Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Reporter Anna Bower Unpacks Explosive DOJ Messages

Episode Date: October 21, 2025

When an inexperienced, newly appointed top prosecutor leading Trump’s vindictive prosecution plan against his political critics, slips into the direct messages of a reporter to chat about the prosec...ution of NY AG Tish James, you have the makings of a bombshell new investigative report by Anna Bower of LawFare. Anna joins Michael Popok to brief our audience on the series of messages, likely not approved by the DOJ, to Anna, which form the basis of her new eye-popping article “Anna, this is Lindsey” and what it says about the DOJ (who called Anna a “tattle tale” (?!?)) and Pam Bondi’s slip on the grip of power. 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 00:02:20 six zero to speak to an advisor free of charge betmgm operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario welcome to a special edition of legal a.F on the might as touch network yesterday there were a couple of major events involving lindsay halligan one we had the comies side james comie and his lawyers filing motions to disqualify lindsay lindsay halligan not because she's obscenely unqualified but because she was illegally appointed but later that afternoon into the evening got a new bombshell report coming out of lawfare and reporting reporting by Anna Bauer. The title, Anna, Lindsay Halligan here. I almost started this interview with Anna, Michael Popak here. And off we go in a series of text messages that were sent to the reporter
Starting point is 00:03:13 Anna Bauer from Lindsay Halligan about Letitia James' prosecution. It looked like she had been triggered by a couple of postings that Anna had made from some New York Times reporting on the 11th of October and we're off and running. And then a story got created, not one necessarily that Anna Bauer was looking for, but one that came to her through the text messages, ones that the Department of Justice is now scrambling to fix by saying that everything was off the record when it couldn't possibly have been since that wasn't asserted until nine days after the text chain started. Let's bring in the intrepid reporter Anna Bauer. Anna, how are you? I'm good. It's been a weird week or a weird nine days, but I appreciate you having me here. I'm good.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Absolutely. There were many, many things about your reporting, and we'll put a link to it down in the notes on Lawfare yesterday, and we'll read from some of the texts. They're just eye-poppingly fascinating about what Lindsay Halligan thought she was doing. And I want to ask you what she thought she was doing. But so you've done reporting about everything related to Donald Trump and prosecutions and the vindictive prosecutions that are now going on. And Lindsay Halligan, it looks like you guys met apparently at the Breaker's Hotel with Jim trustee when she was on the Mar-a-Lago case, right? Yeah, yeah. So the background here is I was covering Trump's criminal cases at the time. He had not yet been indicted.
Starting point is 00:04:49 But, of course, there was this search at Mar-a-Lago. Documents were seized by the FBI, Trump's team, which at the time included Lindsay Halligan and Jim Trustee, filed a very unusual motion in which they sought to have the appointment of a special master to sort through these documents and to kind of stop the Justice Department's investigation of Trump's alleged wrongful retention of classified documents. So amid all of that, Judge Eileen Cannon, who was presiding over this civil case related to that motion, calls a hearing. I had just started reporting on these cases. I am in Florida and go to this hearing. Afterward, I go to eat dinner at this hotel and who is there.
Starting point is 00:05:41 But Lindsey Halligan and Jim Trustee. Was she wearing her red pantsuit? She was not. No, I think she was wearing, you know, I don't remember what she was wearing. She does have some really great court fits, though, in terms of her courtroom outfits. But we briefly spoke, you know, I remember it very clearly because they were very dissatisfied then with my reporting on the hearing, particularly some of the verbs that I used. And then, you know, since then I have not talked to Lindsay Howell.
