdle there
and make that claim, they're going to get all sorts of discovery from the government that really
have nothing to do with the two charges. There's nothing to do with like, did he, what did you say
here and what did you say here? But we'll go into all the stuff that went into prosecuting him,
all the emails, text messages, memos, all the statements that they have, just everything from all the lawyers, et cetera, who said, don't bring this case or there's not enough to bring this case, or there is no case.
So that's what selective prosecution is. Vindictive or malicious prosecution is slightly different.
It's when the government retaliates against a defendant for exercising a protected legal rights.
So like if somebody appeals a conviction or refuses to accept a plea deal or files a motion, and because they did that, the government then brings more serious.
charges, the prosecution has to be motivated by a retaliation here. I think here you have
that as well. So this is clearly selective and retaliatory. So I think they are going to bring
both those motions. I think they have, those are really hard cases to make, but frankly, if I ever
saw a case that had that, I mean, Exhibit A is Trump's public tweet to Pam Bondi, where
you said, Pam, basically. First, he fires the U.S. attorney for the
Eastern District of Virginia, who he appointed Mr. Siebert, and then told Pam to bring this case,
he installs Lindsay Halligan, who brings it the next day. So I think they have a great,
a great shot at both of those motions. And if they get over that hurdle, I don't see
anybody finding Jim Comey guilty of these crimes. And a great judge. You got Michael Neckmanoff,
who we've talked about before, former federal public defender, which is where Joe Biden helped change
the face of the judiciary, he put on a number of federal public defenders, rather than just
prosecutors, to have a more well-balanced, because they come at it from different perspectives.
You know, your long career as a prosecutor is amazing and developed a certain lens for you.
I spent the exact same amount of time as a defense lawyer, primarily, and, you know, now you're a
defense lawyer as well, because you have the benefit of being a prosecutor.
but when you have a guy like Nakmanoff who makes really good decisions is really well respected
it's a compliment to hear Donald Trump call him a dirty what makes him dirty because he got
confirmed by the Senate and Joe Biden appointed him that makes him dirty and what makes
Imrigat the Trump appointed judge in Oregon we're going to talk about next what makes her
an insurrectionist and it's just this the American be honest to say it out loud the
people are tired of it. The American people are tired of it. They're tired of his whining. They're tired of
his unpatriotic approach. They're tired of his attack on the rule of law and attack on judges.
And it's showing up in the polls. So I don't think this is helping him. And I think Nakmanoff was like,
well, nobody's waving. That's the other thing. Jim Comey's smart, as we know, as is Pat Fitzgerald.
They're not waiving speedy trial because it puts the burden and the pressure on the prosecution
to turn over everything within very short.
I mean, we're going to trial in three months in a very short amount of time,
like in the next two, three weeks.
And I don't think they're right.
You think Lindsay Halligan, when she showed up 10 days ago at the Eastern District of Virginia
and couldn't find the washroom key, you think she figured out where the big pile of
documents are that they have to turn over by law to the defense?
Forget it.
so that again advantage a defense ready you know usually it's prosecution right red they're not ready
and that's and that plays into the hand strengthens the hands of james combe as he works to file soon it's
coming soon it may not be as soon as alex spiro spiro whatever his name is filed the motion to dismiss
on on mayor adams right off the indictment but like the day of but it's coming soon uh to a federal
judge near you, and everything that happened today or yesterday was to his advantage. And where did
that perp walk go, Karen? Oh, you got Cash Patel. Oh, the simps over at MSNBC. He wrote this in a
social media post, whining and crying about James Comey. Where were your tears for who? Bannon? Bannon wasn't
perp walked in the federal side. He wasn't on the state side. I don't even know what happened.
On the federal side, he wasn't. I don't even know what you're talking about.
Get your facts straight, as Pam Bondi like to say throughout her performance yesterday.
But all, as we expected, everything really is lining up perfectly.
All the planets are lining up perfectly for James Comey.
And he's, and he'll go.
He went first.
This is the one they chose to go first.
Not that any of them would have been any better.
I think Letitia James, you know, it would be just as tough, if not tougher.
And Adam Schiff and maybe Lisa Cook, you know, they're all represented by the same kind of lawyers.
But to start with James Comey, it's just, it's going to be a major setback for the Trump administration.
And people can celebrate in the streets when James Comey's indictment is dismissed.
Yeah, no, this is atrocious.
This is an atrocious abuse of prosecutorial power.
And as a former prosecutor, I'm appalled that the Justice Department is being weaponized against people for political reasons.
Justice is supposed to be blind.
It's not supposed to go be used against your enemies or your political opponents.
This is appalling.
And what really bothers me in addition to the fact that Jim Comey is being prosecuted in this way.
It's just what this means for the rule of law, what this means for justice, what this
means for the Justice Department.
It's just really sad for this country.
I think that especially federal prosecutors have always been above the fray.
The Department of Justice has always been above the fray.
You've always seen prosecutors, it doesn't matter who.
who the president is, they'll go after politicians who are corrupt in both parties, including in
their own party. Justice has always been meted out that way, and this is the first time the
Justice Department. I mean, when you look at the fact that they dismissed the case against
Tom Homan, who the borders are, right? And Pam Bondi, who we're going to talk about next,
won't even answer basic questions about that investigation and about that case. That was dismissed
because of him, you know, because of who he is.
He's, he works now for Donald Trump.
He's a Trump loyalist when he took $50,000 in bribe money and the, and they have it on tape.
They dismissed Mayor Adams, the same exact thing, the mayor of New York City, right?
They, they dismissed that case, political, you know, he's like an ally of Trump and for political
reasons and now going after his enemies.
I mean, it's just really, really sad what's happening to.
There's dozens of indictments that have been dismissed or prosecutions that have been
Quast or killed that are all within the inner circle or just outside of it for Donald Trump.
I just had the executive director for Justice Connection, which is the alumni group for the
Department of Justice and 280 plus people who have the best and the brightest of the Department
of Justice at every level that have left since January.
You know, and she had a number.
Did you know there's 5,300 Department of Justice personnel that have been fired or have quit
or been forced to resign since Donald Trump's new term,
5,300. And they haven't been replaced, of course,
which is what we're watching with this.
But she was on. We have a great video.
I think they're going to do a playlist with us regularly on Legal A.F.
About the letter that they wrote demanding justice for the Department of Justice
and demanding and cataloging all the ways the Department of Justice has failed,
America under the leadership is too strong of a word,
under the auspices of Pam Bondi and the Chief Legal Officer of America.
Donald Trump. And just to hear her from an insider perspective, she served five presidents and
seven attorney generals as a senior attorney in the Department of Justice. She now has this
organization. And it's their third letter. They did a letter to oppose Emil Bovey as a third
circuit court of appeals judge. They did a letter about the dismissal of the indictment against
Mayor Adams, as you mentioned in New York, and the decimation of the once proud Southern District
of New York prosecutor's office
at that resulted. And now they step
forward here. They also provide legal
like pro bono legal services
for DOJ people who are targeted
and mental health counseling. I think both those things
go hand and glove. I wonder how many of those
5,300 were prosecutors because I think
there's about 10,000 prosecutors
nationwide who work for the DOJ.
