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0:00: Hi everyone, Harry here to talk about the possibly increasingly tight spot
and hotter water that Mark Meadows is now in as the judge decides whether he can
remove his case.
0:14: So a couple of things have happened, one legal and one you could call
factual. Legal, the judge has asked this question. We've got all these overt acts
in the indictment. What happens if at least one of them is under Meadows's color of
office, a definite sort of chief of staff like thing, is that enough for removal
when there are so many ones out there? And the state responded now in a briefing
yesterday saying, no, look, that doesn't matter. Overt acts are not essential to
the Rico conspiracy charge. They could be any of a number of things, indeed, there
are 160 of them here.
0:59: And if you were, we were in that situation where you found overt act number
45 was done clearly in his chief of staff guys, we should just supersede the
indictment and take out overt act 45.
1:14: If you're worried about it, but you shouldn't be worried about it because
there's one thing that matters and one thing only did he join the Rico conspiracy.
There are to lay it out, the indictment alleges this broad conspiracy for everyone
and the members of the conspiracy, but not any individual member have to engage in
a couple acts of racketeering basically crimes. And otherwise, everyone is just
sort of all in on the nefarious goal. And the allegation is Meadows was in on that
goal. So if he is, the question and in doing and in being that way, he was not
acting on their color of office, then that's all you need to know. Meadows for his
part and he is very, very able lawyers followed a brief that basically said yes,
otherwise, the prosecutors could always just, monkey around by adding say one thing
that isn't done under color of office as an overt act.
2:27: And then the defendant would be stuck. So I think the judge here, Judge
Jones may actually be puzzling over this question. Both positions seem a little
odd. And I wonder if he'll come to something having to do with either the thrust of
the overt acts, not just one or the other, but where they go. Or I think the
state's line seems to make sense. What we care about is if he joined the conspiracy
over at acts are really sort of incidental. So the, I think the consensus of people
who are following this closely is not clear how the judge is going to go on removal
at least for Meadows, but a couple of quick points. One is that the other people
who followed suit with Meadows and made similar motions are not nearly as strong.
So it doesn't mean there'll be a, you know, one, this decision would apply to all
with one little asterisk there that I'll get to in a minute.
3:32: And then second, for Meadows, as I've been saying for a while, removal is
the battle, not the war.
3:40: He still has to get to immunity. That is, this will tell him, can he be in
federal court, but under state law doing everything that he'd otherwise do in state
court, what he is really angling for is a ruling that his actions not only were
under color of office, but basically that they served a federal purpose and
therefore the state can't legally under the constitution and the supremacy clause.
Just put him in jail for that or try to do it. But that gets to the other big
point, the factual one, because I analyzing the transcript of Meadows hearing,
which was closed off, wasn't televised. It appears in a couple junctures that he
might have told some fibs.
4:33: And in particular, here there are a few places to point to, but he had said
that he played no role in any of the electors, any of the efforts, however you
characterize them, to put in other electors for what George says is the false
electors scheme and what the Trump campaign wanted to say was, you know, just
protecting our rights in the event courts wind up ruling for us.
5:06: Well, that's a really precarious question for Mark Meadows because there
doesn't seem to be any plausible federal purpose to munking around in a state
campaign like this. He's not there, you know, carrying Donald Trump's briefcase or
just being in a, you know, trying to shaperone his time or whatever, he's nakedly
exposed to doing something that has no valid purpose under federal law.
5:36: And that, as I see it, would really be fatal for his immunity motion, which
is really what he's going for. So I think that's the reason he was caught in, you
know, what many people think might be a flagrant lie enough to ground perjury
charges. And in any event seems that real sort of tension, because he said, I
played no role in any of this elector stuff. And then he was confronted with
emails, one in particular from the Georgia prosecutor and then later by his own
attorney, because they had to fess up where it just shows him coordinating at least
the overall coordination of the state elector stuff. And he had to eat that. And so
he, you know, it made him look really bad. But it also made an opening for the
judge to basically decide that, you know, I don't credit your testimony.
6:32: I don't think it was truthful, you know, all in all, especially about
purpose. And that would be a way for the judge to rule that, you know, that
everything, there's no removal. If people concluded in this way, the judge would
conclude there's no removal. But also he'd be really dirtyed up going forward. I
think the United States won't cooperate with the perjurer. He could be charged.
7:00: Now to my mind is not quite that clean, this alleged perjury, and he can try
to wriggle out of it.
7:07: But it definitely puts him somewhat in the soup and gives the court another
possibility for rejecting the removal petition. Now the court says it's going to
decide this pretty soon.
7:20: September 6 is when the arrangements are otherwise scheduled. And I think
that the judge, Judge Jones, would be aiming for that. And I just want to
underscore that the standard for removal pretty low in the 11th Circuit, especially
and a lot of deference to the district court.
7:41: And I think as people are puzzling through this, you can get the flavor if
you put it all together that it could go either way on removal. We'll see.
Certainly it's not a layup for the state, as I've kind of said from the start. But
also the big game is what we'll follow with quickly on the heels if he gets
removal, which is immunity. And there he's going to be in trouble. Because there's
not just the perjury problem, but the fact that he basically fesses up to doing
things that have no federal purpose. And that's going to make it much harder to get
immunity. So should be within a few days. One final point. There's some suggestion
out here. Here's another on several questions. If Meadows goes that way, there's
some suggestion that everybody goes with them, that when you, when one valid, when
one defendant is a valedict for removal, the whole wild mad criminal crew goes over
to federal court. That'll be the next question to be faced.
8:50: But quite a lot for Meadows in particular. Secondly, for Trump. And then for
the whole gang is riding on this a little removal petition. So stay tuned. Talk to
you later.
9:10: Thanks for tuning in. If you enjoyed this video and other talking feds
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