Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Legal AF Full Episode - 11/26/2025

Episode Date: November 27, 2025

The firing of Lindsey Halligan is a symptom of a greater disease effecting the DOJ and the Trump Administration. The restart of the criminal contempt proceedings against the Trump Administration is a...nother symptom of the same disease. The new lawsuit to stop an illegal criminal investigation of a member of Congress is an antidote to that disease. A decision has been made about Trump’s Georgia criminal prosecution that demonstrates what happens when the wrong prosecutor gets a case. Michael Popok and Karen Friedman Agnifilo anchor the Thanksgiving edition of the Legal AF podcast. Support Our Sponsors: Mud/Wtr: Start your new morning ritual & get up to 43% OFF your @MUDWTR by going to https://mudwtr.com/LEGALAF #mudwtrpod Honey Love: Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to honeylove.com/LEGALAF! #honeylovepod IndaCloud: Get 30% OFF your first order + FREE shipping @IndaCloud with code LEGALAF at https://indacloud.co Tushy: Over 2 million butts love TUSHY. Get 10% off Tushy with the code LEGALAF at https://hellotushy.com/LEGALAF! #tushypod Subscribe to Legal AF Substack: https://substack.com/@legalaf Check out the Popok Firm: https://thepopokfirm.com 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

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Starting point is 00:02:23 on Legal AF, it's the start of the holiday season. Thanksgiving is here, and we celebrate our audience, the fervent support that we've gotten throughout the year here on Legal AF. As we came on the air, of course, we've got already a bit of a national crisis. We've got somebody that looks like they were targeting National Guard in the District of Columbia. Several people sent to the hospital from it looks like the West Virginia National Guard. We'll get more information about that, but you have to focus on, as we always do at the intersection of law and politics, and we try to curate for you the things in the courtrooms, around the courtrooms, that matter. And if ever, Karen, people would ask me, what will it look like when the Trump administration
Starting point is 00:03:13 finally and MAGA finally implode? And we see for ourselves the grip of power being lost by Donald Trump. What does that look like? this is the beginning of, I mean, this is it. I mean, if people were wondering when we would finally see it, when would the cracks and the fissures start to swallow up this administration, we're starting to see it. I mean, it began in the courts with the losses, the frequent losses. Then it's the scandals, a Pam Bondi at the center of many of them,
Starting point is 00:03:40 if not her, Cash Patel, if not him, others. And then you just see it all like, it's all reading on to Donald Trump. I mean, he looks flagged and tired and gas. and just out of it, you know, instead of doing the people's business, he's trying to figure out whether the New York football giants should go for a touchdown or not and writing about or whether there should be a sequel to one of his favorite movies or not. I mean, seriously, this is 25th Amendment stuff. You know, on one hand, he's trying to figure out how the Giants win a game.
Starting point is 00:04:11 And the other hand, he's blowing people out of the water without due process, you know, in violation of international law. and then you've got the series of legal cases and decisions that have come out that just declare that this administration and its Department of Justice are lawless and corrupt. Donald Trump says, I'm the chief legal officer of America. Forget Pam Bondi next to me. Okay. Well, the chief legal officer, you're doing terribly in the courts around America, with federal judges,
Starting point is 00:04:42 with grand juries, and the rest. So why don't we kick it off, Karen, with first. Happy Thanksgiving early. I know you like to cook up a storm. How's it going with that? Yeah, happy Thanksgiving, Popak. Yeah, this time of year, a lot of cooking, a lot of reflecting and things about what you're thankful for.
Starting point is 00:05:02 And I think about my family and how grateful I am to have such a big, beautiful family. And I think about what I was most thinking and what made me feel very warm inside was that I get to do this podcast tonight with you, thinking about the community that has created around Legal A.F. and the Midas Touch Network. And I look forward every Wednesday to being here so that we can all come together and really just know that you're around people who see the world, the way you see the world, as opposed to sometimes when you feel alone, when you look and say, how is it possible that these things are happening? But it's not, no one's alone. We're all in this together and we're going to fight this together because we need the world to come back to something,
Starting point is 00:05:47 At least I recognize. So, yeah, and then after this, I'll be cooking and prepping all night. That's good. Thanks for being here with our audience, too. There's three cases at the midweek, which I think sum up the depravity and the scandal-ridden Trump administration. James Comey and Tish James' prosecution and what's happened to it. The restart of a long-forgotten criminal contempt percentage. preceding, presided over by Judge Bozberg, Chief Judge Bozberg in D.C. against the Trump
Starting point is 00:06:22 administration, which started back in March and April, went off into a hiatus because of appellate decision-making, but it is back and wait so our audience hears the potential witnesses that'll be brought before Judge Bozberg for a grilling. And again, another F-Up by Pam Bondi. I mean, if we made Pam Bondi the center of scandals and F-Up a drinking game, let's just say our audience would be inebriated very, very quickly tonight and every other night. And then people like Eric Swalwell, Representative Swalwar, is like, you know what, it's not okay that Bill Pulte, who's Donald Trump's attack dog, a Nepo baby who bought his way in
Starting point is 00:07:07 to be the head of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, it's not okay that he gets to rummage around private mortgage information and then slapdash cut and pay. and leak half-truths about people's mortgages and then throw shade on them and a cloud on them and make them clear their name. He said, screw that. Taking a page out of like what Michael Wolf, the journalist, just did in suing Melania Trump first for defamation, Eric Swalwell brought a case against Bill Pulte to stop the criminal. It's funny.
Starting point is 00:07:42 I had said, I wonder if any of these people will try. I don't know if you remember this, Karen, about the talk about Letitia James and Adam Schiff and Jim James Covey before they started indicting. I was like, some of these people should consider preemptively filing a suit to try to cut it off at the past. And that's what Swalwell's done. And guess who's judges? Well, I'm going to leave it at that, a little bit of a cliffhanger. But I think our audience is going to be happy to hear who is judges. And then we'll update our audience about developments in another oft-forgotten quarter of the universe.
Starting point is 00:08:12 Georgia, there was a criminal case there against. Donald Trump and others. We'll talk about what's happened there just to update our audience as well. So why don't we kick it off with a very brave decision by Judge Curry in sitting by designation in Eastern District of Georgia, Virginia, sorry, but regularly sitting in South Carolina. And right before Thanksgiving, as she promised, she made a ruling about whether Lindsay Halligan was invalidly, illegally appointed or not. if she was, what she was going to do about the indictments. That's separate and apart from judges like Nachmanoff and Walker,
Starting point is 00:08:55 who are the actual trial judges for the two prosecutions about what they're going to do about the indictment and closing the criminal case if they find selective prosecution, vindictive prosecution, abuse of the grand jury process, constitutional violations of rights, and that type of thing. So why don't you bring our audience up to speed about Judge Curry, and then what happens next with the Eastern District of Virginia prosecutor position?