And, you know, there's many, many more
employees of the DOJ. But I wonder how
many of the 5300 are prosecutors.
It's hard to tell. I mean, she gave
me a number, the executive director gave me a number for the amount of people who signed the
letter about Emil Bovi, and that was like in the seven and eight hundreds. But again, even here,
the letter that they just wrote, which is posted on legal layoff substack, they don't, there's a lot
of, like, analysts and senior analysts and paralegals, but there is a fair amount of, you know,
division heads, you know, we've watched it, you know, Jay Bratt, who was one of the lead
prosecutors or counterintelligence in the Mar-a-Lago prosecution against Donald Trump is on that list
and all of that.
Now, when we come back from our brief break that we need in order to stay on the air, we've got
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
We know who the three-judge panel is.
We know there's a hearing tomorrow.
And there's a brand-new order as we came on the air, breaking news about Donald Trump's
attempts to federalize and mobilize the National Guard in Oregon and Portland.
It's an interesting decision, new order that came out to kind of hold the ring while they make their decision.
We'll talk about the three judges, the hearing what the case is about and what the case is not about.
When we come back, we'll talk about Pam Bondi with clips.
We got receipts of her performance.
That's a great picture before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
And not just we just won't show you the Democratic questions.
We'll, because we're equal opportunity.
We're going to show you the question she had to answer to Senator Kennedy, who's a back of Republican that
didn't go well for her either.
And then we'll talk about the opening
of the United States Supreme Court
with a couple of new oral arguments
that have just opened so many ways
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Welcome back. And now we must return to war ravaged Oregon and Portland, where people are apparently dropping their lattes over people dressed in chicken costumes and frog suits who are, I guess the frog.
represents Antifa? I don't know. In any event, against the backdrop of the Ninth Circuit
setting oral argument about Judge Immigott's decision on last Saturday at 4.30, not to be confused
with her decision the next Sunday at 10 p.m. There's only one temporary restraining order that is
at the heart of the appeal, and there was a request for an administrative stay. We have our three
judge panel. We have the oral argument. The issue that is, that was up for administrative stay was
should the three judge panel, which is not a great, I'm going to just preface this, not a great panel,
judges Graber, Nelson, and Bade, two Trumpers and a Biden, or no, and a Clinton, sorry, going back in
the time. And against that, we're going to get into the procedure about tomorrow's oral argument
and the briefing around it and the issues at stake.
But you had Christy Knoem and her infinite wisdom,
I'm sure, in consultation with her other half-baked, half-wits,
like Pam Bondi and Donald Trump and Todd Blanche,
decided, that's a great time to go to Portland,
go check out the ICE detention center.
And who better to escort the Secretary of Homeland Security
than right-wing podcasters like Benny Johnson,
who, side note, took money from Russia television
and then started spouting Russian propaganda several years ago
and was caught up in a scandal related to that.
But now, Penny Johnson's back.
Everybody wants to be on his podcast on the right.
And I guess you figure a little free media
with them doing their little iPhone recording would be great,
except when they went up to the roof to survey
all that Christine Homes could see in downtown Portland.
Remember, Donald Trump called it war ravaged.
This was the justification for sending in the military and the federalization of the National Guard.
Do we have the video of, let's run the video of Christine Nome, conquering Portland.
I'm sorry we're going to be here right about this.
We'll be here right about this time.
I'm sorry.
I'm glad Salty turned off my mic because I literally burst that laughing.
She was probably fine until her social media podcaster.
decided to pan down and show, you know, the upside-down flag
and a guy wearing a chicken suit.
And this is the reason, ladies and gentlemen,
that we are going to take over Portland with federalized troops.
They should play that at the Ninth Circuit hearing.
Then she went inside, Karen, and did a compelled, forced prayer meeting.
I'm like, what is going on?
We're not this.
This is the turning point memorial again?
What is going on?
And why is she doing that?
Because that didn't help their case.
before they argue tomorrow at the Ninth Circuit.
What was your take on all of it?
It's so bizarre to me.
You know, I'm from the West Coast originally.
I was born and raised in Southern California.
And my parents, actually, when I went to law school, moved to Oregon.
And so, although I've never lived there, I've spent a fair amount of time in Oregon.
I've gone to Portland many, many times.
Beautiful, beautiful city.
There is no way they can make a case with a straight face that it is war.
ravaged in any way, shape, or form. And Portland is a very special town. It's absolutely
stunningly beautiful. It has a very free-thinking culture. You've got people who are very, like,
kind of hippie-ish and hip and young, and just it's a beautiful place with amazing people. Yes,
they have a little bit of a homeless problem like so many cities do and drug problem.
But to call it war ravaged is really, there's nothing you, there's nowhere you can say
that place is remotely like that.
I mean, if you just look at that video that was just shown, you've got like three protesters
and you've got cars commuting going to work.
I mean, and that's exactly what Judge Immigate said when she was making findings of fact
when she was looking at whether or not they can deploy, they can federalize the national
and deploy them in Oregon.
She essentially said, look, I'm looking, I live here.
You know, I'm looking at the facts on the ground.
They don't support what you're saying,
and there's nothing in the record to support it.
They're just saying things that just are belied by the facts.
So it's just to see her there, to see Christy Noam there,
and to see her bringing troops to sweet Portland, Oregon,
which is, like I said, it's such a peaceful,
you know, there's lots of rainbows and people dressed up,
and, you know, it's just a very free thing.
thinking place. It reminds me a little bit of the West Coast version of Vermont. It's a little like
that, you know, kind of a lot of hiking going on, a lot of outdoors stuff. But it is absolutely not what
Trump is trying to say that it is. And I'm glad to see a Trump appointed judge, Judge Immigate,
saying, sorry, you can't federalize troops and bring the military here. There's no reason for it.
There's no need for it. And what you're saying, your justification for it, because there are laws, right,
that say when you can do it.
And it's for things like when there's an insurrection and that sort of thing.
She's like, there's no facts in the record that support that.
Chicken suits.
Yeah, exactly.
Chicken suits.
Exactly.
I mean, and that's the thing.
Like I said, I've spent a lot of time in Portland.
So I hear this and I'm like, this is nuts.
This is bananas.
This is like, it's like, think like college town, you know, that, that's the vibe.
Portlandia, watch the TV show.
Fred Armisen made a whole series.
lasted five years. It's almost like a documentary of life in Portland. Just watch it and think
insurrection, military invasion. Are you effing kidding me? So now we take this to the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals. So Judge Immergut, who's great for this case. And earlier I was like, oh, crap,
Trump appointed. Then I go look at a record. Federal prosecutor, assistant U.S. Attorney in
California Central District, L.A. U.S. Attorney for Portland.
What's the name of the county?
The Portland's in.
Multa Tona.
