Fed Explains Trump's FEDERAL Indictment
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 53 minutes
Words per Minute
180.56973
Summary
On today's episode of FedReact, we cover the case of Donald Trump and his possible involvement in the Espionage case against former President Donald Trump. We cover the details of this case and how it could impact the future of the Trump administration.
Transcript
00:00:09.380
We got a little bit of an outing, but let's get into it.
00:00:14.560
I'm a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations, okay, guys?
00:00:19.080
Defender Jeffrey Williams and associate YSL did commit the felony.
00:00:28.360
Trading secrets with the Russian John Wayne Gacy, a.k.a. The Killer Clown, okay?
00:00:32.480
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time.
00:00:35.680
Zodiac Killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated in Northern California.
00:00:39.740
All these serial killers, guys, they really get off on getting attention from the media.
00:00:44.600
For many years, Jeffrey Epstein sex exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
00:00:48.780
It was O.J. working together to get Nicole killed.
00:00:52.000
We're going to go over his past, the gang tie, so that this all makes sense.
00:01:12.160
As you guys know, we did an episode of Fresh and Fit earlier with our boy, Sartorio Shooter.
00:01:17.360
He's in town visiting, so obviously we had to take him out a little bit and show him a good time.
00:01:23.080
Because he showed us a great time while we were there in Dubai.
00:01:28.660
Sorry, guys, for being late, like I said before.
00:01:32.380
Fed Reacts has been so informational for me and others.
00:01:34.580
So thank you for taking the time to do the research and make this happen.
00:01:47.260
I was, like, literally running from the restaurant here to get in and get this show for y'all.
00:02:01.140
So, yeah, guys, today we're going to cover Donald Trump, man.
00:02:04.780
And if you guys know anything, you know that I had covered this case before.
00:02:16.380
They raided Mar-a-Lago down here in, you know, South Florida, which is about an hour and a half from here.
00:02:24.280
And, yeah, man, I mean, I knew right then and there that it wasn't good.
00:02:28.260
When FBI agents showed up and they did a federal search of his house, we actually went through – we read the entire search warrant on that – we read the entire affidavit for the search warrant on that case.
00:02:40.020
And they had quite a bit of probable cause in there.
00:02:42.360
And at that point, you know, I was kind of like – had my radar like, you know, this is not good.
00:02:47.300
So, you know, and I kind of saw this coming that he was going to be indicted.
00:02:54.260
You know, a former president of the United States is unprecedented.
00:02:56.360
is indicted for violations of the Espionage Act, okay, 18 U.S.C. 793.
00:03:03.980
And let's go ahead and take a quick look at this, by the way.
00:03:09.760
So you go, right, charges 18 U.S.C. 793 E, right?
00:03:16.420
And I'm going to go ahead and share a screen with you all real fast.
00:03:18.440
All right, so U.S. Code gathering, transmitting, or losing defense information, okay?
00:03:28.480
Now, guys, this is pretty much – and just to give you guys a little bit of background on this as far as, like, my experience goes,
00:03:39.460
Yes, I actually have done an espionage case like this where we had a guy – this was back – when was this?
00:03:46.340
This was, like, 2013, 2014, this Iranian guy basically was shipping fighter plane schematics to Iran, okay?
00:03:57.340
And obviously that's, like, defense information.
00:04:00.660
Anything that's military is going to be considered defense information.
00:04:06.020
Whether it's gathering, transmitting, losing, whatever it is, that is going to be a violation of the Espionage Act, okay,
00:04:14.320
So, you know, who gets hit with charges like this?
00:04:18.040
Well, I did a case on Robert Hansen, who actually just passed away, I think, last week.
00:04:23.680
Former FBI agent was a spy for the Soviets, and he was giving a bunch of information on U.S. secrets,
00:04:32.860
FBI investigations, et cetera, on the Russians and, you know, ended up where the FBI was able to catch him,
00:04:37.580
I think in, like, 2002, 2003 they caught him, and that was one of the biggest corruption cases in U.S. history.
00:04:43.940
Probably the most significant intelligence leak in history for the FBI, man.
00:04:50.040
And he ended up getting, I think, life in prison, and he actually just died recently in the ADX Florence out there in Colorado.
00:05:03.620
We got here Jalen Walker, this country again is scary.
00:05:12.240
Just because he got charged for this does not mean that he can't necessarily run.
00:05:17.240
Let me go ahead and look this up for y'all real quick.
00:05:19.160
Let me show y'all the case that I actually worked on because your boy Myron actually has some receipts here.
00:05:23.620
Man, his name was, I think his name was Kazi, Iran, F4, flight, HSI.
00:05:48.760
This is a case that I actually worked on when I was on the job, guys.
00:05:51.480
So, this guy right here, Iranian-American defense contractor, I have 44 boxes full of sensitive materials, right?
00:06:00.000
Who else on YouTube actually has done the shit that he's talking about?
00:06:15.740
I actually was, this case is, you know, public now, so whatever.
00:06:20.480
He was, he wasn't in the United States when we originally, sorry, he wasn't in Connecticut at the time that we got onto this guy.
00:06:27.820
And I was able to track down where he was actually at.
00:06:31.620
We were able to find some of his family members, et cetera, and I did that.
00:06:44.320
Mazafar Kazi is a dual citizen of both Iran and U.S. who worked for a major American defense contract.
00:06:50.500
They literally tried to ship 44 boxes full of sensitive technical manuals, specification sheets, and other proprietary material to Iran.
00:06:57.580
Reports, ABC News, citing an affidavit filed by a special agent of Immigration Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations Division.
00:07:03.420
So, Kazi reported he was trying to fly to Iran by way of Germany when he was arrested last week.
00:07:10.320
Customs official in November, Inspector Hashimah Kazi had sent.
00:07:15.060
He was sent from Connecticut to California, and he documented it as containing books, suitcases, and other items.
00:07:20.220
But the boxes actually contained reams of documents housed in binders and manuals related to the development of the highly advanced Joint Strike Fighter Aircraft Development Program.
00:07:29.640
A collection of partner nations, including the U.K., Italy, and Canada, have invested billions in the program, and others, such as Israel and Japan, have expressed interest in purchasing variants of the F-35.
00:07:40.200
And obviously, as y'all know, Iran, they're not really our best friends.
00:07:43.800
So, him having access to this stuff and shipping it out was not good.
00:07:47.320
The guy had worked for defense contractors, so he had access to this shit.
00:07:53.820
So, his name was, let me see here, Muzafar Katsi.
00:08:01.020
Give me a one in the chat if y'all want me to pull up this dude's case, or we can go right into the Trump stuff.
00:08:08.740
Give me a one if you guys want me to go through this.
00:08:11.340
Or, we can hit two, and we'll go right into the Trump stuff.
00:08:20.100
And trust me, guys, it won't offend me if you guys just want to get into the Trump stuff.
00:08:34.600
We're not going to spend too much time on this.
00:08:35.820
So, I'll do it, but we won't spend too much time on it.
00:08:39.420
So, I'm going to teach you guys real quick, once again, how to find a case in Pacer.
00:08:43.820
So, I know that he was indicted out of Connecticut, right?
00:08:58.540
I'm going to teach you guys how to look up a case.
00:09:02.040
And then it's going to ask you to log in, typically.
00:09:06.540
But, in this thing, I'm already logged in, right?
00:09:15.960
Let me go ahead and enlarge this for y'all real quick.
00:09:19.560
So, you're going to go and you're going to hit query.
00:09:22.020
First, you got to figure out where it was in the United States, which district.
00:09:25.760
Then, we're going to go ahead and take the guy's last name.
00:10:03.080
Well, I put a cap lock on there, but that doesn't matter.
00:10:14.620
So, just so you guys know, the MJ means a criminal complaint was filed.
00:10:30.360
Then, after you go docket report, you're going to hit run report right here.
00:10:44.200
Willful violation of the Arms Export Control Act.
00:10:46.860
Attempted export of defense articles to Iran without a license.
00:10:54.980
And then, here is the United States Attorney's Office.
00:11:16.000
So, they hit him with the interstate transportation of stolen property for the value of $5,000 or
00:11:21.300
This is like a charge they hit you with when they're just trying to get you in jail,
00:11:26.620
So, typically, when you file a criminal complaint, you're going to go with, you know, a charge that's
00:11:37.940
And then you go into the background, et cetera, all this other crap that she gives her background.
00:11:42.340
So, I remember now that they hit him with the interstate transport of stolen property.
00:11:46.280
Because that's a fairly easy charge to get probable cause on and, you know, get it filed.
00:11:50.940
And then, obviously, you come back and you indict with the main charges.
00:11:54.060
This is a case that I did, guys, back in the day.
00:12:02.180
So, basically, that's a long-winded way of letting you guys know that I have done these types of cases before.
00:12:09.320
And I'm very familiar with them, which is what has me so concerned.
00:12:12.520
If you guys watched that original episode that I did, obviously, you know, this is the second time that Trump has been indicted.
00:12:17.880
He was indicted in the state of New York for falsifying business records.
00:12:20.780
I covered that, which I think that's a bullshit charge.
00:12:23.200
But these charges that he's looking at now, guys, are extremely serious.
00:12:25.980
And this is coming from a guy that likes Trump.
00:12:34.220
I think he did a good job when he was in office.
00:12:36.380
I was an agent when he was in office in 2016 to 2020.
00:12:41.760
These are very serious charges that they're hitting him with, okay?
00:12:45.100
So, what we're going to do, guys, we're going to actually –
00:12:50.540
I'm going to share a screen with y'all real quick.
00:12:53.300
This, guys, okay, is the actual indictment against Trump, as you guys can see here.
00:12:58.840
Here are the charges that they're hitting him with.
00:13:04.060
This is, I think, all obstruction of justice charges.
00:13:10.380
And then 18 U.S.C. 2, I think this is like fucking – what is this?
00:13:16.880
But, yeah, Donald Trump and Waltine Nauta, okay?
00:13:19.940
And that was basically his assistant, all right?
00:13:25.760
All right, we're going to read the introduction real quick, guys.