Starting point is 00:09:23 Yeah, so the issue that was before Judge Curry was a very discreet issue, and that's whether Lindsay Halligan was validly appointed as United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. And just to remind everybody, the United States attorneys across the country, although they are inferior, they're considered inferior officers still require, because the Congress passed a statute that says it requires them to be appointed by the president with advice and consent of the Senate. And because that can sometimes take time, they passed an other statute that says that the president can appoint someone interim for 120 days. And because obviously,
Starting point is 00:10:10 like I said, that process can take time or looking for someone or there could be a a vacancy. So you can appoint someone temporarily for 120 days. But the statute specifically says when that time expired or expires, what happens next is district judges are the ones who choose the United States attorney. Now, Trump basically thought that because that statute has two sections, one saying that you can appoint someone in an interim, that you can just keep doing it. And every time you do it, the clock restarts another 120 days. But what happened here was Trump nominated Eric Siebert, who was going to be the United States attorney under Trump.
Starting point is 00:10:51 He was Trump's nominee, but his 120-day period expired. So when that happened, the district judges in Virginia voted and made him the United States attorneys, exactly how the statute is supposed to work. And unfortunately, when he and all the career process, prosecutors in that office, looked at both the Comey case and the James case, Letitia James case, said, you know what, there's no case here. There's nothing to bring. We can't prove any case beyond a reasonable doubt. No crime occurred. Everybody agreed and refused to prosecute the case because they had prosecutorial ethics and integrity. And when that happened, Trump either
Starting point is 00:11:38 fired Siebert or he resigned, depending on who side you believe. and put, install Lindsay Halligan into the office. Somebody with no prosecutorial experience whatsoever. And she was an insurance lawyer. She represented Trump personally. And the people are saying that the defense attorneys for Jim Comey and Letitia James brought these actions saying that's illegal. She was unlawfully appointed.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And so as you said, this went to Judge Kurt. who is not an Eastern District of Virginia judge, but since all of the district judges in Virginia had voted to install Eric Siebert, they were conflicted out of making this determination. And so they had to do it out of district, and Judge Curry was appointed to the judge. And Judge Curry did a very tight analysis
Starting point is 00:12:34 of the statute and interpreted case law and basically said, sorry, if you look at statutory interpretation and all the case law, it's very clear clear how this works. The statute is first you do this, then you do that. So first you appoint it when the term expires, then you, the judges get to do it. And that she was unlawfully appointed. Therefore, she was not the United States attorney at the time that she voted this indictment. P.S., she was the only one in the grand jury. She was the person who signed the
Starting point is 00:13:06 indictment. So this, but for her, this would not have happened. And if she's unlawfully in there doesn't have the authority. It would be like me or you going into the grand jury. We're just normal citizens. We have no power. We have no authority. And he basically said, since she was invalidly appointed, the indictment is dismissed. She dismissed it without prejudice. So there's with prejudice, without prejudice. With prejudice, it means that you can, you can never bring the case again. The case is over forever. Without prejudice means you can bring the case again. But the statute of limitations has run. And there's a footnote in her decision that basically says, look, if the invalid, if you're invalidly appointed, like I said you are, that doesn't stop the clock.
Starting point is 00:14:00 So it looks like the statute is run and that the case against Comey is gone forever. We'll see. I'm sure all of this is going to be litigated and appealed. But Judge Curry found that the statute is unambiguous, and once the term expires, the district court fills the vacancy, and that's that. And so it's a great decision. It's very clear, and it is, I think, going to be really hard to interpret this any differently, even on appeal. But the question remains, what happens to all the other motions that were in front of the trial judge, right? whether it's Knock Monoff or Walker, as you said, what happens to the dispute over the grand jury
Starting point is 00:14:46 materials, the vindictive prosecution, you know, all of the various motions that were pending before those judges. And I, you know, I wonder if you have a different view of this, but I don't see how those things can necessarily be ruled on because there's no case in front of those judges. There's nothing on the docket. There's no way to rule on them, although a complete record has been made, right? They've briefed these issues. They've had hearings on these issues. So in that regard, I think they're covered.
Starting point is 00:15:22 But what is your thought on what they- I think they can still go forward. I don't think the criminal case has been closed. Clerk hasn't closed the case. There's a ruling that Lindsay Halligan is invalid as a prosecutor and, like, of the poisonous tree, everything that she did or touched is void, citing to Judge Cannon, which I thought was interesting in the order, citing to Justice Alito and back when he was a young lawyer in the White House counsel's office for the proposition on remedy, which is what
Starting point is 00:15:56 we always thought she was focused on with looking at the grand jury transcripts about, what do I do? And once I find that she's invalidly appointed, what do I, okay, I tossed the indictments in this case without prejudice, although for Comey, as you said, different impact because they're out of time and the invalidity of the indictment i think is is a terminal is uh to the case being brought again i don't think it can happen again the way that she's analyzed it but in terms of i'm if i'm nakmanoff or i'm um or i'm walker i'm like all right well she's gone um but let's look at the grand jury process and let's and let's look at whether vindictive prosecution was present sufficient that not only that, but I'm going to dismiss it with prejudice.
Starting point is 00:16:45 In other words, don't even bother bringing in another Lindsey Halligan, God forbid, or even the one appointed by the judges of the district court, because I am finding that in the one chance that she had, it demonstrated vindictive prosecution and she was illegally appointed as part of that, but I'm going to close the case and I'm going to do it with prejudice. I think that's similar to what you actually thought was going to happen when you said she's not going to dismiss the indictment. She's going to leave it to Nakmanoff and walk her to do something with on the merits on the substance, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:17:19 That's sort of what she did. Yeah. I mean, yes, but she dismissed the indictment. That's the problem is if the indictment is, it'll just be interesting to see how they, how they start that out. Without prejudice. Yeah, yeah. If it was with prejudice, I would agree with you, case closed, clerk, close the cases.