Multanoma.
She's the DA for Multanoma, right?
Working closely with law enforcement, right?
Knows the streets, drinks the water.
Lived in Vermont for a couple of years and worked in Vermont.
She's been, you know, she's been a dance, what is it called?
A roll is strolling to her own drum, whatever it's called, beat of her own drum for a long, long time.
She's not your typical federal judge.
She's tough as nails.
She doesn't give a crap about Donald Trump.
and Stephen Miller calling her an insurrectionist
and calling her a terrorist.
I guess they want to hang her from the highest tree.
Doesn't care about any of that.
She issued her first injunction on Saturday at 4.30 p.m.,
in which she said, no, the grounds under 10 U.S. C. Section 12406 are not present.
You can't federalize the National Guard.
State sovereignty is at risk.
Marshall law.
You're verging, you're moving us towards martial law,
our founding fathers and framers.
who would not like this, and I say no.
Donald Trump takes an appeal.
That's what's up on appeal at the Ninth Circuit.
He then says, F her, I mean, not,
well, he probably said it literally in the halls of the White House,
but not in writing.
He said, instead he ordered that,
he had Pete Higgseth order that the California National Guard,
which had only been federalized and mobilized
for things related to California,
send them on the road like they're you know like it's an arena tour for a rock band let's send
to Oregon and send Texas National Guard and all of that and she was like let's have a hearing
emergency hearing and why is this not because we had Rob Banta the attorney general from
California on the night of that hearing that's how how much he wanted to talk to our legal
a.F audience and she said according to Rob who was in the hearing tell me how
this is not a violation of my order from Saturday.
They said, well, you only ordered that Oregon National Guard.
She said, you understood the spirit of my order.
Okay, let me make it more clear.
I'm issuing a new temporary restraining order.
You are not to deploy any national guard in Portland, Oregon.
You're not to deploy them.
I don't care where they are right now.
Send them back to their bases and their units, and they stay there.
So that hasn't been appealed.
Now, why that matters is when the three judges set the oral argument, and it's Graber, Nelson, and Bade.
Graber, Clinton, Nelson, Trump, Bade, Trump.
I mean, most of their decisions, Nelson and Bade have not been good and have been very pro-Trump,
even though they were in the first wave of the first Trump administration.
I've spoken to people on legal AF contributors like Lisa Graves, who's very involved with, you know,
corruption and voting and judges related to federal courts.
And she was like, yeah, they're both not good.
They're not good for this.
Graber's Clinton, you know, sort of down the road.
But they issued an order as we went on the air.
Here's what they decided to do.
They decide, I'll read you the highlights of it, Karen.
They decided that they were going to grant the administrative stay,
meaning they were going to allow Donald Trump to federalize the Oregon National Guard,
but not deploy them.
So, for now, until they make.
the final ruling after the hearing tomorrow.
And what they said, their logic, for lack of a better term,
was that since only one of the two temporary restraining orders
were up in front of them on appeal, the original one,
which was the federalization,
and the deployment has been currently blocked by the second,
which is not up on appeal,
aha, we'll thread the needle.
We'll say, administrative stay for as long as we need on the federalization,
the commandeering of the National Guard troops,
but you don't get to mobilize them.
So it's like you get to hold the ice cream cone, Donald Trump,
but you don't get to lick it.
So we're going to see what happens at the hearing.
We'll know better.
You're laughing at that.
We'll know better for the oral argument.
It's up on Legal A.F., YouTube right now.
You can set a reminder.
It's going to be at about noon, eastern time, 9 a.m.
Pacific time.
We're going to run the live feed.
It'll be audio only.
We'll be there for commentary.
And this is what, let me just see if there's anything more interesting in the order,
which we will post on LegalAF substack.
Yeah, this is what they say on page three and four, Karen.
In the circumstances here, granting an administrative stay, a short-timey stay,
will best preserve the status quo, the status quo being he already nationalized them.
Prior to the October 4th, Saturday temporary restraining order,
the Oregon National Guard members had been federalized but not deployed.
And an administrative stay will maintain the federalization of the members because that order
prohibited the implementation of the order.
But the second temporary restraining order has not been challenged or appealed, and it prohibits
the deployment of the National Guard.
Thus, in granting the administrative stay, they're very cute here, aren't they?
It preserves the status quo in which the National Guard members have been federalized,
but not deployed.
Administrative, stay granted.
We'll see everybody 9 o'clock tomorrow morning.
And you and I are going to know really quickly
about who takes the lead and the type of...
Because we knew when a completely different Ninth Circuit,
a completely different Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals panel,
ruled against the decision of a federal trial judge then,
in Judge Breyer, Charles Breyer,
who ruled that also 12406 have been violated
and Donald Trump couldn't federalize the California National Guard under those unique facts.
And then another three-judge panel was like, nah, we're going to let them federalize.
There's enough.
But there, at least there were rocks being thrown and a couple of cars burning.
You know, it wasn't frog in chicken suits, right, Karen?
Yeah, look, I mean, honestly, if they are allowed to federalize and deploy it,
if I were there, I just say, you know what, don't protest.
Just let them, don't give them what they want.
Don't give them an opportunity to make, you know, make chaos and, because they're going to tear gas people.
They're going to put, you know, you've seen people thrown to the ground.
You've seen people really handled poorly.
And then it creates this video of, oh, look, look what's here.
I mean, ignore them, you know, let them guard their federal buildings because that's all they're really allowed to do, right?
Let them guard the federal buildings and go about your life.
Like, it's a joke.
It's a total joke.
So don't let them if they are forced to be allowed to have them there.
That would be my tactic because they can't really do much, right?
That's not what they're supposed to do.
And of course, if they think they're being attacked, then they're going to just draw,
you know, they're going to put out those videos and use those things to justify their existence.
I would, you know, see if we could just ignore them because there's really not, they're not worth,
it's just not worth it, right?
It's not worth it.
if all they're doing is guarding the buildings,
because that's really all they're really allowed to do.
Yeah, absolutely.
Here's what Oregon's attorney general said,
last paragraph of his filing to the Ninth Circuit.
He says, the broader public interest supports the district court's order.
The traditional and strong resistance of Americans
to a military intrusion into civilian affairs has deep roots in our history,
citing the same case that the judge had cited.
As discussed above, defendants have exceeded the scope of their statutory
authority and they're acting contrary to the constitutional federal state balance.
Defendants' nearly limitless conception of the statute about commandeering the National Guard
will give the president discretion to repeat this experiment in response to other ordinary
nonviolent acts of civil disobedience across our nation.
The public interest is served by a judicial order preserving the rule of law in the face
of unprecedented and unlawful executive action that threatens great.
and irreparable damage to our state and the nation.
That's what's at stake, putting aside all the, all the guffawing I was doing about chicken
suits.
That is what is at stake.
