Trump's Trials - New evidence unsealed in federal election interference case against Trump
Episode Date: October 2, 2024Trump's Trials, host Scott Detrow speaks with NPR Justice Correspondent Carrie Johnson about Special Counsel Jack Smith's January 6th brief. Federal prosecutors are providing the most detailed look ye...t — at their election interference case against former President Donald Trump. In court papers unsealed on Wednesday, the Justice Department describes how Trump allegedly conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election.Follow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for new episodes each Saturday.Sign up for sponsor-free episodes and support NPR's political journalism at plus.npr.org/trumpstrials.Email the show at trumpstrials@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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It's Trump's Trials from NPR.
I'm Scott Detro.
We love Trump!
This is a persecution.
He actually just stormed out of the courtroom.
Innocent to proven guilty in a court of law.
Federal prosecutors are providing the most detailed look yet at their election interference
case against former President Donald Trump.
In court papers unsealed this afternoon, the Justice Department describes how Trump allegedly
conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
The 2024 election is, of course, five weeks away at this point.
More on that when we come back from NPR Justice correspondent, Keri Johnson. J.D. Vance and Tim Walz had their first and only debate on Tuesday. What happened? The
MPR Politics podcast has you covered with all the news and analysis from the vice presidential
debate. Listen to the MPR Politics podcast wherever you get your podcasts.
So again, this is a case brought by special counsel Jack Smith.
It is not going to trial this year.
So why are we seeing these court filings now?
We're seeing them now because the Supreme Court ruled this past summer that Trump and
future presidents enjoy substantial immunity from prosecution for official acts they take
in the White House.
This filing is the Justice Department's attempt
to explain that Trump should not be immune
from conspiracy charges because DOJ says
he was acting as a candidate and not as president
when he advanced bogus claims about election fraud.
Prosecutors say Trump was a private citizen,
motivated by personal gain, and just like anyone else,
he should stand trial for these alleged crimes.
This is a 165 page document in the luxurious amount of time that you've had to read it
since it since it came out to bringing it to us now.
Have you found anything new?
A few new things.
Yes.
Prosecutors assert that on January 6th, 2021, as rioters were rampaging through the Capitol,
Trump himself was personally tweeting from a dining room off the Oval Office. They
mentioned a tweet that attacked his Vice President, Mike Pence. And within a minute of that tweet,
the Secret Service evacuated Pence from the Capitol. Rioters actually got pretty close
to Pence before he could be ushered to safety. An aide told Trump that things at the Capitol
were turning dicey, prosecutors say, but Trump allegedly said, so what? There are also some new details about notes Pence took about his conversations with Trump
and the fact that Trump spoke with podcaster Steve Bannon the morning before the Capitol
riot.
A couple hours later, Bannon said on his podcast that all hell was going to break loose on
January 6th.
The Pence details are interesting because Trump's legal team has already signaled that
they're going to argue that anything related to Mike Pence
deserves legal protection. Why is that? Trump's lawyer John Laro recently said
in court that Pence should be off limits because he was a government official
having conversations with the president. He said if DOJ tries to include Pence in
any case, they're gonna appeal all the way up to the Supreme Court. But today
prosecutors said they're leaving out some the way up to the Supreme Court. But today,
prosecutors said they're leaving out some evidence they got from Pence. They're only
gonna focus on Pence's very narrow role in charge of the certification proceeding on
January 6th. They say the president and the executive branch have no authority to choose
the next president.
Nat. What happens to all of this as Trump wins the presidential election that's coming
up in a few weeks? You know, it's pretty widely expected Trump will direct his next attorney
general or acting attorney general to get rid of this federal case in DC altogether. He said he may
deliver pardons to many of the 1,500 people who've been charged with crimes related to that siege on
the Capitol. The prosecutors have signaled they want to keep working through election day. And the judge in this case says she's not taking the election calendar into account.
If Trump loses the presidency, it's possible this case could go to trial, but probably
not before 2026. The Supreme Court is likely gonna wanna consider additional questions
about immunity. This is, after all, the first federal prosecution in history against a former president.
Right. That's NPR's Keri Johnson. Keri, thank you so much.
My pleasure.
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Soterios Johnson's presidential vote has often come down to less than 1% of the state's population.
On NPR's Consider This Podcast, we'll hear what's keeping Wisconsin voters up at night.
We need someone who's going to be dedicated to what's happening for us.
Wisconsin, where just 20,000 votes could swing a state of nearly 6 million.
This week on NPR's Consider This podcast.