00:13:28.240
And then what I'm going to do is we're going to actually react to a video, okay?
00:13:34.300
So, we're going to react to it, break down certain parts.
00:13:36.580
I'm going to give you guys a little bit more background on certain things.
00:13:42.060
But before we get into that video breakdown, let's go ahead and read the introduction of the indictment.
00:13:46.660
And real quick, do you guys want me to define – give me a 1 in the chat if you all want me to define what an indictment is.
00:13:52.700
If you guys don't want me to, just hit a 2 and we'll keep moving on.
00:13:55.520
I know we got some new viewers here that may or may not know what it is.
00:13:58.360
But give me a 1 in the chat if you guys want me to define what an indictment is.
00:14:03.020
Give me a 2 if you guys want me to just keep pushing.
00:14:04.540
Yes, and guys, I will cover the YNW Melly trial.
00:14:14.960
The reason why I didn't cover the YNW Melly chat case, I was going to cover it today.
00:14:19.960
But the reason why, guys, is because right now, Melly's defense is pushing for a mistrial.
00:14:24.760
And to be honest with you guys, there hasn't been really anything juicy in the trial yet.
00:14:28.520
The prosecution is kind of starting to get their case moving.
00:14:34.240
Okay, so for all the idiots out there that are saying, oh, the prosecution is dropping the ball.
00:14:39.660
And you don't realize that they're going to bring out the phone evidence and everything else and tie this thing all together.
00:14:46.180
I mean, I told y'all over a year ago that Melly is guilty as hell.
00:14:54.180
It's just that the trial hasn't really taken off.
00:14:57.460
They brought, like, some experts in to talk about the village trajectory.
00:15:01.020
But to actually tie Melly to the murder, you're going to need the phone.
00:15:04.540
And that evidence is going to probably come in sometime this week.
00:15:06.700
And his defense, as expected, is trying to push for a mistrial.
00:15:13.740
So when you're arrested, okay, in the United States, to be arrested, there needs to be a threshold met, which is probable cause.
00:15:21.380
It could be you get pulled over on the side of the road.
00:15:29.020
He arrests you on probable cause at that point.
00:15:32.100
However, but for the charts to stick, you must be indicted.
00:15:37.500
For you to be indicted, that means that a grand jury, which means citizens, right, not to be confused with a jury in a trial,
00:15:47.020
a grand jury of your peers convene, okay, it's like probably somewhere between, when I, man, I remember when I used to testify on a grand jury,
00:16:04.600
And basically what they do is they hear cases all day, right?
00:16:07.740
Prosecutor comes in, brings in the agent, or, you know, if it's federal or if it's a state case,
00:16:11.980
they bring in the detective or the investigator.
00:16:14.080
And what that investigator does is they talk about the facts of their case.
00:16:19.540
Hey, you know, we've been investigating the subject for such and such.
00:16:23.760
We identified this person, blah, blah, blah, whatever, right?
00:16:28.700
And the purpose of the grand jury is to return a true bill of indictment, okay?
00:16:35.000
And a true bill basically means they found that there's probable cause for you to now be formally charged, okay, by a grand jury.
00:16:46.000
If you get arrested by the cops, you get charged by the police, whatever it may be, it's one thing.
00:16:50.700
But then you need to actually be formally charged, which is done through an indictment and done through a grand jury.
00:16:56.580
So basically what happened was in the Southern District of Florida, our grand jury got together down here in Miami,
00:17:02.720
which I've actually testified in front of this grand jury several times, okay?
00:17:09.320
They got together, an agent from the FBI walked in with the AUSA.
00:17:15.280
He gave his facts, gave his circumstances, everything else, the investigation, informants, all that crap.
00:17:25.440
The prosecutor sits there with the grand jury, gives them the instructions, then he leaves the room.
00:17:29.780
And then the grand jury sits there and they deliberate.
00:17:31.360
And then they decide if they're going to return a true bill of indictment.
00:17:34.980
Now, keep in mind, guys, an indictment is only met with probable cause.
00:17:45.620
Probable cause is simply to arrest and to indict.
00:17:49.980
Beyond a reasonable doubt is to be proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
00:17:56.140
Or excuse me, that's what the state prosecutors in Mellie's case have to do.
00:17:58.960
They have to prove that he's guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, all right?
00:18:02.400
So with that said, that's what a grand jury indictment is, okay?
00:18:09.460
So right here, we're looking at a federal indictment, okay?
00:18:13.100
18 U.S.C., guys, is typically the criminal code in the U.S. code, all right?
00:18:18.700
Which is what it stands for, United States Code.
00:18:21.780
So we'll go ahead with the general allegations.
00:18:23.600
At times of material to this indictment, on or about the dates and approximate times stated below.
00:18:27.740
Defendant Donald J. Trump was the 45th President of the United States of America.
00:18:32.600
He held office from January 20th, 2017 until January 20th, 2021.
00:18:37.180
As President, Trump had lawful access to the most sensitive classified documents
00:18:41.240
and national defense information gathered and owned by the United States government,
00:18:45.480
including information from the agencies that comprise the United States Intelligence Community
00:18:49.620
and the United States Department of Defense, okay?
00:18:52.500
So, hold on, let me get this highlighter thing here.
00:18:57.740
So, obviously, right, they're kind of illustrating what's going on here, right?
00:19:01.680
Let me make this a little bit bigger for y'all.
00:19:07.180
And we talk about intelligence communities, guys.
00:19:08.820
We're talking about, you know, we're talking about the CIA, NSA, National Geo Global Agency,
00:19:15.880
like all the fucking weird acronym agencies, all of them, right?
00:19:19.360
And I also want to make a very clear distinction here, guys, that he had this national defense information.
00:19:31.300
The reason why this is important, guys, is because it doesn't matter if the documents you have are classified.
00:19:42.240
If the government can show that it's national defense information, you're fucked regardless.
00:19:53.800
It does not matter the classification of the documents when it comes to national defense information.
00:20:03.000
Because I know that Trump said, hey, I declassified the documents, et cetera, which is cool.
00:20:09.660
The problem is that he had national defense information, which is stuff that comes from the military.
00:20:17.400
Over the course of his presidency, Trump gathered newspapers, press clippings, letters, notes, cards, photographs,
00:20:22.860
official documents, and other materials in cardboard boxes that he kept in the White House.
00:20:26.920
Among the materials Trump stored in his boxes were hundreds of classified documents.
00:20:30.860
The classified documents Trump stored in his boxes included information regarding defense and weapons capabilities
00:20:35.980
of both the United States and foreign countries, United States nuclear programs,
00:20:40.420
potential vulnerabilities of the United States and its allies to military attack,
00:20:44.260
and plans for possible retaliation in response to a foreign attack.
00:20:48.220
The unauthorized disclosure of these classified documents could put at risk national security of the United States,
00:20:53.860
foreign relations, and the safety of the United States military and human sources
00:20:57.540
and continued viability of sensitive intelligence collection, sensitive intelligence collection methods.
00:21:04.400
So, as someone that used to hold a top secret clearance, right?
00:21:10.720
When I was an agent, I had a top secret clearance, guys.
00:21:13.380
And the thing about classified documents, guys, is that classified documents aren't necessarily classified a lot of the times
00:21:21.760
because it's like information that's like, oh, my God, this is so dangerous.
00:21:25.200
Oh, my God, or this is like national security shit.
00:21:29.280
The reason why most documents are classified, not most, but a good amount,
00:21:37.260
Again, a lot of the times, information that's classified isn't classified because of the actual content.
00:21:45.540
It's classified because of how the content was gathered.
00:21:50.060
So, let's say we have an informant, okay, in some country that we don't have good relations with.
00:22:01.260
Maybe a government employee giving secrets to the Americans.
00:22:04.200
He might say some shit that isn't really that special.
00:22:07.680
However, him and maybe only five other people have access to this information.
00:22:12.420
So, if that information is compromised, now the Iranian government knows, whoa, well, hold on one second.
00:22:19.800
Only five of y'all niggas knew this info or 10 of y'all, whatever it is.
00:22:23.580
So, what they're able to do now is they're able to whittle it down and figure out who the mole is.
00:22:30.300
So, a lot of the times, the way the information gathered, guys, compromises our techniques, our informants, our technology.
00:22:46.040
So, this intelligence gatherer, this intelligence collection method is very, very important.
00:23:20.620
was not an authorized location for the storage, possession, review, display, or discussion of classified documents.
00:23:28.620
Because normally classified documents, guys, you got to look at them like in a skiff room.
00:23:34.900
Nevertheless, Trump stored his boxes containing classified documents in various locations at the Mar-a-Lago Club,
00:23:39.580
including in a ballroom, a bathroom, and shower, an office space, his bedroom, and a storage room.
00:23:47.920
On two occasions in 2021, Trump showed classified documents to others as follows.
00:23:54.600
And they're going to talk about people that he showed it to.
00:23:56.480
On March 3rd, 2022, the Federal Bureau of Investigation opened a criminal investigation into the unlawful retention of classified documents at the Mar-a-Lago Club.
00:24:07.040
A federal grand jury investigation began the next month.
00:24:10.560
The grand jury issued a subpoena requiring Trump to turn over all the documents with classification markings.
00:24:16.480
Trump endeavored to obstruct the FBI in grand jury investigations and conceal his continued retention of classified documents by, among other things.
00:24:23.320
And then they're going to go into what they think, what they're alleging he did, right?
00:24:27.980
Suggesting that his attorney falsely represented to the FBI and grand jury that Trump did not have documents called for by the grand jury.
00:24:35.760
Directing defendant Walti Natua to move boxes of documents to conceal them from Trump's attorney, the FBI, and the grand jury.
00:24:42.440
Suggesting that his attorney hide or destroy documents called for by the grand jury's subpoena.
00:24:45.760
Providing to the FBI and grand jury just some of the documents called for by the grand jury's subpoena.
00:24:50.720
Whilst claiming that he was cooperating fully and causing a certification to be, this is what fucked him up bad.
00:24:58.260
Causing a certification to be submitted to the FBI and grand jury.
00:25:01.060
Falsely representing that all documents called for by the grand jury's subpoena had been produced.