I mean, there's a reason, Judge Irrigut cited to James Madison at the first, you know,
Convention, constitutional convention, about the problem with having a standing army being
used by a quote-unquote overgrown president.
it's great when you're fighting a foreign enemy outside you know but that same standing army
could be used for tyranny quickly when when used by an overgrown president it isn't you can call
Donald Trump many things but overgrown president i think we perfectly perfectly spots it as
james madison said um karen i was going to move on to pam bondi what do you think about that talk
about it yeah let's do we'll split bondi in half
I don't mean literally, although we'll talk about some of Bondi now
and then we'll pick up with Bondi after another commercial break later
and then what happened at the United States Supreme Court.
So Banndy gets called in to the Senate Judiciary Committee and...
Which is routine and normal and is done all the time.
Yeah, yeah.
This is the same group that confirmed her.
This is the same group that she swore that she, as she got sworn in,
that she swore would be independent,
it that you would not take direction
from Donald Trump, like social media
posts, and say, Pam,
you're running out of time, indict all my
people that I want to indict it, or whatever
he wrote, in which you
did. And now, though, we've got a whole
new version of Pam, but you can tell
the strain of the office
is wearing on her. I've said
that we're watching the incredible shrinking
Donald Trump, because he's just shrinking
before our very eyes. Everything he does
where he thinks he looks like a strong, tough guy
and all that, it just, the
public is rejecting him in Trumpism, and he's about three and a half. He's like that guy
that's four and a half foot tall, and he wants to be a starter on the NBA as a center. He just
doesn't realize he's tiny. He's a tiny, tiny little man, and we're all seeing it. And you see
her, you know, one way to interpret her body language and her fighting and her, as I said during my
podcast yesterday, this clutching at pearls. And she was reached for a fan at one point,
Oh, I do declare you're attacking my ethics.
I'm like, yeah, you're, sit down, Pam.
Yeah, yeah.
We're talking about your Department of Justice,
which Dick Durbin called, effectively,
the most corrupt Department of Justice we've ever seen
that you've presided over.
And there was several key moments in that,
you know, about, you know, things that are in the press,
like the Tom Holman bribery video.
It's hard to believe there is, there's that face again.
We should use that and put that in our,
library and constantly use that for panpondy the pan the time there's a video democracy forward who
works with us on legal a f just filed a lawsuit to get the video finally there's a video to but you know
she decides no i'm going to tangle with sheldon white house because sheldon white house might have
known reed hoffman of lincoln at some point and maybe that's connected to epstein it's just
the the sheer madness of it all let's play that clip
Senator, as Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche recently stated,
the investigation of Mr. Holman was subjected to a full review by the FBI,
agents, and DOJ prosecutors.
They found no credible evidence of any wrongdoing.
And that was not my question.
My question was, what became of the $50,000 in cash that the FBI delivered, evidently, in a paper bag,
to Mr. Homan?
Senator, I'd look at your facts.
Are you saying that they did not deliver
$50,000 in cash to Mr. Homan?
As recently stated, the investigation of Mr. Homan was subjected
to a full review by the FBI agents
by Department of Justice prosecutors.
They found no evidence of wrongdoing.
That's a different question.
What became of the $50,000?
Did the FBI get it back?
Mr. White House, excuse me, Senator White House, you're welcome to talk to the FBI.
The report to you, can't you answer this question?
Senator White House, you're welcome to discuss this with Director Patel.
Did Homan keep the $50,000?
As Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche recently stated, the investigation of Mr. Holman.
I can see I'm not going to get it.
a straight answer from you to a very simple question by the FBI agents and the DOJ. They found no credible
evidence of wrongdoing. You know, you're very concerned about money and people taking money and
you ran against dark money. Wait a second. Wait a second. Wait a second. Wait a second.
Did you know? It's all about the what aboutism. What about that time that you stood with Casa
Incorporated. She accused one of the senators. They know Antifa. I'm not accusing you.
of being Antipa. Somebody thought this was an effective strategy for responding to U.S.
senators providing their oversight duties. How do you think it went, Karen? I mean, I was appalled.
You should be able to answer basic questions, but she had some pre-written answers that she was
going to give no matter what the questions were. And that's all she gave. But she was totally evasive
and did not provide. Look, the Senate has an oversight function. That is what they do. And the Judiciary
committee has always had, whether it's director of the FBI or the head of, you know, the attorney
general, whoever it is, they have them to come in for hearings. And these are basic questions, right?
$50,000 was given as like a, as a, as a, as, as, as, as, as, as, as, as, as, as, this was a sting operation
by the FBI with Tom Homan. So, so these are marked bills. When you use bills as bait, you literally
you keep track of the serial numbers
because you want to see if you get the same,
if you recover the exact same ones,
you put them in a bag,
but they're real dollars,
and you put them in a bag
and you go and you do your,
you know, your sting operation,
which they filmed or audio taped.
I'm not, I've heard both.
And they go in and they record it,
but these are pros.
They rehearse it ahead of time.
What are you going to say?
What are the elements of bribery?
Let's make sure that we use the proper words.
And they go in,
And they did the things that they were supposed to do.
Money was exchanged.
Holman accepted the bag of money.
And I think it's a fair question to know where are those dollars that the FBI provided, right?
Did the FBI get it back?
Did it go back into the FBI coffers?
Is it taxpayer dollars?
I mean, where is that money?
It's a fair question.
And she went on later also saying that, you know, that investigation was closed before I was confirmed.
And so therefore she knows nothing about it.
I mean, that is absurd, right?
That is appalling.
This wasn't something that happened 20 years ago.
This happened like the day before she was confirmed
or the week before she was, this was very recent.
And so the fact that I actually don't believe
that she doesn't know more about it.
And if she doesn't know more about it,
I think it's actually she's not doing her job
and she's not a very good attorney general.
She should know exactly the facts of the most important cases
that have been going on
and that have been investigated, open or close,
and that are of public interest and that are important since Trump took office only a few months
ago, right? It's not like he's been in office for four years and she's a new attorney general
and this was three and a half years ago and so she doesn't know. It's only been in office for what,
eight months and there haven't been that many huge investigation. She should know all of the
details, all of the facts. And I think she's just stonewalling the Senate. And I don't think
that's right. I think that the American people have a right to know. The Senate is doing their
job by checks and balances, right? This is what the legislative branch is supposed to do if they're
doing their job and their oversight over the executive branch. And she wasn't answering. And she was
frankly obstructing their answers. Yeah, we got more of Pam Bonding, not less. And it doesn't
get any better when she starts fielding some questions from what's supposed to be softballs from
senators like Kennedy, not that one, the MAGA Republican one. We'll call, we'll call, we will
cover that. Where am I going with that? We will cover that. And the opening of the United States Supreme
Court's 25-26 term, we're already exhausted by the emergency shadow docket. But yes, the term is open
for the regular appeals. And to answer the question that's come up in the chat before,
that does not stop the emergency docket. That goes on parallel with this. So it's 70 cases or so
that will be taken up at the Supreme Court. And then another thousand that will be emergency.
see docket applications that you and Karen and I and Ben will have to cover.
But let's talk about this ecosystem again.