Starting point is 00:06:17 again. Of course, I followed her career. She, after Trump was elected, went to the White House, was put in charge of reviewing materials at the Smithsonian Museums. And then all the sudden is, you know, handpicked by Trump to prosecute as perceived political enemies in the Eastern District of Virginia, becomes the top prosecutor there. And then one day, out of the blue, I get a message from her or someone purporting to be her, which I didn't believe at first, you know, I thought it was a troll. And it turns out it really was her because she was able to tell me where we first met, who she was with, and then we confirmed that it was her by obtaining her phone number,
Starting point is 00:07:05 which connected to the discussion and the Justice Department eventually confirmed it. So to be clear, when you woke up that day to her text message, you're not planning to write an article about Lindsay Halligan, particularly, and some of her prosecutorial work on Letitia James. So when she later says, I didn't know there was a story, there wasn't a story. The story is her communicating with you, right? Right. And I want to be very clear here, Michael, because, like, there's a lot of context here about how relationships between reporters and prosecutors work. So a few things that people who maybe aren't familiar with that context and just like how unusual this is and why this is
Starting point is 00:07:49 even a story, I think it's important to keep these things in mind. So one is that it is normal for prosecutors and journalists to speak to each other. It's the kind of thing that that's how reporting happens, you know. So that's not strange, but there are a few things that are really abnormal here. One is that it's the sitting United States attorney who's one of the most high profile prosecutors in the country who's already under immense scrutiny because of the circumstances in which she was put into this job and the cases that she is pursuing against Letitia James and James Comey. The other is that she is reaching out to me who, you know, I, it seemed that she was reaching out to me about these tweets I wrote that was summarizing someone else's
Starting point is 00:08:43 reporting. Right. The New York Times in that case. The New York Times. And that New York Times story happened to be about grand jury testimony in the case that she was overseeing the Letitia James case. And it's very unusual for prosecutors to reach out to a reporter unsolicited about an ongoing prosecution concerning something that touches on grand jury matters because, as, as, you know, you might, we might speak to later, there's rules and policies and laws around the protection of grand jury secrets. Which I'll be fair, Anna, when we get into the text, it looks like she does not understand the secrecy that is around grand jury material and the way she challenges you about your reporting
Starting point is 00:09:35 about not only this grand jury, but apparently another grand jury that looked into the issues and had the grand niece of Letitia James testify that while she lived in the house, this seemed to be the triggering moment for Letitia James, what she referred to as the exculpatory evidence, that while the niece lived there, Letitia James in this very modest $118,000 house in Virginia visited it as well, and they lived there rent-free with some of her kids, which she's allowed to do under a mortgage. Right. And so before we get into that, one other thing I will mention as well is that the final thing
Starting point is 00:10:12 that is really remarkable about this, in addition to it being about an ongoing prosecution, it seems to relate to something I didn't even report myself. It also concerns matters that relate to grand jury testimony. But finally, nothing at no point. did she say that we were off the record? And for people who don't know what that means, everyone who is a public figure knows very well that when you engage with the media,
Starting point is 00:10:43 you can set at the beginning the basis on which you wish to speak. One way that you can do it is say, hey, I'd like to go off the record. And there has to be an agreement with the reporter that that is the basis on which you speak, and then they can't publish anything, you know, that you speak about
Starting point is 00:11:02 in that off-the-record conversation. But if there's no agreement at the outset, the assumption is that you are speaking on the record and that everything that you say is fair game. And no back-see, and no back-sees. And there's no take-see-backsees. It doesn't work where you can retrospectively, as a source, say to a reporter,
Starting point is 00:11:23 oh, hey, by the way, that was off-the-record. And look, there's contextual situations where people might have ongoing relationships between a source and a reporter where, you know, it's understood that in certain context, you know, you've agreed, oh, hey, everything we talk about is off the record unless there's an agreement otherwise. You know, that's something that some reporters are willing to do. But when you are a sitting United States attorney approaching a reporter, you don't know, and you don't at the outset, set the conditions of that conversation.
Starting point is 00:11:57 of course it's expected that whatever you say is on the record and that they can report that. I have some questions for you that you haven't yet been asked. But I want to get the audience that may be joining this story in progress, even though I have a video up about it, I want to read from some of these texts because you post them in your Lawfare article, and I think it's important to set the context, and then I'll follow up with some questions. And we'll put them up on the screen. You already said she contacts you out of the book. Blue, you're a good reporter, so you want to confirm it's her and that you're not being trolled.
