Thursday, October 3, 2024. Annette’s News Roundup.
Jack Smith’s brief is released.
Judge Unseals New Evidence in Federal Election Case Against Trump.
Judge Tanya Chutkan made public portions of a filing by prosecutors setting out their argument for why the case should go forward despite the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity.
When told by an aide that Vice President Mike Pence was in peril as the rioting on Capitol Hill escalated on Jan. 6, 2021, President Donald J. Trump replied, “So what?”
When one of his lawyers told him that his false claims that the election had been marred by widespread fraud would not hold up in court, Mr. Trump responded, “The details don’t matter.”
On a flight with Mr. Trump and his family after the election, an Oval Office assistant heard Mr. Trump say: “It doesn’t matter if you won or lost the election. You still have to fight like hell.”
Those accounts were among new evidence disclosed in a court filing made public on Wednesday in which the special counsel investigating Mr. Trump made his case for why the former president is not immune from prosecution on federal charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election.
Made public by Judge Tanya S. Chutkan of the Federal District Court in Washington, the 165-page brief was partly redacted but expansive, adding details to the already extensive record of how Mr. Trump lost the race but attempted nonetheless to cling to power.
The brief from the prosecution team led by the special counsel, Jack Smith, asserts that there is ample evidence that Mr. Trump’s efforts to remain in office were those of a desperate losing candidate rather than official acts of a president that would be considered immune from prosecution under a landmark Supreme Court ruling this summer.
“The defendant asserts that he is immune from prosecution for his criminal scheme to overturn the 2020 presidential election because, he claims, it entailed official conduct,” prosecutors wrote. “Not so. Although the defendant was the incumbent president during the charged conspiracies, his scheme was fundamentally a private one.”
The brief was unsealed three months after the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, less than five weeks from Election Day and one day after Mr. Trump’s current running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, declined during the vice-presidential debate to say that Mr. Trump had lost in 2020.
Mr. Smith’s brief was initially filed under seal last week. It was designed to help Judge Chutkan, who is overseeing the case, to determine how much of the indictment can survive the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in July granting Mr. Trump a broad form of immunity against prosecution for many official acts while in office.
The prosecution has essentially been on hold since late last year, when Mr. Trump began making the legal argument that he should be immune. Judge Chutkan is now determining how much if any of a revised indictment filed by Mr. Smith can go forward under the complex standards set by the Supreme Court.
Overall, Mr. Smith and his deputies used their brief to paint the indictment’s many individual allegations as fair game for prosecution.
Still, despite its narrow legal purpose, the expansive filing also served as something like a trial brief, setting forth Mr. Smith’s fullest exposition yet of what he has learned in his nearly two-year-long investigation of Mr. Trump. Judge Chutkan unsealed the redacted version at the request of Mr. Smith and his team.
The special counsel’s filing to Judge Chutkan was not unlike the tome-like report issued nearly two years ago by the House select committee that investigated the events leading up to the attack of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
The 2024 Trump campaign issued a statement criticizing the brief and its release, which it portrayed as a political act.
The filing described a familiar web of intersecting plots by Mr. Trump and his allies. They included efforts to strong-arm state officials to overturn the election results, create false slates of electors claiming that Mr. Trump had won key states he actually lost and wage a pressure campaign against his own vice president, Mr. Pence, to throw the election his way during a proceeding to certify its final outcome on Jan. 6.
But the special counsel’s filing also added new details to the portrait of Mr. Trump as he scrambled to remain in the White House after losing the election to Joseph R. Biden Jr., culminating in the mob attack on the Capitol.
Part of the brief focuses, for example, on a social media post that Mr. Trump sent on the afternoon of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, telling supporters that Mr. Pence had let them all down. Mr. Smith laid out extensive arguments for why that post on Twitter should merit Mr. Trump’s prosecution.
After Mr. Trump’s Twitter post focused the enraged mob’s attention on harming Mr. Pence and the Secret Service took the vice president to a secure location, an aide rushed into the dining room off the Oval Office where Mr. Trump was watching television. The aide alerted him to the developing situation, in the hope that Mr. Trump would then take action to ensure Mr. Pence’s safety.
Instead, Mr. Trump looked at the aide and said only, “So what?” according to the brief.
In insisting that this post was an unofficial act, Mr. Smith noted that Mr. Trump’s advisers had been urging him to issue a message to quell the violence, but he had refused and instead tweeted about Mr. Pence.
“The content of the 2:24 p.m. tweet was not a message sent to address a matter of public concern and ease unrest; it was the message of an angry candidate upon the realization that he would lose power,” Mr. Smith wrote.