Great news.
As I came on the air, our producer told us that this is all a testament to the fervent
support of our audience that we adore.
Legal A.F, the podcast on YouTube rankings for this week is now at, wait for it,
number 25.
And I'm talking like all genres.
Like, we're up against, like, who's your daddy and other podcasts you may or may not have heard of.
It's not like news and, like, we have number one law and politics, no doubt.
Because if we're 25 with that August body, you know, the Midas Brothers are number two.
And then there's a little podcast called The Intersection with Michael Popak that's number 96 that came in to the top 100 again this week.
But that is, it's working.
The hummingbird thing is working.
We're watching us here on YouTube.
You're letting your friends know about us.
You're going over to the audio version on Apple and Spotify,
leaving five-star reviews and listening over there.
Coming over to LegalAF to substack the YouTube chat.
Sorry, legal AF YouTube, sorry, in a long day.
And subscribing there, that's why we just crossed 270 million views
of all the work that we have there.
And we can bring on like Rob Banta, Attorney General, California last minute,
And, you know, all the alumni for the Department of Justice are now coming over to
LegalAF to do a regular playlist, along with Democracy Forward, and there are 90 cases at ACLU.
I mean, we want to be under one roof, one-stop shopping for law and politics, and we're rapidly
becoming that because of you.
Then we got the LegalAF substack.
And some people I had a friend of mine write me recently.
It was very sweet.
The text was, how do I want to make an investment?
I want to invest in Legal A.F.
And she meant, like, literally, like, stroking a check.
And I was like, I love that.
I love what that demonstrates or indicates about you and your commitment, but no, we don't do that.
But there is a way to kind of have a piece of the, piece of the rock and be a full-fledged card-carrying member of Legal AF.
Come over to Legal AF, the substack where we're doing live reporting and 10 different postings a day.
And you can become a paid member.
It's relatively inexpensive.
It's like seven bucks a month, not a week.
And I assure you, I'm focused on the quality of the content there.
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Let's continue with Pam Bondi, not because we want to, but because we have to. It's like a train wreck.
You can't look at it. You can't.
can't look away whenever she, whatever she is so incompetent, obscenely unqualified for that job.
Say what you want about Merrick Carland.
You know, he was a little bit slow on the trigger.
He was, oh, he's not moving fast enough.
But, you know, he was at least an adult.
He at least had, he at least had gravitas.
We felt like we may not agree with the direction of every aspect of the Department of Justice,
but he didn't preside over the destruction of the Civil Rights Division,
the public integrity unit, everything about counterintelligence.
He didn't fire 5,000 people, the best and the brightest, that you can never get back.
You know, it's hard to believe.
We're looking back at the Halcyon days, the golden era of Merrick Garland.
I said she was going to be this bad.
We all said it.
And now it's on full display.
So she gets the point, Karen, just to set the stuff.
stage where it maybe she wasn't ready was one of these softballs that like bounced off her
forehead uh because i don't think Kennedy thought this was going to be a difficult line of
questions epstein's back right and the problem is that somebody i used to work with
name howard lutnik back in the day decided to go on and give an interview on a on a podcast
who in the right mind goes on a podcast
But he decided, and the one he wanted to go on, was Pod Force One that's owned by Rupert Murdoch
in The New York Post.
I'm like, what could go wrong?
So he starts admitting things that, frankly, not that I would ever know it anyway, but I hadn't
even heard in the media, which is not only did he live next store, as we knew, and bought
the house for Jeffrey Epstein, and they shared a wall because they had adjoining townhouses.
but he went into the house in 2005 saw the massage table with his with his wife alison i'm talking
about howard and was like creeped out by what was like suspected wrongdoing and then didn't say
anything about it's the guy who had children living next door he saw it's like it's like you live
next door to a serial killer and you see the hitchhikers going in but not coming out and you don't
call the authorities so that's a problem then he all of a sudden turns in the internet
And I have it up in a video on LegallyF YouTube, he turns in the interview to start talking about, oh, yeah, everybody that knew Epstein was a participant in Bill Gates. He said Bill Gates, like Donald Trump. I mean, he didn't say Donald Trump. So everybody that knew Jeffrey Epstein, it was his best friend and was socialized, participated in all the depraved child sex trafficking. Is that what you're trying to say? And then he turns to Jeffrey Epstein was the greatest blackmailer.
of all time and then continues karen and says he is sure that because he's a he's a broker in his
mind there was a trade he probably traded the videos of important people like his boss having sex
with uh raping girls with the prosecutors in miami to get that sweetheart deal of 17 months
how did he get that deal howard speculated well that is completely counter to the fbi's position
and Cash Patel swore under oath that there's nobody else involved.
The only one that was child sex traffic that was only to Jeffrey Epstein, or I would prosecute it.
That's not what Howard Lutnik says.
So, and you've done prosecution related to this type of thing, right?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I wanted to ask him so many questions of that interview, right?
Like, he was saying, oh, he's the greatest blackmailer of all time.
Really, how do you know that?
Because you just said after that one time that you went in there with your wife and was creeped out,
you never talked to him again and never saw him again.
So either you saw something or people told you, right?
What was going on?
Like he had very specific information that I would just would love to know more of where
did he get that and how did he know that?
And why didn't he say anything about it, as you said?
Well, you might get your chance because here's a clip of Senator Kennedy asking very
similar questions as my podcast partner and friend Karen Freeman Ignifalo to one Pamela Joe
Bondi. Roll it.
Secretary Howard Lutnik
on October 1 gave an interview
to the New York Post
about Mr. Epstein.
And he described Mr. Epstein
as, quote, the greatest blackmailer
ever, close quote. Have you reviewed that
transcript of that interview?
I have not reviewed the transcript, but I saw the clip of it.
Okay. It
It appears that Secretary Lutnik was Mr. Epstein's next-door neighbor.
In fact, their townhomes shared a wall.
And the reporter that was asking, talking to Mr. Lutnik,
she asked how other prominent men could have been associated with Epstein
when Mr. Lutnik could immediately sense that he was a, quote,
pervert.
And then Secretary Lutnik said, or rather the reporter said,
did they see it and ignore it?
Do you remember that from the interview?
I do.
And Commerce Secretary Lutnik said, no, they participated.
And then Commerce Secretary Lutnik goes on to say,
quote, that's what his
M.O. was.
You know, get a massage, get a massage.
And what happened in that
massage room, I assume, was a video.
This guy was the greatest
blackmailer ever, blackmail
people. That's how he had
money, end quote.
Is that true?
Senator is our July memo said
we did not uncover evidence.
This case has gone through
three administrations, as well as former U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta.
I know that, Pam.
But have you interviewed Secretary and Lutnik?
No, Senator.
Do you plan to?
If he wants to talk to the FBI or the FBI wants to talk to him, that is more than on me.
Don't you think you ought to talk to him after this interview?
Senator, if Howard Lutnik wants to speak to the FBI and if Director Patel wants to speak
to Howard Lutnik, absolutely.