00:25:05.220
While knowing that, in fact, not all documents had been produced.
00:25:16.380
So now they're going to go into Trump's co-conspirator, which is this guy, Natua.
00:25:26.980
They're going to talk about the levels of classified, right?
00:25:31.080
Just know that you can't have this shit around, guys.
00:25:40.080
Let me tell you how much classified information is.
00:25:46.220
And I say this with a headache because it's really not as cool as people think it is.
00:25:51.360
Number one, classified information, right, is very sensitive, and it can only be around people that have certain clearances, right?
00:25:57.900
So I was clear at a top secret level, I could have been looking at documents that were top secret, right?
00:26:03.500
But you need something called a need-to-know-in-the-government.
00:26:05.920
That's going to be important, so put a pin in that.
00:26:07.320
Number two, you can't use classified information in court proceedings.
00:26:15.980
So for me, when I was an agent, I stayed away from classified information because I knew it's, number one, it's a burden.
00:26:25.720
And then number three, it's like, well, why the fuck?
00:26:29.320
So a lot of the times, classified information, it's helpful with, like, kind of giving you an idea of where you need to go with your investigation.
00:26:36.940
But it can't be used in court documents, so it's effectively useless most of the time.
00:26:40.240
And on top of the day, you've got to store it a certain way.
00:26:45.720
So as a former government employee, I'm kind of, like, cringing.
00:26:49.820
Like, Trump, just why didn't you give it back, bro?
00:26:58.520
I remember before I left HSI, story time real fast.
00:27:06.660
Before I left HSI, guys, I had one of the biggest national security cases, okay?
00:27:11.800
One of the biggest national security cases, okay?
00:27:14.040
It dealt with the smuggling of Sri Lankan nationals, all right?
00:27:19.060
And I'll cover this case one day for y'all on this channel, I promise.
00:27:21.740
I know I've been talking about it, whatever, but I will cover it for y'all, all right?
00:27:25.240
But the case had a lot of classified information in it, but you know what I did?
00:27:31.740
I had my co-case agent, right, who was also assigned to the FBI, by the way, so he was
00:27:35.880
an HSI special agent, but he was assigned to the Joint Terrorism Task Force, right?
00:27:48.320
So I'm not writing in my affidavit shit that may or may not have come from classified
00:27:55.800
Three, I'd have to be in a skiff room all the time with my phone out, looking at fucking
00:28:03.900
Like, I'm the one that's, I'm the main case agent.
00:28:07.320
I'm the one that has to, like, I'm, like, on the hook for most of the case.
00:28:12.940
The last thing you want, guys, is you're on a stand, or you got to testify, and they ask
00:28:21.000
And you say some shit like, oh, um, agent Fuddle.
00:28:28.600
Well, it might have happened, but it's classified information.
00:28:34.340
No, I got to say, um, well, I can't confirm or deny that's classified information.
00:28:39.140
Bruh, that's just going to open up a fucking can of worms, that classified information.
00:28:51.640
It comes with a lot of responsibilities and not much fucking, um, not much upside for you
00:28:57.760
as a case agent, especially when you're doing criminal cases.
00:29:00.620
When you're doing criminal cases, you can't use nothing classified in criminal proceedings,
00:29:08.600
You got top secret, secret, you got confidential secret, top secret.
00:29:12.940
There's top secrets, um, you know, SCI, secret compartmentalized information.
00:29:17.200
There's, you know, the white hat level, which is when you're working at the white house
00:29:20.220
or the Yankee doodle level or whatever the fuck they use.
00:29:25.220
A lot of secret service agents have like different terms for it.
00:29:27.500
But the point is, is that, or Yankee white hat, there's different clearance levels, but
00:29:31.080
these are the three main ones that, you know, for the purposes of this, uh, indictment
00:29:36.520
So, and then, uh, then there's other parts, no foreign, which means no, no foreign, no, not
00:29:43.360
And then, you know, SCI, which I told you about sensitive compartmentalized information.
00:29:48.040
Uh, and then, um, it needs to be looked at in a SCIF, right?
00:29:52.060
Stored, uh, stored, used or discussed in a credit sensitive compartmentalized information
00:29:56.380
facility SCIF and only individuals, the appropriate security clearance and additional SCI permissions
00:30:01.140
were authorized to have access to such national security information, et cetera.
00:30:03.780
So they go through like what classified information is, et cetera, et cetera.
00:30:10.600
I'll hit the chats and then we're going to go ahead.
00:30:11.940
And then, so you guys know the general backing Trump had documents that he shouldn't have
00:30:20.960
Even if the information was declassified, it's still national defense information.
00:30:24.900
So therefore it's got to be handled a certain way.
00:30:28.280
So, uh, let me read these chats real quick guys.
00:30:30.120
And then we're going to go ahead and start reacting to the video.
00:30:32.320
So we got here, uh, shout out to all you guys from before.
00:30:44.200
I actually familiar with one of them boys for 12 ish years.
00:30:48.300
I might ask him some questions and see how he reacts.
00:30:54.560
Uh, then we got, uh, Jay, so life goes, they love to hate man who can't control Trump 2024.
00:31:01.520
Hey, my, I just wanted to say, thanks for all y'all do.
00:31:08.800
Graper goes, I know this isn't necessarily about the Trump indictment, but what are your
00:31:12.440
thoughts about the Santas being a shield for them boys?
00:31:21.260
All the Washington DC is controlled by them boys.
00:31:27.660
Matthew Gonzalez asked my girl to get back with me after she cheated.
00:31:31.480
And she said, no, I want to move on, but it's hard because she was really
00:31:35.160
the one, but you speaks facts about how to be as a man, bro.
00:31:41.320
If she's doing some bullshit, she's not the one.
00:31:46.400
Be more tasteful read than fed explains case on a video title.
00:31:55.060
It's probably, they had, he has some of your documents.
00:31:56.620
Actually, the Trump basically pulls some Hillary stuff.
00:32:03.680
So guys, without further ado, let's go ahead and react to this video.
00:32:08.680
We, uh, and this comes from the, uh, from the legal eagle.
00:32:14.380
Uh, he did a really easy, he's kind of a Trump hater.
00:32:17.960
This guy's kind of a Trump hater, but this was a very well done video put together.
00:32:23.880
I'm going to stop at a certain part to explain things in more detail for y'all.
00:32:26.840
So, uh, without further ado, let's get into it.
00:32:33.000
It's way beyond what we normally do, but, uh, like the video.
00:32:37.320
In federal court for illegally retaining highly classified defense documents, obstruction of justice,
00:32:46.000
And as you might've been able to tell by the public reaction, this time everyone knows it's
00:32:58.360
For more than a year, prosecutors have been collecting evidence about whether Trump knowingly
00:33:01.480
retained classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida after he left office.
00:33:06.060
Investigators looked at whether he took steps to conceal the materials after the Justice Department
00:33:09.700
issued a subpoena for their return, and it's included in investigating whether Trump instructed
00:33:13.560
others to conceal the materials and whether he revealed their contents to other people.
00:33:21.460
The most serious charge against Trump is that he retained national defense information,
00:33:30.220
I remind you that these are unproven allegations and the government will have to prove them beyond
00:33:35.700
But the DOJ says that they have a mountain of corroborating evidence, including tapes,
00:33:41.600
And the amount of verbatim transcripts in this indictment makes it seem like the DOJ has
00:33:45.300
numerous inculpatory records of Trump and his staff.
00:33:48.880
Yeah, so this is the thing that has me concerned to most guys is that he absolutely, they have
00:33:53.960
informants, they have people that are cooperating that worked for Trump.
00:33:56.660
They got witnesses that he, you know, showed classified documents to.
00:34:02.520
And, um, they're probably all going to testify because this isn't like it's a gang case where
00:34:07.840
people are going to be stigmatized for snitching or something like that.
00:34:13.200
They don't want to get in trouble, you know, and get hit with obstruction or anything like
00:34:16.960
So yeah, these people are probably, uh, going to turn.
00:34:22.300
Defense lawyers, whoever they are at the time of this video, should be quaking in their
00:34:27.040
Now, the indictment lays out in lurid detail how Trump and his valet, Waltine Nauda, conspired
00:34:33.280
The facts of the indictment start on January 21st, 2021, with Trump getting ready to leave
00:34:38.380
Trump caused his boxes containing hundreds of classified documents to be transported from
00:34:44.320
From January through March 15th, 2021, some of Trump's boxes were stored in the Mar-a-Lago
00:34:51.460
Trump's boxes were, for a time, stacked on the ballroom stage.
00:34:54.480
Now, as an attorney with years of experience, I probably need to break this down for you
00:34:59.960
Now, generally speaking, a stage is used for the, I don't know, public display of something.
00:35:05.140
And being on a stage in a ballroom is usually antithetical to the secure protection of top
00:35:10.500
So in March, 2021, those boxes were moved to the business center at Mar-a-Lago.
00:35:14.660
This location also proved to be a problem as Trump employee number one asked Trump employee
00:35:18.340
number two, if they could move the boxes out of the business center to make room for staff
00:35:24.160
Employee number two initially balked at the suggestion.
00:35:27.240
So POTUS specifically asked now to, for those boxes.
00:35:30.420
POTUS stands for President of the United States.
00:35:32.820
It's a normal acronym used around White House employees.
00:35:36.940
To be in the business center because they are his papers.
00:35:39.620
But later employee two suggested moving the papers to the lake room, to which employee one
00:35:44.420
There is still a little room in the shower where his other stuff is.
00:35:50.340
There's some other stuff in there that are not his papers.
00:35:54.260
Or does he want everything in there on property?
00:35:59.560
Anything that's not the beautiful mind paper boxes can definitely go to storage.
00:36:03.880
Want to take a look at the space and start moving tomorrow a.m.
00:36:07.460
Believe it or not, his staff actually called them the beautiful mind paper boxes.