Starting point is 00:17:39 Without prejudice, that puts the ball back in the government's court to try to figure out a way to get a prosecutor, not appointed by them under 546, to go and make a decision to go do this. And that's not always easy. I don't think any self-respecting prosecutor like you used to be is going to prosecute this case. And then they're going to be left arguing naked argument. to some higher authority, that their interpretation of 546, although rejected in Nevada, rejected in New Jersey, and soon to be rejected in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, is the right interpretation of plain statute that says it's a single-use ticket. You get one appointment for 120 days after that.
Starting point is 00:18:23 It gets turned over to the federal judges of the district, and it's a little bit of a power split there. Now, some people have asked me, isn't that a violation of the separation of powers? Like, how does the district court get to pick a executive branch officer in the form of a prosecutor? You know, listen, our nation has been doing it. Apparently since the Civil War, there's been some version of this sort of power sharing when it comes. I guess the way the balance is is Trump gets to, he always gets his pick to be confirmed by the Senate. And he also gets this extra pick for 120 days. But he doesn't get unlimited 120-day picks to involve.
Starting point is 00:19:03 avoid the appointment clause and therefore somebody's got to fill the job. So we'll let district court judges who sometimes pick special prosecutors will let them do it. I think we're out from under a separation of powers issue, but you know that's what they're going to argue. Just like they argued that, you know, oh, the statute's been around for 90 years for the Federal Trade Commission or the National Labor Relations Board, but it really has always been a violation of separation of powers. We'll see. But for right now, I haven't gotten word yet that the judge have the judges met to pick the replacement yet? They should.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Yeah, I mean, they really should, exactly. Quickly. Exactly. So, you know, yes, but I hear what you're saying. I just don't know the mechanism how they are going to be able to rule on this when there's no indictment before him. But it'll be interesting, right? It'll be interesting to see, do they have to wait to re-indict before they can make
Starting point is 00:20:01 these arguments? or can there, can knock Manoff or Nachmanov still rule on these issues? I think he can, but we'll have the debate. We'll see. Yeah, no, no, it'll be interesting to see. There's no indictment in front of him, and the criminal case is still in front of him because it was done without prejudice. So as long as he still has jurisdiction, then my argument, my argument would be,
Starting point is 00:20:22 if I were now Comey, I would bring a motion to dismiss with prejudice the indictment for the running of the statute of limitations. He has to be able to rule on. Let's use that as an example. Nakmanoff has to be able to rule on that. Who would rule on it? So, in other words, they want to prevent, preclude the government from even under any prosecutor from running back in because of the running of the statute of limitations.
Starting point is 00:20:49 That's clearly an issue of law that can be decided by Nakmanoff right now. Yeah, I think he has to wait for another indictment. Right now there's no case. She dismissed the case. She dismissed the indictment. No, there's no indictment. There's nothing. There's no charge, but there's no charging instrument.
Starting point is 00:21:04 Yeah, right, but it's without prejudice. So the case is still alive until they re-prosecute. And if they're all there together, we can debate this all night long. But I've had plenty of cases where the complaint gets dismissed without prejudice doesn't close the case. And she didn't order the case be closed. Yeah. So the case is still open on the docket. And if I'm, if I'm Comey, the next piece of paper I write is to stop the next indictment, not wait for it, and say, you cannot.
Starting point is 00:21:31 under all the other things we talked about. But a new thing, Judge, the statute of limitations has run. The indictment has been declared to be invalid, therefore it didn't stop the clock on the SOL, the statute of limitations, and you need to bar them from bringing me back through the mud with another indictment if they get another kooky prosecutor. That's what I would do. We'll find out. Yeah, I mean, Komi could have asked for the indictment to be stricken, and then I would
Starting point is 00:21:55 agree with you. But he asked for the indictment to be dismissed, and that's what she did. You're right. It's without prejudice means they can bring it again except for the statute of limitations. But I'm, we'll be, we'll see. We'll see what happens. But I'm not as, I think this case might be dead, dead, dead without us being able to review, without those rulings to happen.
Starting point is 00:22:18 That being said, I think that they might appeal this, right? And so if this gets appealed and the indictment goes back. And that's what I think was smart about Knock Monoff, right? is that if this gets appealed and the Supreme Court rules that Lindsay Halligan was validly appointed and these things are wrong, all of these issues have been briefed already and knock one off then, I think, could because then the case will go back down to him can then rule in these other areas. But we'll see. We'll see how it goes. It's very interesting. Yeah, and the debate continues, but not without a word from our sponsors. Thank you for being
Starting point is 00:22:54 here on Thanksgiving so many different ways to support what we do here on LegalAF, the 12 different commentators and contributors that I have on the LegalAF YouTube channel, the work that's done on the LegalAF substack, the work that's done here every week on LegalAF, the YouTube channel, and on the podcast. Support the podcast, keep us afloat with audio listens over on Apple and Spotify with reviews there as well. That keeps us floating around about 50 to 60 in all news podcasts we ended up being in the top 20 recently on YouTube for all podcasts so that's the way to do it come over to legal a after YouTube channel we're so close to crashing through the one million barrier we're going to be at 970,000 by turkey day and at the rate we add on
Starting point is 00:23:42 subscribers about two weeks later hopefully right around Christmas Hanukkah whatever your choice of holiday is we're going to be at the one million and that's all testament to you gives me goosebumps to think about it. We've got a legal AF substack where you can really dive in and nerd out on some of these procedural issues. You can read the orders like Judge Curry's order for yourself, live reporting on things that happen at the minute that we've got to get to you immediately in a way
Starting point is 00:24:07 that even YouTube can't do and all of that. And then we've got our sponsors. Some of them have been with us from the very beginning. Some of them are new, but they have something in common. They know our point of view. They know that of our audience. They support our First Amendment rights, and by extension, support yours to get briefed by us, you know, every day, every hour, one way or the other, different ways of distribution for the legal AF brand. So we appreciate our sponsors.