Okay.
Maybe we ought to get Mr. Lutnik.
in here too, Mr. Chairman.
Maybe we ought to get Mr. Lutnik in here, too, Mr. Chairman.
That is not what Pam Bondi wanted to hear.
But this is an administration that operates with impunity
and has a tone deafness about them,
that they're in some rarefied world that they're untouchable
because their fearless leader is,
if you were to piece together, but they don't have immunity, he does.
they might have future pardons in their back pocket, but they don't have immunity.
See, Howard obviously was trying to spin the narrative about how he lived next door
to what would have been a convicted child sex trafficker for so many years and threw in something
nobody knew.
Nobody else knew about the guy is dead.
Nobody knew about the visit between Howard, Alice, and his wife, and Epstein, but Howard.
But Howard had to like keep talking away there.
I was in the house.
I saw the massage table.
Well, if everybody that knew Epstein participated, like Bill Gates,
then why not Donald Trump?
So he threw Trump under the bus.
He destroyed Cash Patel's under oath statement
that they found no credible evidence of anybody being involved
other than Jeffrey Epstein.
And I think Kennedy did his job, whether he wanted to or not,
and Bondi was left looking like a complete and utter ninkum poop.
What did you think, Karen?
I mean, the crazy thing about that hearing and about Pam Bondi is if she had evidence
that absolved or exonerated people like Donald Trump, she would be presenting it.
She'd be waving it.
She'd be having it on big poster boards.
But instead, she says, oh, I'm just not going to answer those questions.
I'm not going to tell you whether or not we have this
or I didn't see the file or I don't know anything.
And so all of the different things that she was asked
that she was completely evasive, like the $50,000 for Tom Homan in the bribe
or all of the Epstein questions about, was there a picture with Trump?
Was all the different things that they were asking about Levitt,
about all the specifics that she just kept deflecting
and refusing to answer?
and instead attacking them and saying things like Tom Homan is a,
he's an, I forgot what she called him, but, you know,
she went on about how great he is and how he's protecting our borders
and, you know, how he's this loyal, upstanding American.
You know, if she had evidence that he didn't do it, you'd be damn.
I would give you any amount of money.
I would say, I would bet that she would absolutely be waiving that.
exonerating evidence at the hearing to exonerate all of those people, including Donald Trump,
and it comes to Jeffrey Epstein. So the fact that she was deflecting, refusing to answer,
giving these canned answers, and then saying things like, oh, no, you're the one taking dark,
dark money, or you owe Donald Trump an apology for defaming him, you know, doing that kind of
stuff. I don't, it doesn't help her, and it certainly doesn't help Trump or any of the other
individuals. It just makes them look more guilty because she is the one who, no one believes she
hasn't looked in these files. No one believes that she hasn't seen all of the evidence, that she
hasn't seen everything that's in all of those files. She's not that. She's not incompetent in that
regard. Of course she knows what's in there. And so the fact that she isn't saying that it's not
that that they're innocent and that there's evidence of innocence in there, I would read into that
in a big way because that to me is more telling. She is the person in the know. And so that,
I just thought it looked so terrible on the administration, her testimony, and I think it really
backfired.
I agree with you.
And she said, well, the secretary Lutnik wants to talk to the FBI.
The FBI wants to, what are you having talking about?
Even Kennedy was like, maybe we need to bring Lutnik in and put him under oath.
How about that?
Exactly.
And again, the Epstein stain, the stench of the Epstein cover-up scandal continues to follow this
administration around because Donald Trump refuses to level with the American people about
his relationship about their financial ties, if there were any, and to release the files,
because there are embarrassing things in it. You know if there were nothing in there about him
that was embarrassing. They'd already be out. It'd be published in a book by Heritage Foundation
Press, right? You'd be they'd be doing a rally about it, but no. So we have to conclude,
just like we would in court. Look, if a party fails to produce,
documents or information or spoliates them, destroys them, a judge and a jury can conclude
through an adverse inference that the documents that are missing are not helpful and are
harmful to the position of the party that's withholding the documents.
Okay, nation, Trump is withholding the documents.
We can therefore make an adverse inference that anything, they're not helpful.
they're harmful and that's so let's move on but no I'd like to also I'd also like to see the
Epstein files so the Supreme Court opened for business and two oral arguments already in the
books one involving conversion therapy why is it always it's always Christians that are
trying to not not bake a cake or not build a wedding website
for gays or wanting to do therapy that it's documented by the medical and psychological
professions is harmful to people to try to change them back, have them stop being gay or
whatever it is or transgender.
And the fight was over as the First Amendment speech that the patient has the right to hear
the conversion therapy and the Christian therapist has the right to offer.
their opinions and open up the hood of the person's mind and monkey around in there and make it
worse. And the question is, is that true or not? Is that right or not? What was your takeaway from
the majority, MAGA-6 and how they handled that oral argument? Yeah. So, like, this came about
as a therapist in Colorado who, this hadn't happened to her yet, but theoretically, if she wanted
to do this conversion therapy or this prey away the gay therapy, as I like to call it,
that there's a law in Colorado, like in 20 other states, that says you're not allowed to do
this conversion therapy, that it's actually harmful. And the MAGA majority justices basically
are reviewing this from a First Amendment standpoint. They're saying, no, that law,
banning this conversion therapy is infringing on.
the First Amendment freedom of religion rights of and speech rights of this therapist and
the patients who she claims. And by the way, this law only applies to minors. So it's really the
parents who would have to consent to this on behalf of their kids. And so if it's a first
amendment, if this is a First Amendment right, and that's the analysis they were trying to
adopt here, then it's a then any law that infringes upon
on First Amendment right has to go through the highest level of strict scrutiny.
Strict scrutiny.
It's a very high standard.
And that's where they, I think if they adopt that standard, they're going to say, potentially,
I think they're going to rule that the law is unconstitutional.
But what really bothered me about this is how is this First Amendment, right?
This isn't, I just don't see this as a First Amendment.
issue. This is medical treatment, right? This is not speech. No one's saying she can't go out and
speak openly about her religion and her beliefs and that she's anti-gay. It's a matter of her
administering a medical procedure. And mental health therapy is medical. It is a medical
procedure that you are giving to somebody. And it made me think to myself, it's interesting how they
want to give her a First Amendment right or therapist a First Amendment right to be able to try
and do this what has been proven to be a harmful medical procedure on somebody.
But yet they won't then for transgender care when a doctor and a patient make a decision
that they want to take drugs or have surgery to change their body, right, children who
want to do that and who make that very difficult decision to undergo that,
but it is a decision.
That is not protected, right?
That, no, we're going to regulate that.
That's a harmful medical procedure.
To me, this is no different and should be treated the same.
And the fact that they're going to say, oh, no, no, you can do this harmful thing.
Like, you can't have it both ways.
But so it's clear to me what's happening is, look, this is the separation of church and state no longer exists.
And the Supreme Court, the MAGA right, is you bringing their religious views into, and their conservative MAGA religious views into the court.