00:36:10.800
And so after the Texas change between Trump employee number one and Trump employee number
00:36:15.400
two, in April 2021, some of Trump's boxes were moved from the business center to a bathroom
00:36:23.060
So at this point, the beautiful mind paper boxes had slowly declined in position and repute
00:36:26.320
from the stage of the white and gold ballroom to the modest business center and now sadly
00:36:33.140
Like classified documents have to be held and stored in a certain way, and they can only
00:36:41.380
So the fact that it's in his, you know, home pretty much, which is kind of like damn near
00:36:47.840
a resort with a bunch of employees around that don't have clearances being stored in
00:36:53.800
You know, we're talking about nuclear type information, guys, being put there.
00:37:00.160
And, you know, the cleaning lady can get access to it.
00:37:04.860
Thing in the bathroom, as Trump would say, like a dog.
00:37:07.900
Yes, our nation's secrets relegated to the ugliest bathroom on the planet.
00:37:14.440
But note that in this bathroom, there are fresh towels and there's an empty waste bin
00:37:18.660
implying that the housekeeping staff continually refreshes this bathroom.
00:37:28.040
But after a couple of months, Trump apparently decided he needed to use that shower and had
00:37:33.160
And in May 2021, Trump caused some of his boxes to be brought to his summer residence
00:37:40.240
On December 7th, 2021, NAWDA found several of Trump's boxes fallen and their content spilled
00:37:51.780
They got pictures, right, in the indictment of the boxes being held, like, on the ballroom
00:38:00.720
Like, from January through March 15, 2021, some of Trump's boxes were stored in the
00:38:04.900
Mar-a-Lago Club's white and gold ballroom in which events and gatherings took place.
00:38:09.280
Trump's boxes were, for a time, stacked on the ballroom stage as depicted in the photograph
00:38:13.340
below, redacted to obscure an individual's identity.
00:38:21.800
When they first searched this house back in last year, I called it.
00:38:25.480
I said that there was informants and or people cooperating with the government 100% because
00:38:30.620
the only way that the government's going to be able to get a search warrant to go through
00:38:34.680
someone's home nine out of ten times is you need fresh information that shows that the
00:38:39.520
fruits of a crime or evidence is going to be located at that location.
00:38:44.160
So, as soon as I saw that they did a search warrant in his house, I knew for a fact they
00:38:51.280
Not only that, guys, if you go through that search warrant affidavit, it's redacted to
00:38:57.680
Hell, I'll pull it up for y'all and I'll show you guys what I mean.
00:38:59.980
But the search warrant affidavit was redacted way more than this indictment.
00:39:10.580
We got, I think, 1,300 y'all in here, 1,400 y'all in here.
00:39:14.520
You guys could be anywhere else in the world, but you guys are here with me.
00:39:20.500
Nowda also attached two photographs he took of the spill.
00:39:23.560
Trump employee number two replied, oh, no, oh, no.
00:39:28.600
And Nowda attached a couple of photographs of the spill, one of which is...
00:39:44.280
Just a couple of photographs of the spill, one of which is given to us in the indictment.
00:39:59.520
Trump's unlawful retention of this document is charged in count eight of the indictment.
00:40:07.000
Now, apart from the documents, this is also an interesting detail that POTUS had this
00:40:13.000
Trump, who famously does not use a cell phone, was using someone else's phone for God only
00:40:19.600
But this is also penis compared to the recorded interview Trump agreed to give in July 2021
00:40:23.960
with two staffers and the publisher and ghostwriter of Mark Meadows' autobiography
00:40:29.960
Now, for your entertainment, we've used AI to recreate Trump's voice from the transcript.
00:40:33.620
This is not really Trump's voice, which I assume would have been less comprehensible.
00:40:55.080
This is off the record, but they presented me this.
00:41:22.040
You attack, and by the way, isn't that incredible?
00:41:25.820
I was just thinking, because we were talking about it, and, you know, he said, quote, he
00:41:47.960
Now, I can't, you know, but this is still a secret.
00:41:58.720
And here's the exchange, guys, hearing the indictment right here, man.
00:42:10.740
See, this is what's going to fuck him up right here.
00:42:15.120
So, you can see here, he says, this is done by the military and given to me.
00:42:38.020
Then he goes, CS president, I could have declassified.
00:42:52.820
Then he goes, now I can't, you know, but this is still a secret.
00:43:19.940
So, the fact that they have this in the indictment this way, this is recorded, guys.
00:43:31.900
So, the government has that he showed this individual defense information.
00:43:39.980
Trump knew, right, that he had the power to declassify it.
00:44:16.940
I would say it's interesting to admit that you know that you could have declassified it
00:44:21.160
before you left office, but didn't, and now you can't.
00:44:25.160
And I'd also say it's interesting that you are intentionally showing these classified materials
00:44:34.200
And again, broadly speaking, writers and publishers usually don't go hand in hand with the dissemination
00:44:41.820
But surely, that was the only time that this happened, right?
00:44:51.280
In August or September 2021, when he was no longer president, Trump met in his office at
00:44:56.640
the Bedminster Club with a representative of his political action committee.
00:45:00.000
During the meeting, Trump commented that an ongoing military operation in country B was
00:45:06.280
Trump showed the PAC representative a classified map of country B and told the PAC representative
00:45:10.440
that if I'm not mistaken, country B, I think was Iran or Syria.
00:45:15.140
He should not be showing the map to the PAC representative and to not get too close.
00:45:20.040
The PAC representative did not have a security clearance or any need to know classified information
00:45:28.060
I'm going to show you highly classified material, but also don't get too close because you're
00:45:35.500
And on top of it, there is a non-zero chance that one of the people shown this information
00:45:53.260
They're going to bring these people to testify against him.
00:46:00.920
You want to say what's up to the people real quick?
00:46:05.480
Yeah, I'm laughing at your frustration with this case because it is true, though.
00:46:33.200
I want to know what his defense is going to be, you know?
00:46:47.120
And then the stuff that's defense information, he doesn't have a defense for that.
00:46:54.320
But still, he's still got time to build one, though.
00:46:58.180
Well, I'll give you guys what I think he needs to do to get out of this.
00:47:01.640
I have my strategy on how he'll be able to get out of this.
00:47:05.920
Stay to the end of the show, and I'm going to tell y'all what I think he needs to do.
00:47:12.760
And you guys are probably wondering, what the fuck is Nera?
00:47:17.260
One of them government agencies that no one gives a fuck about.
00:47:20.060
The National Archives and Records Administration is an independent federal agency of the United States government within the executive branch.
00:47:26.880
Charged with the executive branch is where the president says, by the way.
00:47:29.860
Charged with the preservation and documentation of government and historical records.
00:47:33.020
It is also tasked with increasing public access to these documents, which make up the National Archives.
00:47:38.780
Nera is officially responsible for maintaining and publishing the legally authentic
00:47:42.040
and authoritative copies of acts of Congress, presidential directives, and federal regulations.
00:47:47.420
Nera also transmits votes of the Electoral College to Congress.
00:47:50.460
It also examines the Electoral College and constitutional amendment ratification documents
00:47:53.760
for prima facie legal sufficiency and an authenticating signature.
00:48:00.360
So, these are the guys that wanted all the documents back from the president.
00:48:04.600
I mean, they're the ones that kind of started all this fucking mess, to be honest with y'all, but, eh, it is what it is.
00:48:09.460
One, Nera realized that Trump had some documents that belonged to Nera and began demanding their return.
00:48:16.420
So, after half a year of repeated demands, on January 17, 2022, Trump employee two and Nauda gathered 15 boxes from Trump's residence,
00:48:24.120
loaded the boxes in Nauda's car, and took them to a commercial truck for delivery to Nara.
00:48:28.260
Now, as we know, these 15 boxes were not everything that Trump had stashed at Mar-a-Lago.
00:48:32.360
And Nara knew that, too, so it referred the matter to the DOJ.
00:48:35.280
On May 11, 2022, the grand jury issued a subpoena to the office of Donald J. Trump requiring the production of all documents
00:48:41.440
with classification markings in the possession, custody, or control of Trump or the office.
00:48:45.820
And, guys, keep in mind, right, we know from reading the indictment, right, that the FBI launched their investigation.
00:48:59.860
We know, boom, the Mar-a-Lago club, they talk about that, classified information, shit, I'm going to fight it, goddammit, you know what, hold on,
00:49:14.980
F, guy, federal, okay, now this shit is being lame.
00:49:28.520
Okay, let me just move this shit out of the way.
00:49:31.180
But we know that they launched the investigation in March of 2022, guys, right?
00:49:34.700
And then they sent a grand jury subpoena on May 11, 2022.
00:49:37.800
So, Trump and his people should have known right then and there, yo, we're probably under a criminal investigation if a grand jury is sending us a subpoena.
00:49:44.980
Because you can only convene the grand jury, typically, for criminal cases.
00:49:49.180
So, I don't know what the fuck his lawyers were thinking or what was going on here, but, bro, if the grand jury sends you a subpoena,
00:49:55.440
that means there's a criminal investigation being done, okay?
00:50:01.960
Now, 11 days later, Trump met with his lawyer, Evan Corcoran, an unnamed Trump attorney number two.
00:50:06.940
At their meeting, Corcoran and attorney two made the legally wise suggestion that they fully comply with his subpoena, to which Trump responded.
00:50:14.780
March 30, 2022, the FBI opened a criminal investigation into all unlawful retention of classified documents.
00:50:20.320
So, and just so you guys know, the FBI needs to jump through a bunch of hurdles to even open up a criminal case, by the way.
00:50:30.260
They're really restricted in what the fuck they can do.
00:50:32.280
They're not free, right, to do a lot of the shit that they want to do.
00:50:36.320
So, for them to open up a criminal investigation is a big deal, for them to open up a full, you know, full-field investigation.
00:50:43.280
So, after he tells, the lawyer tells him, after Trump says, hey, we guys should probably follow up with this stuff, right?
00:50:52.000
Trump attorney one says, this is what he gets in response.
00:50:59.500
Well, what if we, what happens if we just don't respond at all or don't play ball with them?
00:51:05.340
Wouldn't it be better if we just told them we don't have anything here?
00:51:09.180
Well, look, isn't it better if there are no documents?
00:51:24.820
Obstruction of justice, false statements, all that shit, man.
