Letters from an American - March 27, 2024
Episode Date: March 28, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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March 27, 2024. The news that NBC News has reconsidered its invitation to former Republican
National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel to become a paid contributor has buried the recent news
about some of the other participants in Trump's attempt to overturn the
results of the 2020 presidential election. Yesterday, a judge in Minnesota ruled in favor
of a warehouse owner who sought to evict MyPillow after it failed to pay more than $200,000 in rent.
MyPillow chief executive officer Mike Lindell has complained that his company has been decimated by his support for Trump.
His insistence, without evidence, that the 2020 presidential election was stolen has entangled him in expensive defamation lawsuits filed by voting machine companies Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic.
Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic. Lindell cannot pay his lawyers and claims to have lost hundreds of millions of dollars, but insists he is being persecuted because you want me to shut
up about the security of our elections. Also yesterday, Trump loyalist Kerry Lake, who has
pushed the idea that the 2020 presidential election was stolen, ran for Arizona governor in
2022, and is now running for the U.S. Senate, admitted she defamed Maricopa County recorder
Stephen Richer and that she acted with actual malice when she claimed he sabotaged the 2022
election. The request to admit to defamation came on the day that discovery, the process of sharing information about a case with each side, was to begin, suggesting that she preferred to admit wrongdoing rather than let anyone see what might be in her emails, texts, and recordings.
Howard Fisher reported in the Arizona Daily Star that in a video statement, Lake said her admission did not mean she agreed she did anything wrong, although that is expressly stipulated in the court
papers. She said she conceded because Richard's lawsuit was keeping her off the campaign trail.
It's called lawfare, weaponizing the legal system to punish, impoverish, and destroy political opponents,
Lake said. We've all seen how they're doing it to President Trump, and here in Arizona,
they're doing the exact same thing to me. One of Lake's senior advisors said,
Carrie Lake maintains she has always been truthful. Also yesterday, a three-member panel of the D.C. Bar's Board of Professional
Responsibility began a disciplinary hearing for former Department of Justice environmental lawyer
Jeffrey Clark, who was so key to Trump's plan to get state legislatures to overturn the results
of the 2020 election that Trump tried to make him attorney general. Clark joins Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani,
who led the media blitz to argue, falsely, that the election had been stolen. Giuliani's New York
and Washington, D.C. law licenses were suspended in June 2021 after a court found that he made
demonstrably false and misleading statements to courts, lawmakers, and the public at large.
He is now facing disbarment. Earlier this month, Giuliani said on his podcast that he expected to
be disbarred because the Bar Association is going to crucify me no matter what. I will be disbarred
in New York. I will be disbarred in Washington. It will have nothing to do with anything I did wrong. Today, after a long trial, attorney discipline judge Yvette
Rowland recommended that John Eastman, the lawyer who came up with the justification for using fake
electors to overturn the 2020 presidential election, be disbarred. Eastman will immediately lose his license to
practice law. The California Supreme Court will decide whether to disbar Eastman. Eastman's lawyer
said it was unfair to take Eastman's law license because he needs to make money to fight the
criminal charges against him in Georgia, where he has been indicted for his part in the effort to
overthrow the results of the 2020
presidential election there. For his part, Eastman maintains he did nothing wrong.
In her recommendation, Judge Rowland compared Eastman's case to that of Donald Segretti,
the lawyer whose efforts to guarantee President Richard Nixon's 1972 re-election included,
as Rowland's recommendation noted,
distributing letters that made false accusations against Nixon's rivals, including a forged letter
attributing a slur against French Canadians to Maine Senator and candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination, Ed Muskie. At the time, the court noted that Segretti was only 30,
thought he was acting for Nixon, and did not act in his capacity as a lawyer.
The court also emphasized that Segretti recognized the wrongfulness of his acts, expressed regret, and cooperated with the investigating agencies.
agencies. In contrast, Rowland wrote, the scale and egregiousness of Eastman's unethical actions far surpasses Segretti's misconduct. Segretti acted outside his role as an attorney while
Eastman's wrongdoing was committed directly in the course and scope of his representation of
President Trump and the Trump campaign. Roland also noted that while
Segretti expressed remorse and recognized his wrongdoing, Eastman has shown an apparent
inability to accept responsibility. This lack of remorse and accountability presents a significant
risk that Eastman may engage in further unethical conduct, compounding the threat to the public.
engage in further unethical conduct, compounding the threat to the public. One by one, those who worked with Trump to overturn the election are being held to account
by our legal system, but still, they refuse to admit any wrongdoing.
In that, they're following Trump.
Despite Judge Juan Merchan's gag order, Trump continued today to attack both Merchan and his daughter.
On his social media site, Trump posted that Merchan was trying to deprive him of his
First Amendment right to speak out against the weaponization of law enforcement,
including the fact that Crooked Joe Biden, Merrick Garland, and their hacks and thugs
are tracking and following me all across the country, obsessively trying to persecute me
while everyone knows I have done nothing wrong. Trump posted in great detail about the judge's
daughter, accusing her of making money by working to get Trump, based on images shared by an old social
media account of hers that had been hacked. It was President Nixon who perfected the refusal
to admit wrongdoing in the face of overwhelming evidence. Even after tapes recorded in the Oval
Office revealed that he had plotted with an aide to block investigations of the break-in at the
Washington, D.C. headquarters of the break-in at the Washington,
D.C. headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate Hotel by invoking national security, and Republican Party leaders told him he needed to resign, he refused to admit
wrongdoing. Instead, he told the American people he was stepping down because he no longer had enough support in Congress to
advance the national interest. He blamed his fall on the press, saying its leaks and accusations
and innuendo were designed to destroy him. Gerald R. Ford, the president who replaced Nixon,
inadvertently put a rubber stamp on Nixon's refusal to accept responsibility.
Believing it was better for the country to move past the divisions of the Watergate era,
Ford issued a preemptive pardon for any crimes the former president might have committed against the United States while in office. Ford maintained that the acceptance of a pardon was an admission
of guilt. But Ford's pardon meant Nixon never
faced legal accountability for his actions. That escape allowed him to argue that a president is
above the law. In a 1977 interview with British journalist David Frost, Nixon told Frost that
when the president does it, that means it is not illegal by definition.
As Nixon did, Trump has watched those who participated in his schemes paid dearly for
their support, but he appears angry and confused at the idea that he himself could be held legally
accountable for his behavior. But without accountability, as Judge Rowland noted,
there is no incentive to stop dangerous behavior. Josh Dossie reported last night in the Washington
Post that since Trump has taken over the Republican National Committee and purged it of former
employees, those interviewing for jobs are being asked if they believe the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
Other questions, Dossie reported, include what applicants believe should be done on election integrity in 2024. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.