And they are going to make legal arguments to fit what their ideological viewpoint is, because it is inconsistent, in my view, to apply one standard for one and one for another.
I mean, therapy isn't speech, it's treatment, it's a medical treatment.
And so, but I think, I mean, I don't have a crystal ball, but I think that there's a chance that, you know, that she wins and that the rights of LGBTQ people are really, really put back.
And it's really harmful, you know, it's, it's, there's been, there's been studies that talk about how this conversion therapy has, can be very harmful and create.
can actually be worse, right, for people who then could want to consider suicide or,
you know, other really harmful acts because you're being told that who you are,
there's something wrong with you. And it's really sad. This case makes me sad.
Yeah. And there's a MAGA majority to find on First Amendment grounds that conversion
therapy bans in 22 states, including Colorado, violate the First Amendment under strict scrutiny.
And I think that's what the ruling is going to be, just managing expectations here.
As we roll into the second case, which was a case on its face, the merits of the case is about whether states like Illinois and other places can extend the time for a postmarked ballot, postmarked on the day of the election, but received up to 12 or 14 days later because the mail sucks, especially overseas mail.
is unconstitutional or not, does it violate, does it fundamentally have a state through its rules
change the essence of the election and the day of the election, which is set by constitution?
I mean, Donald Trump wants an election day. He doesn't want early voting. He doesn't want mail-in voting.
He doesn't, except when he was using it himself back in the day, absentee voting, all the things
that are he sees as an advantage of the democrats he wants good old-fashioned stand in line like
you know back of the day um yeah because like when i first started voting and you too karen
there wasn't early voting there was mail in there was absentee and there was mail in it was strict
but you you had to like go down to the firehouse and stand in line you got to a giant okay kids
gather around you it's going to be a history lesson you went to this giant gray metal cabinet
it from like the 1960s or 50s that it was mechanical, not electronic.
You went in, they closed the curtain, you pushed, you switch to switch, they closed the
curtain, and you went down with levers on a paper ballot that was thread through the back
of the machine, and you hit your switches, then there was one big giant switch.
You sure you're ready to vote at the top?
Yes.
And then that ballot got dumped into the bottom of this giant machine and locked away until they collected all the ballots.
That was voting.
And Donald Trump likes to want to go back to a version of that because Democrats always have an advantage of getting souls to the polls and getting ballots and all that.
So that's the merits, but that's not what was on full display in the oral argument.
Because there, this was a procedural question as to whether a candidate who didn't lose by a little but lost by a lot could still have standing.
the legal right to challenge who has the right, I guess is the better way to put it,
and who can bring a lawsuit to challenge things like a state's election laws,
which they're allowed to do by federal constitution,
about whether it conflicts with another aspect of the constitution or not.
Who is the injured party?
And you had a couple of people who challenged, you know, Maga Trumpers,
but they didn't suffer any harm on the male invalidation.
problem because they didn't lose by the difference of the mail-in ballots.
And Paul Clement, who's kind of come out and helped a lot of targets of Donald Trump
as a former Solicitor General for George Bush, he was on the side of these people.
He tried to frame it as the campaign continuing for an additional 12 days.
The postmark has to be the day of the election.
It has to be in the bag.
You're not campaigning to change the hearts and minds of people waiting for their votes to come in.
they should have already voted.
But what was your impression of how that's going to go down with the MAGA 6?
I mean, I think that's, first of all, I think that's a weird argument, you know,
because as the circuit below said, look, that was your choice to keep campaigning two weeks
afterward, you know?
No one said you had to do that.
As you said, it had to be postmarked by the day.
I mean, look, there's some interesting questions because on the one hand, you know,
you don't want to make the rules harder for bringing election law challenges.
But on the other hand, if it make it too easy, you'll flood the courts with a gazillion lawsuits, and you'll never have, you'll never have results of any elections. So, you know, it's a tricky case. The whole thing about mail and ballots, I mean, that's just going to impact so many people who are in the military who are overseas. It's going to impact so many people. But this is just the fight continues on, you know, this is all about Donald Trump's crazy assertion that the election was stolen.
and he's so anti-mail-in ballots.
So we'll see.
We'll see whether the, whether the, you know,
whether MAGA is going to try to,
whether the MAGA-right Supreme Court majority,
which is really what they are at this point,
what they're going to do,
and whether they're going to continue to do Trump's bidding or not.
But I could see them, I could see them here.
I think the argument that having too many lawsuits
and never having elections be finalized,
I could see that carrying the day old.
ultimately, because, you know, well, I don't know.
I'm not as trusting as you are.
I think they're going to, they're going to allow, they're going to widen the net of who can, who has standing to bring these types of lawsuits.
And they're going to, they're going to loosen up the reins of injury and not require that a person show that they're, the election outcome for their election would have been different.
based on the mail-in ballot or whatever election rule that we're talking about.
I think there's no doubt in my mind that they're going to instruct federal courts below them
to loosen up the ropes about standing, even though standing is the most fundamental thing.
You see, we've talked about this before, right, Karen, with our audience,
when the administration, it's all reverse engineering, when they don't want to reach something,
that would be helpful to, like, the liberal side or the Democratic side.
They say, well, we'd love to help you, but this case, we have to dismiss because there's
no standing for the people that have brought it.
Sorry, it's a nice case.
Probably would have helped a lot of people in America, but you don't have standing,
and then you've got to go scramble to go find somebody who does have standing.
But here, they're like, yeah, go ahead.
No, I was just to say that could be, that's what they should say to the therapist in Colorado.
Yes.
Right.
There's no case in controversy there.
She wasn't, she wasn't, it wasn't like she was disciplined for providing this therapy.
I mean.
How about the website designer?
She didn't even have a company.
Exactly.
It was a fictitious company that she didn't even have up and running.
She never designed a website in her life.
Yeah.
They bend the rules when.
Yes.
They make them up.
And when they can't find one in the toolbox, you know, like when you're in your garage
or whatever, you know, and you're looking for something, you're like, God damn,
but I wish I had that.
They just make it up.
They're like, oh, I wish there was a rule that we could, who could create that?
Right.
We can.
That, right, when you're too close to an election, you can't.
Okay.
Purcell Doctrine. People were like, that must have come from, sprung from the head of our framers
at the constitutional convention. Like, no. Originalism, textualism, right? Oh, we must divine the
meaning of what our framers said. Oh, that must have been part of the Constitution. Right. No,
it's made up bullshit that didn't even take root until the 1980s with people like Robert Bork
carried forward by Alito
until they got enough MAGA 6
to get a majority. It's all made
up shit. That's why
people have
no confidence in the United States
Supreme Court. And then they
and then as we've talked about in the shadow docket,
they don't even bother explaining themselves anymore.
They've reached the point where they're just
like, just take our word for it.
This is the ruling
of what is it based on? We're not going to tell you.