00:51:30.500
And that's not Trump's voice, by the way, guys.
00:51:33.520
But they're doing it to create, like, you know, so you guys can, I guess, get in the imagination, right?
00:51:46.600
From reading this, this attorney right here, guys, Trump attorney one, guaranteed he's cooperating with the government right now.
00:51:54.900
That's the only reason that they have, because, right, what does it say?
00:52:06.420
So, he wrote it down when he said, I don't want anybody looking.
00:52:12.460
Well, what if we, what happens if we just don't respond or don't play ball with them, right?
00:52:18.480
Wouldn't it be better if we just told them we don't have anything here?
00:52:24.060
That is literally the definition of obstruction of justice.
00:52:28.000
You have a grand jury saying, we need these documents.
00:52:33.300
And he says, wouldn't it be better if we just told them we don't have anything?
00:52:58.900
And the, the, the, um, the attorney is going to turn, bro.
00:53:06.880
How the fuck does the FBI and the United States Attorney's Office have this lawyer's notes?
00:53:15.500
The only way they have them is he's cooperating.
00:53:20.000
Because, guys, when you're in a criminal case, your lawyer, right?
00:53:24.400
You and everything that you talk about with your lawyer is called privilege.
00:53:30.480
So, for example, let's say I'm interviewing a suspect.
00:53:36.040
I got to get the fuck out the room and let him talk with his lawyer.
00:53:38.620
And then I can't ask questions again unless his lawyer allows it.
00:53:43.020
And let's say I accidentally hear something that they're talking about.
00:53:51.340
So, the fact that privileged information, which this conversation right here, that we're looking at, this whole fucking thing right here, is privileged, guys.
00:54:04.520
The fact that this isn't a grand jury indictment is the fucking bells and whistles are going off in my head.
00:54:14.200
Because this attorney, if I'm not mistaken, was one of the attorneys that falsely certified that Trump had given all the documents over.
00:54:25.300
You made me certified that we gave all these documents over.
00:54:31.640
I could go to jail for fucking obstruction of justice or false statements because I certified under oath that it was true and correct.
00:54:47.420
I'm going to go ahead and break our attorney-client privilege.
00:54:50.040
And I'm going to give them my memorialized notes of our conversation.
00:55:07.080
I told myself I was going to be calm on this one.
00:55:13.100
But you do know that this means that this man was very, very careless for this to happen.
00:55:31.360
Old Buddhist monk relayed to the lawyers a story with a very clear implication.
00:55:38.960
He said, he said that it, that it was him, that he was the one who deleted all of her
00:55:43.980
emails, the 30,000 emails, because they basically dealt with her scheduling and her going to the
00:55:52.700
And he, so she didn't get in any trouble because he said that he was the one who deleted them.
00:56:03.980
Like saying like, oh yeah, like she didn't get in trouble because her attorney did the
00:56:11.660
Like that shows that, you know, that you're not complying with what you're supposed to
00:56:33.660
I genuinely believe it, that there's been a target attack on him.
00:56:40.420
More than likely, y'all want to know something?
00:56:41.960
He's probably going to get indicted for the January 6th shit too.
00:56:48.180
January 6th, he's going to get indicted for that too.
00:56:50.280
They're going to make sure that he is not president in 2024.
00:56:58.060
These guys, because Hillary did a bunch of bullshit too.
00:57:08.160
Understanding what he thought happened in the Hillary Clinton case, and then suggesting
00:57:12.200
that one of his attorneys do what he think happened.
00:57:16.020
But apparently, Trump related the story more than once that day.
00:57:19.340
But anyway, Trump agreed, Biden too is a crook, guys.
00:57:21.760
And we're going to do an episode with Ryan Dawson about this too with the whole Biden
00:57:27.420
That Evan Corcoran would return to the Mar-a-Lago Club on June 2nd to search for any documents
00:57:31.940
with classification markings to produce in response to the May 11th subpoena.
00:57:35.400
However, between Trump's May 23rd meeting with Trump Attorney 1 and Trump Attorney 2 to discuss
00:57:40.760
the May 11th subpoena, and June 2nd when Trump Attorney 1 returned to the Mar-a-Lago Club
00:57:45.080
to review the boxes in the storage room, NAWTA removed, at Trump's direction, a total of
00:57:49.980
approximately 64 boxes from the storage room and brought them to the Trump residence.
00:57:55.140
In sum, between May 23rd, 2022, and June 2nd, 2022, before Trump Attorney 1's review of
00:58:00.840
Trump's boxes in the storage room, NAWTA, at Trump's direction, moved approximately 64
00:58:05.240
boxes from the storage room to Trump's residence and brought to the storage room only approximately
00:58:11.780
Neither Trump nor NAWTA informed Trump Attorney 1 of this information.
00:58:17.800
So that is extremely bad because they think they have everything, but Trump's assistant
00:58:22.800
had moved some of the boxes out, so the attorneys didn't have everything.
00:58:26.720
And this is going to be a problem here, guys, in a second.
00:58:29.700
Corcoran believed that Corcoran had turned over everything to the FBI, then secretly
00:58:34.380
Trump and NAWTA had hid away at least 24 extra boxes in another room when Corcoran sifted
00:58:47.760
Corcoran used the clear duct tape to seal the Redwild folder with the documents with classification
00:58:54.040
Corcoran brought the Redwild folder to Trump in the Mar-a-Lago dining room and confirmed
00:58:58.360
that he had finished his search for classified documents.
00:59:04.640
Trump and Trump Attorney 1 then discussed what to do with the Redwild folder containing
00:59:08.420
documents with classification markings and whether Trump Attorney 1 should bring them
00:59:11.860
to his hotel room and put them in a safe there.
00:59:14.360
During that conversation, Trump made a plucking motion as memorialized by Trump Attorney 1.
00:59:18.720
He made a funny motion as though, well, okay, why don't you take them with you to your hotel
00:59:29.620
room and if there's anything really bad in there, like, you know, pluck it out.
00:59:38.960
So he basically says, yeah, just like, you know...
00:59:49.420
Classified, you know, national defense information.
01:00:03.500
James Corcoran contacted the FBI and told them that they were ready to hand the documents
01:00:08.420
Unbeknown to him, though, they don't have everything.
01:00:11.920
They think they have everything, but Trump and his assistant had moved a bunch of the
01:00:19.080
A Corcoran and Christina Bob met with the FBI, gave them the set of documents that they
01:00:23.080
were aware of, as well as the Redwild folder full of classified documents, and Christina
01:00:26.780
Bob falsely certified that a diligent search had been conducted.
01:00:33.500
That they had done a complete search, and they're handing over all the documents.
01:00:40.760
Then, the FBI finds out that there's more classified documents, gets, you know, probable cause and
01:00:58.840
You want to know what I guarantee their conversation was with those lawyers after?
01:01:02.880
We could get you motherfuckers on 1001 right now.
01:01:07.000
You guys had went ahead and given us all the documents.
01:01:11.960
Both lawyers probably went, oh, yeah, I'm flipping.
01:01:23.380
Because these lawyers are probably cooperating with the government.
01:01:26.140
I know they're cooperating with the government.
01:01:27.400
Because in this fucking indictment, they got the lawyer's notes.
01:01:34.080
The only way that you're going to have lawyer's notes as an FBI agent investigating an individual
01:01:48.140
Well, in this case, they're not going to get stitches because everyone here is a lawyer.
01:01:52.280
And that they returned any and all documents that are responsive to the subpoena.
01:01:56.120
But the thing that really slaps you in the face is paragraph 72.
01:01:59.540
Because before the lawyers had made the search, apparently, earlier that same day,
01:02:04.720
Nauda and others loaded several of Trump's boxes along with other items on aircraft
01:02:08.340
that flew Trump and his family north for the summer.
01:02:11.100
But in any rate, the FBI realized that they were still missing a ton of documents.
01:02:14.680
And so they took the extraordinary step of issuing a search warrant against the property
01:02:19.300
and basically raiding Bar-a-Lago on August 8th, 2022,
01:02:22.420
where they found 102 documents with classification markings in Trump's office and storage room.
01:02:32.800
August 8th, 2022, FBI executed a court-authorized search warrant, right?
01:02:36.960
And then Trump's office, 27 documents, 6 top secret, 18 secret, 3 confidential, storage room,
01:02:43.780
75 documents, 11 top secret, 36 secret, 28 confidential.
01:02:50.940
Now, as you can probably already tell, Trump is going to need a good lawyer,
01:02:57.840
which he may not have right now because they keep resigning.
01:03:01.040
But if you need a great lawyer, my firm, the Eagle team, is now accepting new documents.
01:03:05.620
On May 22nd, Nauda took one box from the storage room and moved it to the Trump residence.
01:03:09.660
The following day, on May 23rd, Trump met with his lawyers to discuss their response to the subpoena.
01:03:14.460
Corcoran and Trump attorney, too, informed Trump that they should really have a chance to search documents
01:03:19.000
and make sure that they comply fully with the subpoena.
01:03:21.320
Trump clearly hated that idea and expressed that he didn't want anyone looking through his documents.
01:03:25.300
And eventually, he agreed that Corcoran would have to look through the boxes of documents,
01:03:30.960
But before that, on May 24th, Nauda removed three boxes from the storage room.
01:03:36.020
On May 30th, after speaking with Trump on the phone, Nauda removed 50 boxes from the storage room.
01:03:41.060
From a text conversation between Nauda and presumably Melania Trump,
01:03:44.180
we know that the boxes ended up in Trump's residence.
01:03:46.440
On June 1st, the day before Corcoran's search, Nauda moved another 11 boxes to the residence,
01:03:53.820
And the following day, Nauda moved only 30 boxes back from the storage room for Corcoran to actually look through.
01:03:59.360
It appears that both Trump and Nauda interacted with Corcoran the day of the search,
01:04:02.740
and neither told him that most of the boxes weren't in the storage room.
01:04:06.300
Basically, they conspired to make sure that Corcoran and Christina Bob
01:04:08.920
unwittingly lied to the FBI the next day and only turned over a portion of the documents.