Starting point is 00:12:32 It starts with, as your article does, and the title, Anna, Lindsay Halligan here, you're reporting things that are simply not true, thought you should have a heads up, as if it was just going to end there. Well, thanks a lot, Lindsay. And then you do a confirmation process, figure out, you know, do you know the secret password? Yes, it's the Breaker's Hotel with Jim Trustee. Okay. I think I've got it.
Starting point is 00:12:54 I've all ears, right? Good reporting there. okay here we go um okay awesome thanks i'm all ears what am i getting wrong that's what you write i'm waiting now and by the way just to short circuit it she never tells and about what she's gotten wrong honestly so much i can i just can't read this without being without doing that voice i can't tell you everything about your reporting in particular is just way off i had to let you know it's clear you don't have sources that are accurately telling you what you're writing seems clear to me that you just jump to your conclusions based off of what you read and still instead of really looking at the evidence evidence
Starting point is 00:13:31 that she never reveals to you at one point she's insulting right she acts like you're like a clip accumulator and you're not a journalist so i don't have to have this agreement with you but of course she's been talking to you since the breakers she knows you're a journal she knows what you're maybe that particular tweet was something that you thought was interesting to your audience from the times but that doesn't mean you're not a reporter. And then she goes off with, it continues. She says, you're assuming exculpatory evidence
Starting point is 00:14:02 without knowing what you're talking about. It's just bizarre to me. Okay, I think I made it clear, you say, that my post was based in the New York Times report. But did they get something wrong? Yes, they did. But you went with it. Like, okay, are you ever going to tell me
Starting point is 00:14:17 what is wrong about the reporting? Obviously, no. And they're also disclosing grand jury info. So at that point, I'm like, oh, she sort of understands the secrecy that's required by law around grand jury. No, which is also not a full representation of what happened. I guess I was surprised by you running with it. I'm happy to retract, you say, or correct anything that is untrue, but I can't do that if I don't know what the supposed error is. Can you be more specific?
Starting point is 00:14:46 This goes on for several more chains when you finally say, did you just write me to criticize my? reporting. I thought you were, you know, you said ask questions, I'm asking questions, and you just told me I got it wrong. So here's my question to you. Why, let's put ourselves for a moment in her head. Why did she contact you? In her best day, what was she trying to accomplish? I, you know, I have been, oh, I've been over this again and again and again in my head. I frankly cannot figure it out at all. And like, look, I want to be very clear. It's total speculation and just theories on my part.
Starting point is 00:15:33 So I have no idea, but, but one thing that, you know, might have happened is some of the tweets that I had posted, you know, one of them I think that was moderately, you know, popular in the sense it got like, you know, a little bit of traction. it had like a thousand likes or something. And it was the one, I believe, that was just that I, that's the one I sent her that I took her to be directly responding to, which summarized the New York Times reporting about this testimony that was reportedly given by the grandniece. Right. I had another-
Starting point is 00:16:14 Yeah, Tanya Thompson, right. Right, and I had another tweet in which, as you heard, she was seemed to be responding to also. which was, you know, I said, I think this is exculpatory in that it, this testimony in which the niece said reportedly that she lived in the house for many years, that's the subject of the indictment and that she did not pay rent. You know, I took that to be exculpatory because it tends to show that Letitia James, who was alleged to be using a home, a second home as a rental investment property, was not actually using this property.
Starting point is 00:16:52 primarily to collect rental income because the grandniece that lived there for many years and did not pay rent. You know, it may very well be that someone, you know, at the White House in the Justice Department, sent her this tweets or these tweets and maybe, you know, they weren't too happy about it. And so then she's reacting to some type of criticism. That's a possibility. But I have no idea. The other possibility is just that she had a moment of frustration because she's been under immense, you know, public pressure and criticism. I'm going with this one.