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Starting point is 00:28:07 to start deporting human beings without due process in the middle of the night, sometimes children, sent 200 Venezuelans to El Salvador to be tortured at the Seacot prison in return for el salvador getting six million dollars to the united states and bosberg didn't like it especially when the ACLU um ran into court early and said they're fuel in the jets and they're sending them to el salvador away from your federal jurisdiction after the suit was filed judge and he said no they're not i'm going to hold a hearing and he held a hearing and he ordered that all planes that hadn't left yet be grounded he ordered the ones that were in the air be returned and they didn't do any of that then they sent in a a purposeful willfully
Starting point is 00:28:53 blind lawyer named drew ensign who said to the judge i don't know i told him about your order judgment i don't know what they're doing and you know and that was all a lie and how do we know that because uh there's a whistleblower named eras ruveni who i just learned today has joined democracy forward working with sky parryman as a new lawyer boy is he going to be a secret weapon for Sky in her hundred cases that she's, especially in ones involving immigration. And so hats off and congratulations to Sky Perryman, Democracy Forward, and Eras Ravetti. And Eris had a 35 page or so whistleblower complaint right at the time that Emil Bovi, Donald Trump's former criminal defense lawyer and number three, the Department of Justice,
Starting point is 00:29:38 was nominated and up for confirmation hearing to be on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. There he is, sitting in Philadelphia, of all places. And Amel Bovi said, I was promoted on March, I think the March the 13th or 14th, right around the time of the hearings with Judge Bozberg. And right after I was promoted, I was ushered into a room. And I was there with all the other immigration litigation people for the Department of Justice. And there was Amel Bovi, who told us in no uncertain terms that we are to hide the fact that we're using the Alien Enemies Act to whisk people out of the country and that we're
Starting point is 00:30:14 to tell judges who ask about it to go F off, literally, to go F off. And he was very, very concerned about that, and he refused to do it. He then phoned in for a hearing with Judge Bozberg, the one I'm talking about now, in which he says Drew Ensign, who was his boss, effectively lied to Judge Bozberg about the planes and where they were located. I still think they're lying because I read the new filing they made last night, Karen, and they still are fudging the timeline of where. planes were not in the air so he judge Boseberg started a contempt proceeding he asked the
Starting point is 00:30:54 ACLU if they wanted contempt they said yes he started a contempt proceeding now subsequent to that he started in April the United States Supreme Court vacated blocked his earlier temporary restraining order and found that he didn't have the power to do that but this is a different issue. This isn't about whether his order later was overturned by the Supreme Court. The question is, at the time, it was a valid and binding federal court order from one branch to another, whether you're allowed to just thub your nose at it and flout and say, well, I think you're going to be reversed one day, so I'm just going to keep flying my planes away from federal jurisdiction and oversight. And I think the answer to that question is, no. There's just case law
Starting point is 00:31:42 that's longer than my arm that's out there about you have to comply with the federal court order unless and until you're told otherwise by an appellate court. And you can't just on your own, you self-help and violate it. So after a bunch of appeals, he restarted this hearing. The first thing he said at the
Starting point is 00:31:58 hearing a couple days ago, Karen, was, I want to hear from Eris Rivetti, which is exactly what you and I had said. When Eras Rivetti's 35 pages came out, whistleblower, I said, there's two people that are going to want to hear from Eras Rivetti. Judge Zipani, Judge Zinnis about the Abrago-Garcia case and Judge Bozberg.
Starting point is 00:32:16 Because now we have the answer, why weren't they listening to Bozberg and Zinnis in their orders? Because Amel Bovi told the lawyers not to listen to the judges and told the, effectively told the Homeland Security Director, Christy Nome, to keep flying on the planes. And we'll deal with it later. So now we got this amazing potential hearing with some very interesting guest appearances under oath to talk to Judge Bozberg. What do you think, Karen? Look, this is really, this one's going to be interesting because Christy Noem says that she sought legal advice, right, about whether or not they had to listen to Bozberg's order. So they're admitting that he gave an order. but it was an oral order at the time, right?
Starting point is 00:33:10 He said it on the record orally. And so she claimed she saw it, and I'm putting air quotes for people who are listening and not watching legal advice from Todd Blanche, Emil Vovay, and others, and asking them, do I have to listen or not? And she's claiming that they gave her legal advice that she didn't have to listen
Starting point is 00:33:31 and she sent the planes off. Now, the reason I bring that up is because there's a defense, right? There's this advice of counsel defense. She can kind of rely on that in this criminal content proceeding that's happening in front of Judge Bosberg when he's looking at whether to bring criminal contempt. She's going to lean on the, well, I was relying on advice of counsel, which is, I think this one's going to be hard because this is not really within the law, within the bounds of the law.
Starting point is 00:33:59 Of course, an oral order of a judge is enforceable. I mean, I was thinking when I read that, that that's their position. that, well, it wasn't in writing. Well, first of all, it was on the record, meaning it was transcribed by a court reporter, therefore it is in writing. And I'm thinking about all the times, there are never writings, like in an emergency search warrant
Starting point is 00:34:18 that you have to do orally, or an emergency eavesdropping warrant that you have to do orally. Those have complete full effect in cases, right? Judges orally do things. Or if a judge tells you to do something or orders you to do something on the record, and you don't, then they can hold you in contempt. not everything comes out in a written order. I mean, so to me, it's just such a preposterous
Starting point is 00:34:40 position to take that they are taking, that this was advice of counsel. So this is going to be, I think, a major hearing where they're going to try to call Emil Beauvais, who was at the time the number two at the Department of Justice, but is now an appellate judge, a federal appeals court judge. So I don't know how you call it a federal appeals court judge to testify. That'll be interesting. And Todd Blanche, who's currently, right, the number two at the DOJ, who's going to have to also talk about this, that they gave this advice. But, I mean, what a, what a pickle this, this has, they've created by making these claims. Bovi was three and Blanche was two. Sorry. I promoted him. I promoted him, my apologies. And now Stan Woodward is number three,
Starting point is 00:35:28 who just showed up on the 46 people who donated to Donald Trump and his transition campaign. Five of them are now in the administration, including Howard Lutnik, Linda McMahon, Stan Woodward, and a couple of other people talk about pay-to-play. All right, so we're going to see what's going to happen with Judge Boseberg. There's going to be appeals again, and already the administration, I said in an earlier hot take today that the Bozberg is not going to be pleased with the filing by the Department of Justice, effectively told him to go pound sand, that he was wrong, that the appellate process said he was wrong, that they were not in contempt. And then they fudged the, which I think is another perjury problem, except it wasn't done under oath, but it's a problem for the lawyers who signed that pleading.
Starting point is 00:36:22 I think they got the time of the planes wrong, as I've seen earlier versions that the judge was focused on, which said some of those planes were not out of U.S. airspace. I think now they've wallpapered over that with they just alighted over it with a with a little flick of the pen or the computer screen and I think they're going to be in big trouble but you know Boseberg they're trying to undermine Boseberg left and right you know you got Pam Bondi saying he's a terrorist enabler I'm just crazy shit to say out loud by the chief legal officer the attorney general of the United States against a federal judge I mean I can't wait I wish I could just time travel to the end of this administration and get a Democrat back in office and get the Department of Justice right again. And like, if I never hear, it's like, it's like, it's like a silent movie star. Like, I never want to hear from the attorney general unless I really have to. Instead of these crazy, insufferable press conferences, you know, with her, with her resting, resting attorney general face that she's developed, you know, hmm, hmm, hmm, like, do I need to see this?