01:04:14.560
And just so you guys know, here's a search warrant, okay, that was used to search
01:04:20.440
Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence, which I broke this down on another episode,
01:04:25.660
but what I want y'all to see here, right, is look at how much of this shit is redacted, okay?
01:04:38.020
Because they're going to get into the probable cause portion here.
01:04:41.300
All right, so now we're on the probable cause, right?
01:04:44.700
They're going to talk about how Nara sent it in, blah, blah, blah, right?
01:05:00.520
They didn't want nobody to know what the fuck was going on.
01:05:08.380
And they did it because I told y'all before, they had informants.
01:05:14.220
They had people at Mar-a-Lago saying, yeah, these documents are here, blah, blah, blah.
01:05:21.740
Notice how the search warrant affidavit is redacted, but the indictment is not.
01:05:25.140
And I went ahead and broke this affidavit down and gave y'all my predictions in it
01:05:33.940
But yeah, the whole thing is fucking redacted, man.
01:05:40.440
They did a good job of keeping this investigation very, you know, under wraps.
01:05:47.360
Now, we'll talk about the legal charges in a second,
01:05:49.580
but in sum, the indictment hits every formal and informal defense that Trump has so far broke.
01:05:54.100
Okay, so this is why this indictment is so bad.
01:05:58.260
He does a really good job of breaking down the charges and Trump's defenses,
01:06:03.100
which you guys have heard publicly that he said, you know,
01:06:05.340
whether it's I declassified them, blah, blah, blah.
01:06:12.300
He possessed national defense information, much of which was TSSCI.
01:06:17.580
And on top of that, it doesn't matter if it's classified or not.
01:06:33.240
He knew he had not declassified those documents that he possessed.
01:06:45.080
He deliberately hid the docs from his attorneys so they couldn't comply.
01:06:48.300
He repeatedly hid the docs from the FBI and NARA.
01:06:51.460
And he conspired with others to complete everything that we've talked about.
01:07:00.920
The reason why I'm so bothered, guys, is because, like I said before, I showed you at the top of the show that I've done cases like this before.
01:07:12.740
The government doesn't play around when it comes to classified information, bro.
01:07:25.300
This might be, like, way too obvious, but it is not for me.
01:07:32.460
They're gonna talk about that here in a second, why he held them.
01:07:37.480
He did everything for the Trumpiest reason of all.
01:07:40.600
He kept the documents and he showed them to others for clout.
01:07:43.840
So by now you're probably getting the sense that Trump is pretty...
01:07:58.360
I mean, if you're showing it to a bunch of people that are fucking...
01:08:00.680
Don't have clearances to include Kid Rock's dumbass.
01:08:08.180
Well, the indictment contains 38 different charges.
01:08:10.980
And the first is 31 counts of violating the Espionage Act.
01:08:14.900
One for each of the documents containing national defense information.
01:08:18.560
The indictment includes a list of each of those documents, which you can find beginning on page 28.
01:08:22.420
The list includes documents marked top secret special handling relevant to USA.
01:08:26.060
Yeah, so these are all the different documents, right?
01:08:30.120
You got, you know, undated document concerning military capabilities of a foreign country in the United States with handwritten annotation of black marker.
01:08:38.020
Document dated May 6, 2019 concerning White House intelligence briefing related to foreign countries, including military activities and planning of foreign countries.
01:08:46.040
Document dated June 2020 concerning nuclear capabilities of a foreign country.
01:08:56.940
Yeah, document dated June 4, 2020 concerning White House intelligence briefing related to various foreign countries.
01:09:08.840
Just so you know, 5-Eyes is the five English-speaking countries, okay?
01:09:14.620
United States, United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, Australia.
01:09:24.520
And, yeah, it would be a problem for us to have their secrets.
01:09:30.120
They have our secrets, and then we're sharing their secrets with Mar-a-Lago staff.
01:09:36.980
And in the descriptions of these documents, there are some truly terrifying commentary on the nature of these documents.
01:09:42.840
For example, document 9 concerns military attacks by a foreign country.
01:09:46.280
Document 12 pertains to the projected regional military capabilities of a foreign country and the United States.
01:09:52.560
Document 19 involves the nuclear capabilities of the United States.
01:09:56.120
And all these documents were, according to the indictment, shuffled around various locations in Mar-a-Lago,
01:10:01.020
squirreled away in closets and bathrooms and stored next to a toilet, spilled on a floor,
01:10:06.280
and most of the time easy for anyone who worked at Mar-a-Lago to access.
01:10:09.980
And worst, these may not even be the most sensitive documents recovered by the federal government.
01:10:13.880
To bring an Espionage Act case, prosecutors have to cite documents that can be partially revealed during the trial.
01:10:20.240
That's because the defendant has a right to review the evidence that is being...
01:10:26.460
So they're going to have to declassify the documents that they want to use against them in court.
01:10:35.160
So the DOJ and intelligence agencies, on the other hand, want prosecutors to use the least sensitive documents possible
01:10:40.800
to minimize the additional damage that a trial could cause.
01:10:43.980
Because the defendant and the entire jury, people that don't have clearances or authority,
01:10:51.800
get to see these documents because it's evidence of the case, which means the jury gets to review it.
01:10:57.540
Together, prosecutors and intelligence agencies often agree on Goldilocks documents that are sensitive enough,
01:11:07.820
Who has the authority to declassify these documents in this case?
01:11:15.880
Appears to have recovered at least 13 top secret documents that weren't charged in the indictment.
01:11:26.200
13 of the documents are so sensitive that they're not even bothering to put them in the indictment.
01:11:33.040
And these are the president of the United States.
01:11:42.740
For each document listed in the indictment, prosecutors would have to have received approval
01:11:46.500
to use it in the criminal case from the agency which owned that information.
01:11:50.480
And some of the 13 documents might have been considered too sensitive to be exposed during the criminal case.
01:11:55.060
And the indictment says that Trump kept classified documents created by or in some way involving most of America's intelligence agencies,
01:12:01.420
including the Central Intelligence Agency, the Department of Defense, the National Security Agency,
01:12:05.920
the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, the National Reconnaissance Office,
01:12:09.880
the Department of Energy, the Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and others.
01:12:14.560
Now, the name Espionage Act looks foreign spies, and that has, of course, triggered Trump and his supporters
01:12:18.680
who claim this act can't apply to a former president.
01:12:21.220
But the Espionage Act applies to anyone who discloses national defense information to a foreign government.
01:12:25.740
But it also applies to anyone who retains national security information or discloses it to any unauthorized person.
01:12:36.560
So, accordingly, Trump was indicted under Section 793E of the Act,
01:12:41.440
which makes it a criminal offense for any unauthorized person to willfully retain national defense information
01:12:45.520
and fail to deliver it to an officer or employee of the United States who is entitled to receive it.
01:12:50.360
A 793E offense is a felony punishable by imprisonment of up to 10 years in prison.
01:12:55.080
And unlike a lot of the things that we talk about on this channel,
01:12:57.320
where the maximum is nowhere near what the actual sentence someone would actually get...
01:13:02.560
And every time I've seen people get hit with it, they get way more than 10 years, guys.
01:13:07.480
This is something where 10 years might actually be reasonable.
01:13:10.780
And the really scary thing for Trump is that sometimes these kind of offenses can get consecutive sentences rather than concurrent,
01:13:16.460
which means that they stack on top of each other and have to be served one after the other
01:13:19.780
instead of serving all of the sentences at the same time.
01:13:24.300
That's not to say he's guaranteed consecutive sentences.
01:13:27.180
There's a whole thing in the sentencing guidelines that I'm not going to go into right now, but it is a possibility.
01:13:33.700
Yeah, sentencing guidelines, you know, go into like the egregiousness, cooperation, accepting responsibility, criminal history, etc.
01:13:40.020
Like all these things, add points and everything else like that, that can get you more time, if not, or more or less time.
01:14:05.420
And here, Trump's co-conspirator was allegedly Walt Nauta.
01:14:10.200
The indictment says the two men pressured other witnesses to withhold testimony or withhold a record document or their object from an official proceeding in violation of section 1512b2a
01:14:19.520
and to corruptly conceal a record in violation of section 1512c1.
01:14:23.440
Now, count 33 of the indictment charges Trump and Nauta for misleading Trump's lawyers and others in order to withhold documents from an official proceeding.
01:14:30.960
The purpose of this tampering was allegedly so, quote,
01:14:33.620
Trump could keep the documents that he had taken with him when he left the White House and to hide and conceal them from the grand jury.
01:14:40.540
Count 34 is for corruptly concealing a document or record in violation of 1512c1 and 2.
01:14:45.660
And that section applies to whoever corruptly alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object or attempts to do so with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability to use in an official proceeding.
01:14:55.740
Now, here, Nauta and Trump were hit with this charge for hiding and concealing boxes of classified documents from Corcoran so that he would not be able to return them from the government.
01:15:03.320
Then the 35th charge says that the defendants were concealing a document in a federal investigation in violation of 18USC 1519,
01:15:09.960
which outlines the federal crime of obstruction of justice for destroying, altering, or falsifying records.
01:15:15.220
And the indictment lays out all the ways that Trump, Nauta, obstructed the investigation.
01:15:19.260
Trump suggested that his lawyer falsely represent that Trump did not have the documents responsive to the subpoena.
01:15:24.940
And they know this. Why? Because the lawyer, they were able to get, because remember, guys, keyword, it was memorialized, which means it was written down,
01:15:33.760
which means that lawyer took notes, right, which Trump didn't like, by the way, and.
01:15:40.700
Made it available to the prosecution so they could put it in the indictment.
01:15:44.180
Yeah, he said it later, like what prosecutors take notes, what lawyers take notes, all lawyers take notes.
01:15:52.940
On the attorney-client privilege, prosecutors were able to use the crime fraud exception to get access to the notes taken by Evan Corcoran,
01:15:59.460
one of Trump's lawyers, and the man who is throughout this indictment labeled as lawyer number one.
01:16:04.540
Corcoran's notes helped the government lay the foundation for the obstruction charge.
01:16:08.220
And the notes were taken contemporaneously with events that they unfolded.
01:16:11.320
The notes say that Trump said, quote, I don't want anyone looking through my boxes.