Starting point is 00:17:32 Yeah. And, like, you know, I'm someone she could put a name to a face to because we met three years ago. And so potentially it's that. Again, this is all speculation. I have, frankly, I have no idea. It can found. It's baffling to me, but that those are my theories. So let me, it's lonely at the top when you're a top prosecutor and you've never had that role before.
Starting point is 00:17:59 So that, my second question was, is this an example of another, yet another example of Lindsay Halligan going rogue? There's already been reporting that she obtained the indictment of at least Comey without letting Pam Bondi and Todd Blanche know in advance that they were caught flat-footed. We've got the other reporting that Ed Martin seems to be playing an outsized role as some sort of shadow AG that's maybe guiding Lindsay Halligan here. She went in, you know, by herself to the grand jury. I think somebody wrote a script for her, and it might have been him. That's my own speculation. But is this another example?
Starting point is 00:18:37 You think she actually cleared this, this contact with you and the lack of off the record with anybody in the main justice? You know, so look, if you look at the Justice Manual, I, U.S. attorneys do are allowed to, you know, themselves without authorization, talk to the media. And like I said, it's not, you know, there are examples of U.S. attorneys having relationships with the media. Again, typically that would be off the record and it would not be about an ongoing prosecution. But what I think is interesting is that, you know, again, it's a reporter that you're on the record. with you don't go through public affairs, which is kind of even though she is technically
Starting point is 00:19:24 authorized is my understanding of the Justice Manual to go reach out to a reporter herself because she's the U.S. attorney, you would typically go through public affairs. You would then also report the contact, you know, two higher ups, particularly because here it related to matters concerning an ongoing prosecution and grand jury or, you know, reported grand jury testimony. I would be really surprised if people at the Justice Department knew about this beforehand and had kind of cleared it or even after the fact, I, you know, I don't know that I just can't speak to those facts. But what I will say is I think it's really interesting in telling that in the Justice Department's statement, when we went to them for a request for comment,
Starting point is 00:20:19 they suggested that I was tattletailing on Lindsey Halligan. And that to me indicates that maybe they did not know about this communication, but I don't know. Plus, they spelled her name wrong, which is ironic given she's got problems with spelling and geolocations like Brooklyn, New Jersey, in some of her. I forgot about that. Yeah, they reached out a few hours after the story published and realized the spelling error. But, you know, I have never seen the United States Justice Department call a reporter a tattletail for reporting. It's a badge of honor, Anna.
Starting point is 00:21:03 Yeah, I mean, reporting something that was on the record and clearly newsworthy, you know, we in the course of reporting the story spoke to multiple former. officials from the Justice Department and also reporters who cover legal affairs. And no one was able to tell us of something that came to mind that was even remotely similar to this type of contact with a U.S. attorney. So, you know, it was clear to us. This was newsworthy. And it was on the record. And I think that it was completely fair game. I want to read our audience here at the end of the interview with the exchange about on the record and off the record. This is nine days after the initial contact. This is the backsees we were talking about. She just writes you out of the blue nine days later. There's nothing in the chain. Boom. By the way, everything I ever sent
Starting point is 00:21:56 you is off record. You're not a journalist. We're just insulting you for so no reason. So it's weird saying that, but just letting you know. And you write back, I'm sorry, but that's not how this works. you don't get to say that in retrospect. Yes, I do off record. I'm really sorry you write back. I would have been happy to speak with you on an off-the-record basis had you asked, but you didn't ask.
Starting point is 00:22:20 And you still haven't agreed to speak on that basis. Do you have any further comment for the story? Now it dawns on her. It's obvious the whole convo is off-record. And here's one of my favorite parts. There's a, they're disappearing messages. And I use signal. and it's on signal.
Starting point is 00:22:39 Here, again, the Trump administration already got in trouble with the Atlantic and Jeffrey Goldberg and Mike Walts adding him accidentally to the Houthis and Yemeni attack, right? With J.D. Vance and Marco Rubio, Stephen Miller, have they not learned about disappearing messages?