In the minutes before the tweet, Mr. Smith noted, Fox News had shown an interview with a protester marching toward the Capitol and expressing disappointment in Mr. Pence. It then reported that a police officer might have been injured and that protesters had broken into the Capitol itself.
That evidence “shows what social media and news the defendant privately reviewed in service of issuing a private tweet,” prosecutors wrote. “The government will not elicit testimony from the defendant’s staffers about his official deliberations, reactions to social media or television, or official actions taken in response.”
Several times, prosecutors drew a direct line between Mr. Trump and his supporters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6. The brief describes how one of the attackers went to Washington that day because Mr. Trump “told us we had something big to look forward to” and how others wore clothes and carried flags pledging allegiance to him as they broke into the Capitol.
Mr. Smith, for the first time, implicated a podcaster and former Trump aide — who is identified in the brief as Person 1 and who resembles Stephen K. Bannon — in the alleged plot to keep Mr. Trump in power.
The brief says that Person 1, who has not been charged in the case, played an integral role in the pressure campaign that Mr. Trump waged against Mr. Pence. Mr. Bannon is currently serving a four-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress for refusing to testify to the House select committee that investigated Mr. Trump’s attempts to retain power.
Mr. Smith’s brief also portrayed Mr. Trump and some of his allies — like his personal lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani — as making wild claims about election fraud in public while other aides close to him doubted the same allegations in private.
In early December 2020, for example, Mr. Giuliani appeared at a hearing of state legislators in Georgia and proclaimed that as many 10,000 “dead voters” had cast their ballots in the race.
At that same moment, however, the brief contends, Mr. Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows and one of the former president’s lawyers were exchanging text messages doubting the assertion and sharing with each other that only 12 votes in Georgia had been attributed to dead people.
Mr. Smith also took readers of his briefs behind closed doors to show how Mr. Trump sought to sway state lawmakers to throw the election his way.
His brief, for instance, described a meeting in the Oval Office on Nov. 20, 2020, where Mr. Trump tried to persuade the two top state lawmakers from Michigan that he had won the election. Joining them at the meeting was Mr. Giuliani; Ronna McDaniel, the chairwoman of the Republican National Convention; and, at least for a while, Mr. Meadows.
When the lawmakers told Mr. Trump that he had lost the election in Michigan because he had underperformed with “educated females,” the brief said, Mr. Trump was not pleased.
The lawmaker could tell by Mr. Trump’s “body language,” the brief recounts, “that he was not happy to hear” the assessment.
One of the themes that Mr. Smith hit upon repeatedly was that top officials close to Mr. Trump tried over and over to persuade him to simply concede.
During a private lunch in mid-November 2020, the brief says, Mr. Pence suggested to Mr. Trump that he should accept defeat and run again in the next presidential race.
But Mr. Trump did not want to hear about it.
“I don’t know,” the brief quotes him as saying, “2024 is so far-off.” (New York Times).
Here is Jack Smith’s 165 page brief.
Kamala is always busy.
#ACTUALNEWS: VP Harris delivered remarks on the Iranian attack on Israel pic.twitter.com/JZTw5hHr35
— Olga Nesterova (@onestpress) October 1, 2024
Here is VP Kamala Harris comforting the victims of Hurricane Helene in Georgia today. This is what a real leader looks like. Compassionate, kind, and understanding. Thank you, VP. pic.twitter.com/rAbKQmYLrM
— Harry Sisson (@harryjsisson) October 2, 2024
Melania Trump’s October Surprise.
In her new memoir, Melania Trump gives anti-abortion Republicans a sharp poke in the eye as her husband desperately needs their votes.
— Matthew Sheffield (@mattsheffield) October 2, 2024
"A woman's fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes." pic.twitter.com/uIaqCXvhvX
Responding to the Vice Presidential Debate.
My commentary again, in case you missed it.
A check-in from CNN.
Yes, Vance looked more human at the Debate, but the today, would you rather be them than us, with these numbers? -2 v. +37.
A reminder that JD Vance wrote an op-ed entitled 'Opioid of the Masses' in which he called Trump "cultural heroin" and criticized him for not having real solutions for the problems average Americans face. pic.twitter.com/GX4O2rrMgz
— Nate Lerner (@NathanLerner) October 2, 2024
Oh snap!!!!
— Art Candee 🍿🥤 (@ArtCandee) October 2, 2024
Donald Trump is gonna be big mad.
Fox News said that 58% said Tim Walz won the CBS News VP debate vs. 42% for JD Vance.
Hide the ketchup!!!!
🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿 pic.twitter.com/xY5hWbRSAG
Vance-Walz VP Debate Ratings: 43.2 Million Viewers, Down 25% From 2020 - Variety
Meanwhile, ABC announced on Wednesday that Walz will appear as a guest on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” next Monday, October 7. The appearance will rep Walz’s first on a late-night talker.