Starting point is 00:37:40 I mean, this isn't wallpapering over your defects, your lack of ethics, your lack of leadership and independence as an attorney general, and it's not working with the American people, you know, so I don't know why they continue to play this card, except they're pandering to the only person that matters to them, which is Donald Trump, but woe be them. If we're right that the slip on power has happened and Donald Trump, who's already like closing, putting the lid on his day at 3.30, 4 o'clock in the afternoon and, you know, and all of that, they don't have presidential immunity. And some of the things that they're within a five-year statute of limitations for some of the
Starting point is 00:38:22 crimes that they have committed, you know, they act so imperiously, so like they're never going to be caught for what they're doing. They are. And I think they're starting to realize it as we're watching the implosion of the MAGA movement it's all you can call it you know the Mac uh mike johnson's not going to be there through the midterms it's not just marjorie taylor green it's going to be the permission that marjorie taylor green has given to others in her party to throw up the middle finger to the to the white house and say i'm tired of being abused by effing stephen stephen miller who elected him who elected pam bondie who elected pam bondie who Who elected any of these people, other than Trump?
Starting point is 00:39:05 And if there's three, four, five people that go, I'm out, even before the midterms, forget about playing with the maps, the congressional maps. They'll lose their hold on power in Congress now. And it's just, I don't know what they thought. It's just the abuse of power. They just got power mad, drunk on power. And we'll have to continue. I do with the Popeau, that for the first time, we're really seeing fissures in the MAGA movement.
Starting point is 00:39:36 You're really seeing that there is infighting, there are problems. There are people like Marjorie Taylor Green and others who are fed up with the fact that the Trump administration is not doing what they said they were going to do. And it's not just Epstein transparency that they promised and assured everyone that they were going to be. but it's also putting America first, right? No, prices aren't going down. Trump is flying all around the Middle East and buying up companies for his own edification
Starting point is 00:40:10 and making him and his family members more wealthy and not spending time at home. I read something recently talking about how he seems really tired and he's falling asleep and he doesn't come down from his part of the White House until noon and then he stops all his meetings. at five. I mean, I think you're really starting to see that he is ailing, he's aging, and he's really losing his support from a lot of his base. And I think he feels it because
Starting point is 00:40:41 you can see by what he's panicking about with his screeds. So it's interesting. And I think you're 100% right. We're seeing it and we're seeing it play out in real time and nothing can make me happier. Look at the six paragraphs that he wrote against the New York Times report. who wrote an obvious story about what we're watching with our own eyes, his flagging energy, his, his putting a lid on the day early. And then he called her, I mean, he can't help himself. He called her ugly inside and out, the failing New York Times, here we go. I stopped eight wars.
Starting point is 00:41:17 I don't know. What wars? I know. Name one. Forget eight. So, I mean, even Ukraine, Russia, they buy. bombed Ukraine yesterday, nine more people died. What war is ended, you know?
Starting point is 00:41:33 So it's just that implosion we were hoping for. I didn't think it was going to happen in month 10 or in, you know, so soon. But it's here, and we need to capitalize on it. I want to talk about Eric Swalwell. So Donald Trump figured out, and I called it a mass conspiracy, that if he had Bill Pulte, the Nepo baby from the Polti, Pulte Construction Fortune, who he took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and have him go after Democrats for quote-unquote mortgage fraud.
Starting point is 00:42:06 He'd get a lot of mileage out of it, political mileage out of it. So all of a sudden, you know, three months ago, here's the conspiracy. Bill Pulte at the demand of Donald Trump goes and writes a phony memo. Then he sends that memo and on his social media post to Pam Bondi. And he says, oh, look at these signatures on these two documents, not looking at the rest of the file for a mortgage or anything else. Oh, this is mortgage fraud. They're two primary homes or this is a secondary home, but you can't rent it out.
Starting point is 00:42:37 And what's the niece doing there? I mean, just crazy shit about how people run their lives. And, of course, ignoring the fact that his own parents, the Pultes, committed this, quote, unquote, mortgage fraud in Michigan and Florida in claiming two primary residences, where that Scott Bessett, the Treasury Secretary, did the exact same thing, or 20% of the Cabinet did, including the Transportation Secretary and the Labor Secretary, because it's not fraud.
Starting point is 00:43:04 It's not fraud if the bank isn't defrauded. If the bank knows they're lending you both loans, they know you can't have two primary homes. If they gave you a lower rate, it's because you're a good customer, or it's because you're the Attorney General, because you're a senator. They're not worrying about you going bankrupt,
Starting point is 00:43:20 like Donald Trump, or foreclosing on your house. So he slaps this together and puts up this. Look at these signatures. Oh, this is interesting. And then shade is cast on these people. And then because Pam Bonny, oh, I'm going to open up an investigation. Who can I use? Oh, Ed Martin.
Starting point is 00:43:39 Oh, John Sir Cody. Oh, Lindsay Halligan. Oh, oh, oh. And now you've got the front page headline that Donald Trump wants. It's all he wants. That's his pound of flesh. Federal probe, federal criminal probes open about mortgage fraud. Adam Schiff, Shifty Schiff.
Starting point is 00:43:53 Petition James. Jigaboo James or whatever he used to call her, Peekaboo James. And who's the last one? Oh, Lisa Cook on the Federal Reserve. And then we had a report last week that maybe, although I'm not sure it's true, maybe in a grand jury some DOJ people were actually looking at Pulte and Ed Martin to see if they committed any crimes. But now we've got Eric Swalwell.