Where's the logic? Well,
that's for another day. Where's the
the analysis. Where's the precedent being used? Well, you know, that, that's just getting in the way,
as the Sam Alito once said during an oral argument. Let's not get bogged down in the facts of this case.
I was like, what are you even, are you just admitting out loud that you don't even care to be in appellate court anymore?
You're just issuing advisory opinions that try to bind us. I mean, the legitimacy of the Supreme Court,
all kidding aside, is a serious, serious matter, which is why the next administration,
hopefully with a big D next to its name,
needs to address that we need Supreme Court reform.
There is no, and federal court reform.
There is no down in my mind now that in order to avoid a future Trump
or a series of Trumps, we have to, whenever we grab the reins of power,
we're going to have to pack the court to quote Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
We need 15 seats.
We need to add six more to balance us out and get a nine to six majority
of free-thinking people.
And then, you know what, give me and you a shot.
We've had deck generations, three generations of complete Republican control of the United States
Supreme Court.
You know, the presidency, sometimes we get it, sometimes we don't, the full House, the Senate.
We haven't had the Supreme Court led by Democrats in like 75 years.
Give us a shot, folks.
Let's pack the court.
Let's get 15.
more on there and let's return civility to American life. What do you say? I mean, it would be
nice to just have also judges who just actually interpret the law. Like, you know, it's just
you cock-eyed optimist, Karen. You're not happening in this world. We've just got to play
by the new rules and beat them at their own at their own game. I mean, you know, to use a
sports metaphor, you know, Florida teams are winning the Stanley Cup. You know, who would have
thought ice hockey in Florida? All right, we've been given the rules. We got to beat them at their
own game. Yes, keep our ethics, keep our morality. But stop with the niceties and stop with the,
I'd like to even see sharper questioning in the Supreme Court. I'd like to see a better job
being done by the legal counsel that supply a lot of the cross-examination questions to the
senators and the congresspeople i mean some of them are former prosecutors so they know what they're doing
but i could have seen a stronger cross-examination and the problem with even the senators karen
is that they're so like sort of suffused in in the and the traditions of the senate and all that
that even when they get a lying sack of you know what like pam bondy in front of them they can't
switch gears quick enough you and i in court you'll you and i'll come in with our rough
outline of how we'd like to do a witness or handle a certain legal issue
And then in the fog of war, you know, it all gets lost.
And you've got to quickly, you've got to quickly pivot.
You've got to throw away your outline, take your legal pad.
I once had a case, Karen, where in the middle of my opening in front of a jury,
the judge stopped me, called us all up to the podium and said, you can't make the,
the defense that you're making.
I say, excuse me?
They said, no, I'm going to make a ruling now.
I'm going to grant this other motion that have been floating around for years,
and you now have to redo your entire opening statement.
I'll give you two hours at a lunch break.
So I'm there on a yellow pad in a diner in Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
like pages were like flying in the air.
It was like a Tasmanian devil.
But I pulled it together, and I gave an effing opening, and we won the case.
And I want to see a little bit more of that when the Senate and the House get their myths
and their grips into cabinet members like RFK Jr. and Pete Hggseth and Pam Bondi,
we better be learning from what's going on in these rooms just as they are.
Yeah, I mean, I hope you're right.
But what we've seen so far is all the administration, all they do is obstruct.
They do not answer questions.
So no matter how good the questions are, no matter how strong and sharp they are,
the administration just doesn't, just refuses to comply and refuses to participate and just
deflects. And I think we hold it against them. You know, and I, if I was one of the senators,
I would say, so I would basically say, so if you had evidence that this did not happen,
I assume you would bring it here, right? And, you know, like, she'll have to answer that, right?
I assume if there's no evidence of Donald Trump in the Epstein files, you would tell us, right?
I mean, you know, you have to bait her into answering some questions. And I agree with you.
They have to get better at it, but they have to figure out a way to get the questions answered.
They just do.
And I guess hope, you know, a lot of them are fans of Legal A.F.
Sheldon White House is going to be on LegalAF tomorrow being interviewed by Adam
Classfeld of All Rise News with us here on legal AF.
And, you know, we've had a number of these people on.
And Jamie Raskin's been on with us on Legal AF.
And that is...
I hope Adam doesn't say Popak thinks you should ask better questions.
No, but I did write a note to Adam that said that I was disappointed.
I wanted to tell Senator White House that I was disappointed when he asked the questions about the photographs that have been, that were in Epstein's house of Donald Trump with girls on his lap, that they didn't also use the legal AF video that they, that Jamie Raskin and Ted Liu used two weeks earlier in the house.
Like, oh, here's our moment. Legal AF's going to be back in the earring room. No. So, no, that was, no, Adam will do a great job. And Sheldon's a friend of LegalAF. He's very close. People may not know this.
but one of the great contributors on Legal A.F is court accountability action led by Alex Aronson
and Lisa Graves. Lisa Graves has a brand, a beautiful new book out. She's been sounding the alarm
about John Roberts for like 30 years and finally wrote a book called Without Precedent
about John Roberts being a Trojan horse and what he's doing to destroy America. It's a beautiful
book. It's required reading for legal afters that she's with court accountability action. But
Alex Aronson was Sheldon White House's chief legal counsel on Capitol Hill,
and they have a very close relationship,
and he's often with us over on Legal AF as well,
as we're trying to bring newsmakers and the lawyers that are in the courtroom
all together in one place and one ecosystem.
Karen, we're at the end.
What do you got?
What do you got for the audience?
You know, tonight's episode makes me want to go have a glass of Willamette Valley, Pino Noir,
because I'm just thinking back to my times in Oregon,
and it's just no better wine than it's from the Willamette Valley.
I saw your, I was going to say earlier, I'm wearing blue, you're wearing red, but it's more like wine.
So maybe it's more red where you are.
But if you're around next a week from Saturday, I'm going to be in San Diego doing a live legal A-F hot take interview of Rob Bond of the Attorney General on the stage at a thing
called Laudie Grah, which is a bunch of lawyers getting together, and he's one of the
keynotes, and I'm going to be doing an interview of him. But the next day, there's a podcast
called Bourbon of Proof. Do you drink Bourbon? I do not. Okay. Burbin of Proof. It's run by
a lawyer named Robert Simon, and we're going to do a crossover episode. Burbin of Proof meets
Legal A.F on a, like a music stage where they're going to have DJs, house music DJs later
in the day. I think it may end up being like,
Like, you know, drunk Shakespeare?
It could be like drunk legal AF.
I think it's been fun.
I think it sounds fun.
Right.
So look for that.
Look for that starting to next thing.
We're actually going to do the Rob Banta interview and we'll put it up soon as a live.
So people kind of get used to us doing live feeds like that.
And we're so pleased to have people like Rob Banta coming on, Legal A.F.
And so supportive of everything that we do here, as I am of you and all of your great work.
We've reached the end of another episode of Legal A.F.
the number 25 ranked podcast on legal a on youtube weekly rankings just out today and that's all
a testament to your support we really do appreciate all of it so shout out to the mightest mighty and
the legal a fers