01:16:19.480
Back to my favorite part of the Mueller report, where Trump was talking about how much he loved his old lawyer, Roy Cohn, who was just a real piece of work, and hated the fact that his lawyers were taking notes.
01:16:31.920
The president then asked, what are these notes?
01:16:38.260
McGahn responded that he keeps notes because he is a, quote, real lawyer, and explained that notes create a record and are not a bad thing.
01:16:43.720
The president said, I've had a lot of great lawyers like Roy Cohn.
01:16:49.460
Real lawyers take notes, both for the client's protection and for the lawyer's protection.
01:17:01.820
23rd, 2022, Corcoran and a person described as lawyer number two told Trump they needed to search for documents responsive to the subpoena.
01:17:08.000
Corcoran then told Trump that he would be back on June 2nd.
01:17:10.880
But on June 1st, Trump spoke with Corcoran to confirm that he was coming to Mar-a-Lago on June...
01:17:18.840
...2nd, and Trump directed Nowda to move 64 boxes out of the storage room and hide them from the lawyers.
01:17:24.880
Nowda moved the boxes from the storage room and put them in Trump's residence.
01:17:28.180
On June 2nd, the lawyers searched the residence and they found 38 classified documents and sealed them in a folder.
01:17:33.420
But according to Corcoran's notes, Trump told him, wouldn't it be better if we just told them we don't have anything here?
01:17:38.680
He then said, well, look, isn't it better if there are no documents?
01:17:45.360
And then, of course, there was the classic plucking gesture that he made about the documents.
01:17:52.540
And guys, the reason why they know that is because I guarantee the lawyers met with the FBI multiple times and told them this stuff in detail.
01:18:00.300
And he's more than likely going to testify against Trump.
01:18:06.040
The conduct of conduct did serious harm because it meant the U.S. didn't get the documents back until at least August of 2022.
01:18:12.240
And it's worth noting, the Justice Department closed the Mike Pence case without charging him for obstruction, and this indictment shows why.
01:18:17.600
Pence cooperated with the government, whereas Trump instructed his aides and lawyers to conceal records from the government after Trump was on notice that the government wanted them back.
01:18:26.620
And the reason, bro, if he had just given it back during the grand jury situation, they wouldn't have charged him, man.
01:18:33.680
If he had just given it back, even though they opened a criminal investigation on him and everything, if he had just given all the documents back when the grand jury subpoena came, he would have been good.
01:18:46.720
Once the FBI did that search warrant, and they found those documents, it's a wrap.
01:19:02.140
Classified national defense information, now they gotta charge him, bro!
01:19:10.020
And this pains me to see, because I told y'all before, I fucking love Trump.
01:19:28.360
I'm gonna give my prediction on how he could beat this.
01:19:32.780
I was just gonna say that I can really vote, but I hope this guy wins.
01:19:38.300
Like, I hope Trump wins so I can see all these people.
01:19:42.860
These people just hiding, like, cockroaches after he wins.
01:19:57.540
I just wanna see all these people running, like, cockroaches, for real.
01:20:00.800
Shout out to the Department of Justice in the house.
01:20:08.820
We're gonna put some classified documents in your fucking house and set you up.
01:20:16.300
I got three episodes of Fresh and Fit for y'all tomorrow.
01:20:20.140
We're gonna bring the owner of Boxer Gym down here in Miami.
01:20:22.440
We're gonna bring a championship fighter for y'all.
01:20:26.020
We gave y'all a sartorial shooter earlier today.
01:20:36.480
Do you think he tried to pull off a Batman with kryptonite in case Superman goes rogue?
01:20:39.940
I.e. the government or them boys starts to do crazy stuff?
01:20:47.720
I'll vote for Trump again in 24, but if he's guilty, he should be charged.
01:20:52.180
If we're going to be about the rule of law, it should be applied equally.
01:20:59.080
Hey, Myron, I was just wondering if you could cover the Travis Rudolph case.
01:21:01.520
He was an NFL player who shot his ex-girlfriend's brother.
01:21:16.580
I fully support Trump, but I didn't realize he was this screwed, man.
01:21:25.860
It's crazy how the five presidents prior to Donald Trump started 10 wars,
01:21:30.280
are actual war criminals, and no one bats an eye.
01:21:55.200
Anyway, Jared Kushner has been a mole within the family from day one.
01:22:03.740
Xavier Tuggle, yo, can you do an update on the Melly trial?
01:22:11.660
If there's enough of y'all that want me to do it,
01:22:15.900
Joe Biden and Mike Pence was also caught with classified docs.
01:22:19.460
Why are they not trying to hunt Trump but not the others?
01:22:25.100
It's probably because Biden probably, you know, communicated with them,
01:22:30.560
Josh Holic, logic, Joshua logic, goes, motion suppress, finna be stupid.
01:22:41.560
Respect GOP candidate Vivek Ramswamy for aggressively defending Trump,
01:22:52.220
You probably didn't like the video, motherfucker.
01:22:54.280
Christian Davis goes, it does not matter what them boys put on Trump.
01:23:01.080
They're mad they can't control him like other puppets.
01:23:08.780
Before I get myself kicked off YouTube, let's continue on.
01:23:19.800
But to this guy, this guy is speaking some game right here.
01:23:33.040
And he caused his lawyers to file a certification with the FBI, falsely stating that he did a
01:23:36.600
full search and returned all responsive material.
01:23:38.780
So it's not surprising that Nauda was charged as his co-conspirator in most of this conduct.
01:24:00.880
I'm breaking down a criminal case for you guys.
01:24:10.440
Session 1001 is the classic don't lie to the government provision.
01:24:13.660
It makes it a crime for any person to make a false statement orally or in writing to federal
01:24:29.020
And then they're like, hey, bitch, we know you lying on insider trading.
01:24:31.920
Just today I was watching her Comedy Central thing.
01:24:37.360
She's a convicted fellow, but Snoop Dogg isn't.
01:24:51.580
Fucking Department of Justice over here laughing.
01:24:53.400
That whoever in any matter within the jurisdiction of the executive, legislative, or judicial branch
01:25:00.920
of the government of the United States knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers
01:25:04.740
up by any trick scheme or device a material fact, makes any materially false, fictitious,
01:25:09.060
or fraudulent statement or representation, has committed a felony punishable by a fine
01:25:12.800
imprisonment by no more than five years or both.
01:25:15.240
Now, the government accuses both Trump and Nowda of a scheme to conceal.
01:25:18.300
The government charged Trump with a subsection A2 of section 1001.
01:25:21.580
It's hilarious that these intelligence agencies are in here saying, yo, and LOL, and like,
01:25:26.040
yo, y'all are the reason he's going to jail, goddammit, man.
01:25:30.900
Man, by the D-Mod, all you intelligence agencies, man.
01:25:36.700
Making representations that are materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent.
01:25:40.160
And the indictment says that he caused his attorney number three, who we think is Christina
01:25:43.600
Bob, to submit a sworn certification to the FBI that a diligent search was conducted and
01:25:47.980
that all responsive documents were produced with the certification.
01:25:50.740
In reality, though, Trump had sabotaged the attorney's efforts to do the search by making
01:25:54.500
sure that Nowda removed boxes before the attorneys even did their search and that the
01:25:58.960
lawyer wasn't aware that Nowda was concealing documents.
01:26:02.060
Of course, it's their own problem that the lawyer did not make sure that a diligent search
01:26:07.960
But the indictment says that after the June certification, over 100 documents with classification
01:26:11.760
markings were recovered when the FBI raided Mar-a-Lago.
01:26:15.160
Nowda was also accused of lying to the FBI, violating the same section of the law.
01:26:18.480
And Count 38 says that he voluntarily talked with the FBI on May 26, 2022, while represented
01:26:24.300
And during the interview, he made the following.
01:26:31.940
He said he was unaware of Trump bringing any boxes into his Mar-a-Lago suite, that he had
01:26:36.540
no information at all about where the boxes were located, how they were kept, or who had
01:26:42.500
He had never seen the boxes until the day they arrived from Pine Hall.
01:26:47.980
Guys, if the FBI wants to ask you questions, you don't answer shit.
01:26:55.300
Because nothing good is going to come from him, my friends.
01:26:58.380
And like the video, or else be prosecuted by the Department of Justice.
01:27:29.520
He could have had guns, but not classified documents.
01:27:34.660
Diamond says that Nauda knew exactly where the boxes came from since he himself had moved the boxes from storage.
01:27:41.680
And since Nauda had reviewed the boxes in and around Mar-a-Lago, even taking a photo of their spilled contents and sending it via text message.
01:27:48.920
Yo, I got the, you guys are fucking hilarious, bro.
01:27:51.520
We literally got the best fucking chat ever, bro.
01:28:07.400
Yo, get me to, yo, you should have 1,500 likes just off the fucking chat alone, man.
01:28:18.800
The indictment contains numerous text messages from Nauda about fetching the documents for Trump and on January 22nd.
01:28:27.040
So, you better not, you better not kill me, man.
01:28:31.700
In 2022, Nauda texted a Mar-a-Lago employee about getting new covers for the boxes because Trump thought the existing ones were too marked up.
01:28:39.180
And again, this was all after Trump was on notice that the government requested the return of the class.
01:28:43.180
That's not good because that shows that he had knowledge and he didn't want the boxes to be too obvious that they're classified, possibly trying to hide it.
01:28:50.160
By documents believing that they were in an unsecured location.
01:28:53.120
And again, here is Nauda who doesn't have a security clearance moving boxes around at will and then lying to the FBI about it.
01:28:59.480
So, basically, if the facts are as they are alleged.
01:29:01.440
And if Trump wanted, he could have given him a clearance when he was in office, easily.
01:29:05.880
The Justice Department had no choice but to indict Nauda as well.
01:29:08.960
Now, one of the more interesting things here is that Trump wasn't charged for retaining material that was returned to the government prior to the 2022 subpoena.
01:29:15.780
So, this is a pretty good indication that if Trump had cooperated, like others who had documents accidentally in their possession, like Biden and Pence, and shipped everything back, he wouldn't be staring down the barrel of 37 counts of this indictment.