Starting point is 00:44:19 Well, I think right on time, like exquisite timing, because there was a referral from this Pulte guy about Swalwell's mortgages, he said, screw that. I don't need a criminal referral hanging over my head. I'm going to sue Pulte. So take it from there and tell our audience what judge just got assigned to it. Yes, Judge Bowsberg, our favorite judge. So basically what Pulte's saying is that, I'm sorry, what Swalwell is saying is that Pulte abused his position by going through and scouring the databases of mortgage records and
Starting point is 00:44:56 selectively looking for records to create these allegations, these fake allegations of mortgage fraud and ask the judge to declare Pulte's actions illegal and direct him to withdraw his criminal referral. And so it's almost like a vindictive prosecution claim in advance because a criminal referral is slightly different than a prosecution. It basically, what criminal referrals are is government agencies who don't have the ability to prosecute, but they uncover illegal activity within their agencies, they can refer the matters to the Department of Justice. And so Pulte's agency has made this criminal referral. And what Pulte is essentially doing is saying this is vindictive, even though he's not really exactly using those words because vindictive prosecution is a term of art after a
Starting point is 00:45:51 prosecution has been brought. But that's essentially what he's doing. This is like that. It's like he's saying it's vindictive in advance. And because, you know, there's, look, there's all sorts of federal privacy laws that prohibit officials from going into the private information of citizens and use this, use that information to go after your political opponents. And so he also raised First Amendment claims, basically saying that the effort to get the DOJ to investigate him was retaliatory and to punish him for his political speech. And he writes in his filing, you know, the First Amendment is first for a reason. Freedom of speech comes before all others. And I'm allowed to say what I want to say, but you're not allowed to then vindictively go and search through confidential information looking for something against me. So it was, this is, I think he's got a great lawsuit and I'm glad he brought it and, you know, let's, let's see, let's see where it goes.
Starting point is 00:46:49 You know, Pulte is also the guy who sent a referral, by the way, that led to the indictment against Letitia James, the New York Attorney General that was dismissed, you know, by Judge Curry as well on Monday, I think it was. So I think, I think it'll be interesting to see where this goes. Yeah, the meantime, you know, he's the head of something, which means there's an oversight capacity to Senate and the House. And with the slip-on power by Donald Trump and MAGA heading for the exits, certainly not wanting to run in his shadow. Who's going to want to now with Donald Trump's independent voter approval rating at 26 percent? Who's going to want to run clinging to Donald Trump? You know, his superpowers are effectively done. the rapidity or velocity at which Donald Trump has lost his powers to help candidates is stunning,
Starting point is 00:47:47 really stunning. I think it started with well before election night three weeks ago, but certainly proved itself election night three weeks ago. And the perfect timing, exquisite timing by Eric Swalwell to take on the administration, take on Bill Pulte head-to-head, and he's got the right judge, and Judge Bosberg will see what happens next, and we will report on it. And Pulte will one day be in front of a committee having to answer questions about that, which he's done. And if I'm in the oversight committee or the committee responsible for financial services or the mortgage industry,
Starting point is 00:48:20 I bring in Pulte right away and talk about his side gig at being Donald Trump's attack dog and rummaging around the private records of Americans and putting them out for public display in a half-ass manner in order to, throw shade on them. It's not right. It's not fair. It's not democratic. It's not American. And it needs to stop along with this administration, right? Yeah, absolutely. You know, it's funny. This reminds me that growing up, my parents' generation was very much about privacy and not letting the government get your information and not letting the government have personal stuff about you. And I always thought they're so paranoid, you know, because it was all like the age of the internet and being, um, being suspect of all of computers and databases and that sort of stuff.
Starting point is 00:49:12 And again, I always thought it was kind of paranoid, but you look at what they're doing. You look at what this government is doing with people's personal information and going into databases, whether it's Doge with going into everyone's social security information, you look at what they have access to. And not only do they have access to it, but that they are going through our personal information in order to go after their political enemies, it is frightening. And we are living in a time that is frankly really frightening. And thank God for the judges who are the last check, but is stopping so far a lot of the stuff that's going on and the abuses that are going on. And I want to
Starting point is 00:50:00 give a shout out to all the judges who are holding down the fort. You know, the founders who had three branches of government and checks and balances, et cetera, we're so just genius and prescient. And because Congress seems to be not showing up and not doing their job and really just feckless, it's just amazing that the judiciary has held up and is holding the line, even Trump appointed judges and are ruling against him. So it's, that's a good thing. And I think there's reason for us all to continue to have a lot of hope because we do have this great system of checks and balances. And so let's just keep fighting and keep bringing these cases and keep pushing back against this authoritarian regime.
Starting point is 00:50:49 Can you imagine if Congress was strong and the president was strong and the judges were weak? Imagine we just had a, first of all, I don't know what our show would be about. We lost again today in federal court, federal judges not doing their jobs. I guess that would be the show. But I'm glad you're right that the last firewall to protect democracy and our rule of law is holding strong, even if we have to hold our breath every time a case gets to the United States Supreme Court. When we come back, I want to take another break.
Starting point is 00:51:20 I wish everybody an amazing Thanksgiving. Now is the time to pull your family even closer and friends even closer. Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday. not only because it just what it sort of represents about family and I love all the foods. It's also very close to my birthday, so I've always loved Thanksgiving. In fact, there's a great photo of my late mom and me. God, I think I was about five or six and I was obviously at a Thanksgiving table at my grandparents' house in Long Island, of all places, and I can see the birthday cake for me on the table because they would use that to kind of kick off my
Starting point is 00:51:57 birthday. So I always have fun memories about that. And so for those that, want to help us in going into 2026 what an important year for us to continue what we've built together brick by brick here on legal a f 26 wow i mean if it wasn't if it wasn't obvious before that this that's the year where real change happens it is now but we but we're doing the right thing being together being together now legal a f been there for the start five years as you know, a five-year-old podcast. Help us on the audio side of this podcast. Come over to Apple and Spotify, leave reviews, five-star reviews and comments. The audio does really well, but we could always do better on YouTube, and you can send it off to people in your life and ask them to join us,
Starting point is 00:52:48 and that helps us stay at the top of the YouTube rankings, along with some other work that I do along the week. And then we've got the Legal AF YouTube channel. That's where we really drill down. where the TED Talk meets the law school class, 12 different contributors. I do the first four videos a day, but then I've got Adam Classfeld All Rise News and Sydney Blumenthal and Sean Walentz of a court of history. We've got the ACLU over there. We've got Democracy Forward over there with us. We've got court accountability action, one of our first contributors that joined right away. Dina Dahl joins me once a week to talk about the Supreme Court. on a show called Unprecedented, all on LegalAF YouTube channel.
Starting point is 00:53:33 With your help, we'll cross the 1 million subscriber threshold, that important ceiling to give us street credibility to bring on the guests that you want to hear from. The elected officials, the judges, the former judges, the law professors, help us cross that million subscriber barrier. And then, of course, we got LegalAF, the substack, which is where you can read the orders that we talk about on the show. We've got live reporting there that we can only do there. are not on YouTube because of the nature of the platform and the rest.