The first Harris-Walz ad. Touch to watch or, should I say, relive? 👇
The Harris campaign is out with a new ad focused on the key moment of the VP debate: JD Vance refusing to admit that Donald Trump lost the 2020 election. pic.twitter.com/pknG9MQSb8
— Matt McDermott (@mattmfm) October 2, 2024
Interesting update - The Harris Ad (above) Showing Vance Refusing to Say Trump Lost Gets One Million Views in Just a few hours.
A social media ad. 👇
More fact checking.
JD Vance just told us to “look at the record” for Trump’s economy.
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) October 2, 2024
Ok.
Donald Trump lost 2.7 million jobs.
President @JoeBiden and VP @KamalaHarris have created over 15 million jobs.
That’s the record.
Last night, what JD Vance didn’t say said everything. pic.twitter.com/0vmMwr0f37
— Tim Walz (@Tim_Walz) October 2, 2024
Trump is always crazy.
Trump says his economy was “so good” in 2020 when Americans were in food lines and he had the worst jobs record since the Great Depression pic.twitter.com/g6Sp7xC24B
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) October 2, 2024
“He peacefully gave over power" https://t.co/yM22RlDn1z pic.twitter.com/baFHVWDBOo
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) October 2, 2024
BREAKING: In a stunning anti-American moment, Donald Trump just said it was a nice thing that Iran attacked and injured over 100 American soldiers. Retweet to make sure all patriotic Americans see this and vote accordingly. pic.twitter.com/Ln2D8crJsS
— Kamala’s Wins (@harris_wins) October 1, 2024
Reporter: Iran launched ballistic missiles when you were president that injured more than 100 US soldiers
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) October 2, 2024
Trump: Injured. What does injured mean? It means they had a headache
(they were diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries. Not a “headache”)pic.twitter.com/MXDDU7kUvR
I'm on my way to South Carolina and North Carolina.
— President Biden (@POTUS) October 2, 2024
Once there, I'll take an aerial tour of areas impacted by the storm, receive briefings, and meet with first responders and local officials.
The Biden-Harris Administration is here. And we're not leaving until the job's done.
Biden to tour hurricane damage in Florida and Georgia on Thursday https://t.co/eBHFa24sGR
— The Hill (@thehill) October 3, 2024
Letter signed by a dozen Senators from both parties asking the Senate be reconvened to pass hurricane relief legislation.
Vice President Harris: I am here in Augusta, Georgia to thank all of the folks who are here on the ground doing this extraordinary work. These are very difficult times, and in a moment of crisis, I think that really does bring out the best of who we are. We are talking about… pic.twitter.com/0CuT00tnMi
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) October 2, 2024
I authorized the Minnesota National Guard to provide emergency assistance to North Carolina in the wake of Hurricane Helene.
— Governor Tim Walz (@GovTimWalz) October 2, 2024
Those recovering from the devastation are not alone. As communities rebuild, I am grateful to Minnesota’s first responders for answering the call.
Your Daily Reminder.
Trump is a convicted felon.
On May 30th, he was found guilty on 34 felony counts by the unanimous vote of 12 ordinary citizens.
The Convicted Felon Donald J. Trump was scheduled to be sentenced on July 11th and September 18th. He will now be sentenced on November 26.
BREAKING: Prosecutors in newly unsealed court papers say Donald Trump "resorted to crimes" in a bid to cling to power after the 2020 election. https://t.co/av15c4LF2X
— The Associated Press (@AP) October 2, 2024
BREAKING: Molly Jong-Fast just demolished the media for holding President Biden to a different standard than Donald Trump. Trump is a convicted felon and adjudicated rapist. He’s the candidate who should be disqualified. Retweet so all Americans see this.pic.twitter.com/4FiOKjIC9F
— Kamala’s Wins (@harris_wins) July 1, 2024
After reading Jack Smith’s filing, it is clear that Donald Trump is not just unfit for office again, but a criminal who deserves equal treatment under the law.
— Adam Kinzinger (Slava Ukraini) 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇮🇱 (@AdamKinzinger) October 3, 2024
Step one: defeat him.
If you still support him after this, you can no longer pretend to support the rule of law
A happy, healthy New Year to all from Eve and me, and from these folks too.
One more thing.
Here is a photo of Eve putting stamps on the last of the 1,000 postcards she sent to voters in the swing states.
The postcards she sent came with addresses on labels and specific short messages for her to write from BlueWavePostcards.org
Voting has begun in many states, and will soon begin in others.
May she inspire us all to Do Something. Who can you call? Who can you support? Whose door can you knock on?
33 days to go.