01:29:28.400
And that's the part that I hate the most about this.
01:29:30.180
If he had given that stuff back during the grand jury investigation, at this point, he knew it was a criminal investigation because the grand jury had been convened to go ahead and get a grand jury subpoena.
01:29:38.560
And you have to, you know, obviously follow it.
01:29:45.060
Of course, storing hundreds of top-secret documents in an unsealed bathroom can lead to all kinds of information being leaked.
01:29:51.020
But for most of us, a lot of our personal information has already been-
01:29:58.020
Everybody pointed Nara in the fucking house, you fucking assholes.
01:30:02.820
You guys are the reason why Trump got a fucking indicted, man, you fucking assholes.
01:30:06.560
I knew someone was going to make a Nara account.
01:30:10.060
I'm going to give you a wrench just for being funny, bro.
01:30:12.020
The nigga's about to be in the chat saying, I'm the one that got Trump and shit.
01:30:19.360
I'll give you a wrench, you fucking asshole, you piece of shit.
01:30:23.220
But you can get your online personal data taken down with Dave's sponsor, Incogni.
01:30:26.980
Now, I don't know about you, but I've seen a huge uptick in the amount of spam that I'm getting.
01:30:33.640
This dude said, that's good bathroom reading material, though.
01:30:46.980
Get the likes up to 1,500, and I will give you guys the only way I see Trump getting out of this.
01:30:52.200
But I need 1,500 likes, god damn it, for me to give you all this sauce.
01:30:57.540
And I will go ahead and tell you guys how Trump is going to get out of this.
01:31:00.860
But while we wait, Angie, what are your thoughts on this situation, looking into this case, etc.?
01:31:06.020
I really think it's funny that you're blaming all these people.
01:31:09.420
And if Trump is actually guilty, he just did it, you know?
01:31:18.360
I mean, if they find that, like, guilty, what are you going to do?
01:31:36.900
He thought, like, I'm a former president, they can't touch me.
01:31:39.680
I think what ended up happening is he felt like they couldn't touch him, and that's what happened.
01:31:45.760
He was like, yeah, they're not going to find it.
01:31:50.120
But, I mean, that makes me question, like, who started this?
01:31:55.440
Somebody had to give a tip or something, right?
01:32:03.720
Like, they knew that he was taking a bunch of it.
01:32:06.900
And they tried to, like, reach out to him, like, hey, we need these documents back.
01:32:13.000
Like, once you leave the presidency, you got all this free time now.
01:32:16.120
You know, you can, like, fucking be out and adventure and travel and do all this shit.
01:32:22.060
I think, like, he just didn't take it seriously.
01:32:25.740
The only people that knew that he had the boxes was the staff.
01:32:39.400
Man, I don't want to get into this because this is the news for my case.
01:32:47.880
I wouldn't be surprised if he wasn't involved in him.
01:33:06.380
If you guys want me to talk about how I think Trump is going to beat this.
01:33:14.040
Well, if we don't get it, then we're just going to go to sleep then, I guess.
01:33:25.880
We got three other podcasts lined up for tomorrow.
01:33:32.320
This is two for intelligence and special operations.
01:33:44.520
Them boys are trying to get Trump locked up for sure.
01:34:18.280
Guys, are we going to actually end up closing this thing without the likes?
01:34:22.640
Y'all don't want to know how Trump beats this thing.
01:34:46.780
I watched it like three times to understand it completely.
01:35:08.560
No, I was going to pull up like the zoo that happened when he was arraigned.
01:35:15.080
But I was like, nah, this shit's going to be wild.
01:35:21.640
I watched people just like, you know, manifesting and just like.
01:35:37.460
Which Tuesday, guys, an arraignment, guys, is basically when you come in, right?
01:35:44.920
But, you know, he entered in his plea, which he obviously pled not guilty.
01:36:07.100
Here's the federal courthouse right here, guys.
01:36:08.660
Two separate venues inside the courtroom right now.
01:36:19.300
A mix of those for Donald Trump, those against Donald Trump.
01:36:23.400
Court in 2012 basically said it's kind of up to Bill Clinton because he was president.
01:36:28.080
And the Trump team is trying to say, see, well, that should apply to us.
01:36:32.200
Cash money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels.
01:36:35.580
Todd, with sort of, you know, the old school of putting your thumb in the ink, if you will.
01:36:43.460
Obviously, these were all part of conversations.
01:36:51.240
Play the video of the guy throwing himself to the...
01:37:01.840
For throwing himself to the cars and to police?
01:37:19.840
You had Miron all stressing out because of Trump's indictment.
01:37:40.960
We know what this con artist from New York has gotten away with.
01:38:04.620
And, uh, also, it seems as though we are attacking one.
01:38:16.420
This is when he's leaving the courtroom, right?
01:38:21.380
Like, he just went in, pled not guilty, and left.
01:38:41.180
This guy actually took some time to buy a costume.
01:39:00.680
The guy that rushed the motorcade is in handcuffs.
01:39:34.020
Lord Myron, what happens if Trump gets convicted
01:40:00.020
Myron, why them boys don't like Trump or Republicans?
01:40:23.380
But there's a reason why them boys don't like him as well.
01:41:10.420
We cannot confirm or deny the man is in this stripped outfit being an operative of ours.
01:41:16.040
Institute for Intelligence and Special Operations.
01:41:38.760
Yeah, I don't think people are liking the video.
01:41:43.760
Department of Justice said shout out to them bums.
01:41:58.720
We got 1,700 people watching and, bro, y'all don't like the video.
01:42:01.340
I don't know why people are ninja watchers, man.
01:42:11.580
Like he sent the super chat in so that we keep the show on.
01:42:23.960
You're stalling for all the fucking losers out there that don't want to like the video.
01:42:28.360
That are just sitting there fucking, I hate my own gains.
01:42:31.840
But I'm going to watch the content anyway so I can talk shit.
01:42:38.240
I was going to go further, but I might hurt some.
01:42:48.300
I ain't interested in how J.P. Morgan paid reparation to the Epstein victims, but the
01:44:15.680
I'm going to give it down to Marco for all you guys that literally super chatted to stall
01:44:34.500
We would like to hear more information on the matter.
01:44:54.680
So this is how I think the only way that I think Trump is going to be able to beat
01:45:01.820
Uh, Fed reacts, Brian Nichols and Fred Tokers cases from ATL.
01:45:08.920
Mark, what do you think of that about the UFO stuff coming out, especially from top
01:45:12.800
Um, taking your mind off the Russia Ukraine war.
01:45:16.300
Um, and then just putting extra quarters in the arcade machine to keep the game show going.
01:45:23.280
Um, guys, I did an interview with MSCS, um, media.
01:45:27.980
Went up to Palm Beach and did an interview with them.
01:45:29.540
If you guys really enjoy this Them Boys talk, I'm pretty much damn near unfiltered on that.
01:45:46.720
Um, is there an agent behind Biden attacking our second amendment?
01:45:49.800
Bro, that's, that's what Democrats do is always go over to the second amendment, bro.
01:45:53.780
So this is how Trump is going to beat this thing.
01:45:57.840
He's going to have to drag this case out as long as he possibly fucking can.
01:46:02.720
He's going to have to file the fucking, you know, the extensions, uh, literally fight every
01:46:09.220
piece of evidence, do suppression hearings, do all kinds of bullshit hearings that he
01:46:15.180
He's got to just make it to November, 2024 where people vote.
01:46:22.140
Then I'm confident that he's going to get the Republican nomination and then whoever he
01:46:34.880
So as long as Trump can stall, run for president.
01:46:39.660
Stall run for president, make it to the 2024 election and win.
01:46:46.000
Then my friends, he's once again, president United States and he can probably pardon himself.
01:46:56.180
I knew you were going to say that because you told me like a few days ago, but like, is
01:47:04.340
there not a way that they can stop that before that happens?
01:47:07.580
I mean, if he's elected president, no, no way I can hear that noise.
01:47:12.780
I mean, if he's elected president, yeah, he can just like, I think I wouldn't be surprised
01:47:28.260
Literally he just, uh, I'm, nigga, I'm innocent.
01:47:32.480
Fire the fucking current, um, uh, Department of Justice, uh, uh, the attorney general who
01:47:38.800
is who Merrick Garland, I think, or current, hold on.
01:47:41.500
Who's the current, I think it's Merrick Garland, uh, us, uh, you probably know better.
01:49:32.400
Uh, you know, ever since, man, like, now I see, now I see them everywhere.
01:49:42.360
Like, I know I think everyone is one, you know, like.
01:50:45.480
I need y'all to like the goddamn video for the entertainment.
01:50:48.360
But that's honestly how I genuinely think Trump is going to beat this thing.
01:50:56.080
Because every time he gets in that, he wins in the polls.
01:51:03.120
I think if he, you know, I generally think if he makes it to being president, he can pardon himself, man.
01:51:11.800
No, but we got a few more stupid shots if you want to read them.
01:51:17.740
Abraham Niggas says, Wallahi, I've seen UFO in 2015.
01:51:28.260
Pox Kaya says, Rachel McDow says, give Trump deal if he agrees won't run.
01:51:35.580
Why Biden fam has records of being paid for foreign government.
01:51:41.520
Jarrett's Choice says, everyone's supercharged so Marion can go to me.
01:51:52.140
And Julio Ponce says, ever thought of doing Michael Jackson?
01:52:04.520
Please do not Wikipedia search the subject and their early life, when you get that feeling, Mr. Gaines, refers to.
01:52:37.840
And yeah, man, at the end of the day, Trump's in trouble, guys.
01:52:43.900
So we got to vote Trump, man, to keep him out of jail.
01:52:48.220
And then we got to vote for him so he can pardon himself.
01:52:53.000
Catch you guys on the next episode of Fresh Fit tomorrow at 6 p.m.
01:53:14.240
A special agent with Homeland Security Investigations.
01:53:18.780
Defender Jeffrey Williams and associate YSL did commit the felony.
01:53:32.140
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time.
01:53:35.360
Zodiac Killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated in Northern California.