Starting point is 00:54:04 So come over to LegalAF Substack as well. And now a word from our sponsors. If you're anything like me, the very first thing you do when you get home is rip off your bra and get comfortable. But that is until I got this amazing new bra from Honeylove. Their bras are so comfortable. You actually forget you're wearing them. And frankly, that's not going to be the first thing you feel like doing when you get home.
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Starting point is 00:55:18 Say goodbye to those terrible underwires and treat yourself to the summer support you deserve with Honeylove. And for a limited time, you can get Honey Love on sale. Treat yourself to 20% off your entire order by heading to honeylove.com slash legal a.F. Support the show and check them out because you deserve this glow up. You know, I've been trying to clean up my morning routine lately. I was tired of that mid-morning crash after my second cup of coffee. So I switched things up. And that's when I found mudwater. It's a coffee alternative made with cacao, chai, turmeric, and adaptogenic mushrooms. So you get focus and energy without the jitters or the crash. I just mix it with hot water, froth it up, and it's become my morning ritual.
Starting point is 00:56:00 It's warm, smooth, and it actually helps me start the day clear-headed. And now they've got nourish the world's first mental wellness shake. It's like a protein shake, but it's for your brain and your body with 25 grams of clean, plant-based protein, plus neutropics and adaptogens and probiotics. It supports focus, recovery, and digestion, and it actually tastes good. Ready to make the switch to cleaner energy, head to mudwater.com and grab your starter kit today. right now our listeners get an exclusive deal up to 43% off your entire order plus free shipping and a free rechargeable frother when you use code legal a f that's right up to 43% off with code legal a f at mudwtr dot com after your purchase they'll ask you how you found them please show your support and let them know we sent you welcome welcome back to the thanksgiving family edition of legal a f yes this is francesca my daughter daughter, for those that are wondering, future podcaster, president of the United States,
Starting point is 00:57:01 and or, and or Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, you be the judge. But I saw Ben brought in his daughter. I was like, wait, I want to bring in my daughter to work day. She's so gorgeous. Hi, Francesca. Look at that little face. That's Aunt KFA. That's the face of a future Supreme Court justice.
Starting point is 00:57:27 That's what I see. All right, we're going to take, we're going to take, let's pick it up with Georgia. And I'll turn it over to you, Karen, while I take care of my daughter for a second. Georgia, there was a prosecution. It was brought by somebody named Fannie Willis. Remember that? It was so long ago. Fonnie Willis decides she's got a RICO case racketeering and that it was a long, baby,
Starting point is 00:57:47 and that she's going to bring it against Donald Trump and a whole bunch of other people, including Rudy Giuliani and all of his lawyers. And it looked so great. And at one point, it was leading. and then your old office, Alvin Bragg, he got ahead with his prosecution, and then what happened? Yeah. Yeah, well, Spani Willis had an unfortunate relationship with her lead prosecutor that then called everything into question and the case spiraled out of control and she was ultimately taken off the case and they were looking for another prosecutor to prosecute the case.
Starting point is 00:58:22 And what just came out is the, in Georgia, there's a, I guess, a head prosecutor or a consortium of prosecutors that they all belong to. And the president of that basically said, but I couldn't find another prosecutor who would take this case. Nobody wanted to touch it besides you couldn't prosecute a sitting president until after the president is no longer president. So we'd have to wait for three years for that. And besides, presidential immunity has come down. And so we'd have to sort through all the immunity questions and essentially just said, we're dismissing this case. The prosecutor, this prosecutor also said, which I thought was ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:59:08 I mean, all of those things are disappointing, but I understand them. What I thought was ridiculous was he said that that call to Brad Raffinsberger, the Secretary of State of Georgia saying, find me the 11,800 and whatever number of votes, that that could be interpreted in two different ways. And when there's ambiguity and things can be interpreted in two different ways, the tie goes to the defendant, which is a concept in criminal law. But there is no way, in my opinion, you can say with a straight face, that that was what Trump was doing. He was absolutely trying to have there be basically trying to get fraud, you know, find fraudulent votes is, I think, pretty clear.
Starting point is 00:59:58 Anyway, that's a question for the jury to decide, and he was indicted by the grand jury. And that's not the only charge. It was a sweeping RICO case that you can't just look at that one phone call out of context. You have to look at it in the context of everything else that he was charged of doing, like getting fake electors to come in and, you know, all the other. schemes that were going on. I mean, 18 people were indicted and it was a huge sweeping, very long indictment that had charge after charge and RICO predicate after RICO predicate and over it act, over an over at act in the conspiracy. I mean, it listed out such a web of
Starting point is 01:00:37 lies and fraud and deceit. And when you look at that phone call in the context of the entire case, there is no way, in my opinion, that you can say, oh, well, he could have just been saying, oh, look, I'm questioning the election and there could be irregularities. So, so let's do, you know, let's look for the irregularities. I mean, I think that just is banana. So I think I'm really disappointed that he said that. But the bottom line is no one in Georgia, no prosecutor is willing to touch it with, you know, a 20-foot pole that they think it's a political hot potato and no one wants to get under Trump's ire. He also said, by the way, this is more appropriately brought by special counsel, Jack Smith,
Starting point is 01:01:24 but that case was dismissed because he has immunity. How is it more appropriate for Jack Smith if the president, if Trump has immunity? That makes no sense either. So it's just clear that they didn't want to touch it. Georgia is basically a red state, and they don't want to go after Trump because it has, you do that and it has consequences for people who are elected. I still support Fannie Willis. I don't think her relationship, her personal relationship is anyone's business and certainly is not a disqualification for this case. I think that was a little bit of a just, I don't know,
Starting point is 01:02:01 hatchet job on a black woman in the South. And I think she brought a incredible case. She'd put a lot to work into it. It was a righteous prosecution. And I'm thankful that she at least brought to light all of the abuses of all of the individuals that participated in that scheme and that that will be a record in history going forward. And even if nothing happened with it, it's not going to get completely swept out of the record books of history. So, you know, but that case is over for now or forever, I guess. And then you got the crazy house oversight and judiciary committee going after Jack Smith and Jack Smith's prosecutors, you know, who's going to take, I mean, I give you a lot of credit for being a prosecutor for 30 years. Who want to take this job, especially when you're
Starting point is 01:02:53 being attacked for just doing your civil service, just doing in a non-political way where the facts lead you and wielding your particular prosecutorial power in the right way. I mean, the fact that Jacksmith even has to answer to these Yahoo's in the house, and it's not helping them. If they thought, they didn't obviously get the memo of what's happened since the shutdown and since election night in America and since the Epstein scandal has so spectacularly blown up in the face of Donald Trump. And the fact that after yet another year of high prices and no relief in sight, and a president that seems out of tune,
Starting point is 01:03:39 completely out of tune with the sufferings of America and even goes out of his way to make Americans suffer, that they still think that people care about them going after Jack Smith where it doesn't boomerang and hit them back in the head. That's not what it looks like to the American people. It looks like an out of control deranged MAGA elected officials doing Donald Trump's bidding what's left of them to the detriment of the American people.