Starting point is 00:22:57 And then you say, she says, and what is your story? You never told me about a story. Lindsay, you contacting Anna. is the story. Now, here's the question out here at the end. There was a bit of, because I want people to understand
Starting point is 00:23:12 the nitty-gritty of journalism, there was a bit of a gap between the text exchange until you released the story yesterday. So what were you doing as a journalist about the story before you decided to time it for yesterday? Yeah, so look,
Starting point is 00:23:27 I mean, we knew that there was a story here, but of course we wanted to make sure that we were diligently fact-checking everything. We needed to confirm that it really was her. It took us a few days to obtain her phone number and to actually, you know, make sure that and confirm that it really was her. We went through the process, as I said, of speaking with experts who could speak to us about how unusual this story is. And then also, you know, I was not entirely sure whether she was done.
Starting point is 00:24:06 talking to me and a part of like a part of journalism you know it is just trying to see whether there is a possibility of a relationship there and we had to make a decision like we've got something that's clearly newsworthy but also it does she really want to open a line of communication with me because at the beginning of the conversation even though she was you know uh expressing her dissatisfaction with my reporting she also said at one point before before you report, feel free to reach out. And that's an incredible, like, you know, opening for, you know, I'm reporting on these cases. So, of course, if the U.S. attorney is offering for me to reach out to her and ask her questions about the case that she
Starting point is 00:24:54 personally is prosecuting, of course I'm going to try to see and feel it out and we're on the record. And she's offering to answer questions. So for a few days, I tried to see if she was serious about that. It quickly became clear to me that she was not. You know, she started, I don't know if maybe she just thought better of what she was doing and the outreach, but she started stop responding to my messages. And so then we started going through the process, you know, of writing the story. But I just really want to underscore that like this is the kind of thing that is so risky for a prosecutor to do. You know, there can be a host of consequences for talking to a reporter on the record about an ongoing prosecution, which is why prosecutors typically don't do it.
Starting point is 00:25:49 It can result in, you know, all kinds of ammo for the defense. She clearly knows that she is, you know, every misstep, every minor mistake or error is going to be picked apart by Abby Lowell in the Leticia James case, who is Lettia James case, who is Lettia, James' defense counsel. So it's still just as shocking to me that this happened. But we'll see. I don't know what's going to happen, but it'll be interesting to see, you know, kind of the response to the story as the next few days play out. Thank you for kind of sharing that kind of inside baseball about journalism
Starting point is 00:26:26 and how hard you work to confirm stories before you run with them. And the decision-making tree that went on for you, I think that our audience will find, we'll find all of that fascinating as they will. If you don't already know about Anna Bauer in Lawfare, this is your opportunity. I've been trying to find a way to get you on here for a long, long time. I read the story. I was like, oh, my God, we've got to try to get Anna. I'm so pleased that you're willing to brief our audience here on the Midas Touch Network
Starting point is 00:26:57 and Legal AF. And we'd love to have you back for any kind of follow up or anything else that you think is interesting. I know our audience will find it interesting. Anna Bauer for Lawfare here to talk about Anna Lindsay Halligan here, her new article about a very unique, maybe once in a lifetime opportunity to have a text exchange with a sitting head of the U.S. Attorney's Office about ongoing matters.
Starting point is 00:27:23 And I'll go one further, Anna. I'd be shocked if this doesn't show up, at least in a footnote and an argument in the motions practice that's going to be filed, not just by Letitia James, but I'm sure James Comey and all the rest of the political enemies that are being targeted by Donald Trump will find a way to use this incredible, incredible piece of reporting. And I'm so glad you're here. Thank you for being part of our audience today.
Starting point is 00:27:48 Thanks for having me. Michael Popock, Legal AF on the Midas Touch Network. In collaboration with the Midas Touch Network, we just launched the LegalAF YouTube channel. Help us build this pro-democracy channel where I'll be curating the top stories, the intersection of law and politics. Go to YouTube now and free subscribe at LegalAFMTN. That's at LegalAFMTN.

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