Starting point is 01:04:07 I just saw a number before we came on the air today. Get this number, Karen. The American people are going to foot the bill for over $300 million for Donald Trump to go coughing while he's in office. $300 million. That's crazy. That's absolutely crazy. You know, Popak, you just reminded me of something when you said, who in their right mind would do this, right?
Starting point is 01:04:38 Who in their right mind would be a prosecutor and subject themselves to this? You know, I was a prosecutor, as you said, for 30 years. And the last third of my time, I was the number two at the Manhattan DA's office. And when Cy Vance, the Manhattan DA, told me that he wasn't going to run again, I had to make a choice because whoever the next DA was going to be
Starting point is 01:05:00 certainly would want to bring in their own number two. So I had to decide, do I want to run for office myself and do I want to be the next Manhattan DA or do I want to leave and go do something else? And I actually went through the process of thinking about running and going through what it would be like to your family, to your life, to be a politician, a prosecutor, in this day, with what everything is going on. And I ultimately made the choice that I made, which is not to run. But I think about all the time what you just said, which is what all these people who do make that choice,
Starting point is 01:05:47 these amazing public servants who give up so much of their privacy, the people who are getting attacked by the president of the United States and others who he has appointed, who are getting docks to have, or we're getting these terrible bomb threats, these fake bomb threats at their houses, who have to have security 24-7,
Starting point is 01:06:11 who have their personal lives turned upside down and who are completely just attacked for just being normal people. And yet these are people who are public servants. They don't make a lot of money, and they are here to serve us, and we abuse them, and I don't mean us, but we, our society right now,
Starting point is 01:06:31 because of who the president is. And so it's really, I have, I just hold people who do make that choice to be prosecutors and to devote, you know, to make the sacrifices that they're making, especially now, which is an unprecedented time. Those are people who deserve our praise and who deserve our support. And I, you know, I really, I just want to give a shout out to them and the judges and all the other public servants out there who are upholding the rule of law and who are trying to do the right thing because the Department of Justice right now is unrecognizable.
Starting point is 01:07:07 They're they, what is happening in the Department of Justice and the prosecutors who are there, how they how they, how they, the things they are being asked to do and not do is beyond atrocious what's happening. So I hope when the Democrats are back in office and we can return our society back to a society of laws and order and justice and not political. vengeful retributions and bringing cases that don't exist out of thin air against people like James Comey or Letitia James. All the people, Adam Schiff, these are all public servants. These are people who have sacrificed to serve us. And being a public servant is not easy. So, you know, I, I'm just appalled. I'm absolutely appalled at what's going on. And to our audience, and back to my point about
Starting point is 01:07:58 2026 being so important. And the last week, I've had interactions with like 13 or 11 attorneys general for the Democrats live and in person when I went out to Arizona to interview them, and the product of that is now up on LegalAF YouTube channel. And I spoke to League Alert, who's the head of the immigration litigation division of the American Civil Liberties Union. And they all unsolicited said effectively the same thing, which is we, And they're talking about the lawyers that are in the courtrooms on the front line and are the first responders. We need you, Legal A.F. and your audience and the support that you're giving us, that's the heavy artillery that's pinning down the elected officials as we do battle in the courtrooms. And they put it in those terms, almost in those exact terms.
Starting point is 01:08:54 And it was interesting because to hear from the actual newsmakers is the wrong word, the actual litigators and trial lawyers and organizations that are in the courtrooms every day. We learned that the Democratic attorneys general talk every other day, all 23 of them and their staff, about how to defeat the Trump administration and its lawlessness every other day in a way that they never did before, the ACLUs of the world, the democracy forwards of the world. They say they can't do their job without our support, without our audience, without the coverage that we provide for them. It's not ego.
Starting point is 01:09:36 It's not like, oh, I got 300,000 views on my video, you know, interviewing Lee about the new... It's the attention that is brought to bear on an issue and how it impacts the body politic and those in power. And that made everything that you and I and Ben do on Legal AF World and our contributors there. It made it all worthwhile to hear that from their perspective, they need not just us, Legal AF, the channel, the platform, but they need our audience to be focused on these things. And they're so, they're so respectful and they're so supportive of everything that we do here. And I wanted to accept that compliment and praise on behalf of our audience, but I wanted to talk about it here on our Thanksgiving edition. I love that, ProPak.
Starting point is 01:10:29 That's like I have the chills. That's like the most wonderful thing I've ever heard. That's like, thank you for saying that because I love our audience too so much and just the community that has developed. And I'm so happy that they also recognize how important they are. are and what a part of just what's going on and how important it is to stay informed and to know what the issues are and to be a part of, you know, the people who show up at these protests, right, and the people who know Kings Day. And it's because people are involved and engaged. And I just think it's so wonderful. So thank you for sharing that story. Absolutely. And thank you to our legal
Starting point is 01:11:13 AF audience. We've got big things planned here in resistance, if you will, on LegalAF. at all. It's different formats in 2026, but we're not done. You know, we're not pulling in our oars on the eve of Thanksgiving. And I'll be, and Karen will be too. We don't miss a beat. Full day of programming up on Thanksgiving Day on LegalAF, the YouTube channel. Back at it on Friday, I'll be traveling for a bit. I got a birthday coming up soon. But, you know, I have a mic, I have a bag. I've got an understanding family, and you'll see me recording. while I'm traveling as well. It's just that important at this moment in time.
Starting point is 01:11:53 Nobody wants to look back and say, I could have done one more thing to help the defense of our rule of law. And I never want to look back and say, I could have done one more thing without doing it. So thank you to our audience. Enjoy your family and friends on Thanksgiving because they're so important and to honor them.
Starting point is 01:12:16 We honor you. Thank you. We'll see you. Saturday with Ben Myceles and me on Legal A.F. Next week, following back with Karen Freeman and me here on Legal AF. In the meantime, shout out to the Midas Mighty and the Legal AFers. Happy Thanksgiving.

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