Julie Kelly 🇺🇸 Profile picture
Apr 25 22 tweets 5 min read Read on X
John Sauer, representing Trump, gives opening statement. Already answering questions posed by Chief Judge John Roberts.

Says indictment uses vague statutes (2 of 4 in this indictment relate to 1512(c)(2) to criminalize "core authority" of the presidency.
Sotomayor already arguing what Trump did was for "personal gain" unlike what Obama did--one example used by Trump's team is could Obama be indicted for drone strikes that killed an American--bc Obama did it "to protect the country."

"The president is entitled for personal gain to use the trappings of his office without facing criminal liability." She mentions "creating false documents" as an example of committing a crime outside of scope of authority.
KBJ: Claims presidents since the beginning of time understood they could face criminal prosecution.

She then says the understanding stems from presidents being prosecuted "after impeachment."

Which is exactly what Sauer/Trump argue. Whoops.
Gorsuch seems to suggest what is the most likely outcome. SCOTUS kicks this back to Chutkan to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine what elements of the 4-count indictment represent "official" acts v personal.
Sotomayor back to alternative electors. "What is plausible about the president assisting in creating a fraudulent of electoral candidates?"

Sauer disputes her description as he should. Calls it a "mischaracterization" of the indictment.

Can't help but think this is Sotomayor's way to support 1512(c)(2) in Smith's indictment.
Sauer admits some of the allegations in the indictment (he also disputes the allegations) would be considered private--such as working with private attorneys on alternative slate of electors.

Thomas raises Meese amici that argues Smith is unlawfully appointed as special counsel.
Sotomayor asked a question and I have no idea wtf she just said. I don't think Sauer does, either.

Kagan joins ACB in parsing the indictment to ask Sauer which allegations represent official v personal.

This really can be such a slippery slope--sort of mind blowing to consider
OH FFS Kagan asks Sauer "How about if a president orders the military to stage a coup? Is that immune?"

Kagan: Is it an official act?

Sauer answers, it sounds like it.

Kagan: The answer sounds like to me it's like, oh it's official but sounds really bad.
Gorsuch expressing concerns about precedent of incumbent presidents always considering criminal liability when making decisions in office.

Kavanaugh and Sauer discussing exec privilege protections and the broad scope of the 4 charges in Smith's indictment--again, 2 1512(c)(2) and 2 similarly vague "conspiracy" charges.

KBJ asking why the president should be making official acts without a responsibility to follow the law. She's arguing that other "high powered people" also have to follow the law.

This is silly--the president has powers that no one else has. So now the president is comparable to, what, a mayor or judge?

"When we are talking about liability, I don't see how the president stands in any difference" than anyone else.''

HAHA OMG KBJ wonders aloud about turning the oval office into "the seat of criminal activity in this country."
Michael Dreeben now up for Jack Smith.

MY GOD WHY DO ALL THESE FED PROSECUTORS SOUND LIKE WOMEN?

Dreeben served on Robert Mueller's team.
Thomas asks Dreeben if there no immunity even for official acts? Dreeben says yes.

Thomas asks why no criminal prosecution of past presidents for military operations such as coups. Dreeben argues bc they were not illegal lol ok.

Roberts asking about circuit court general conclusion that a president can be prosecuted because he's been prosecuted. That logic "concerns me."

Roberts criticizing circuit court for not considering what was official and what was personal. "They had no need to look at what courts normally look at when you talk about questions of privilege or immunity."

WOW.
Roberts describes circuit panel's reasoning as "tautological."

Not a good sign for the 3-judge panel.
Kavanaugh again turning back to separation of powers issues related to Congress passing laws and which ones apply to the president.

"It is a serious Constitutional question whether a statute can apply be applied to the president's official acts."

Argues Congress needs to speak with some "clarity." Now again discussing how vague "obstruction" and "conspiracy" laws can easily be applied to a president.

Kavanaugh: Especially "risky" in the hands of a "CREATIVE PROSECUTOR WHO WANTS TO GO AFTER A PRESIDENT."
Gorsuch gets Dreeben to agree there are specific core functions of the presidency that Congress cannot regulate.

He says yes, Gorsuch suggests that in itself is a form of immunity. Now asking about 1512c2.

Can a president be prosecuted for obstruction of an official proceeding if he led a civil rights protest in Washington that delays a government proceeding?

Dreeben tries to say no and tries to rely on intent and "corruptly" elements. Gorsuch tells him to assume both elements are met--he meant to do it.

Dreeben did not answer that one well.
Alito presses Dreeben on the idea that the president is like everyone else in terms of following the laws.

Alito calls 371--conspiracy to defraud the US-- a "peculiarly open-ended statute."

It would apply to any fraud in any government function, Alito suggests.

Dreeben counters that presidents have no official role in certifying the election.

Alito: "Whatever we decide will apply to all future presidents."
Dreeben unconvincingly argues that future presidents won't violate the law bc they have the best lawyers and an attorney general who will steer him properly. Alito counters that is not always the case.

Alito: "This case will have effects that go far beyond this prosecution."

Alito very skeptical of Dreeben's position that oh don't worry about the slippery slope here because an attorney general will give the best legal advice on whatever he is going to do.
Alito generally asks, "What is necessary for a stable democratic society?"

Asks if permitting criminal prosecution of a president will "lead us into a cycle that destabilizes our country?"

Sotomayor retorts that a stable country relies on the "good faith of public officials assuming they follow the law."

Sotomayor: "No man is above the law either in his official or private acts." Just blabbering nothingness.
Kagan asking about official v personal acts in the indictment. Dreeben again goes back to working with "private lawyers to gin up fraudulent slate of electors is not part of a president's job."

It is to achieve a "private" end--argues what Trump did was in his role as a candidate and this was campaign-related.

Which is something presidents do every single day.
Gorsuch: "Every first term president, everything he does, can be seen through the prism of his personal interest in re-election."

Asks if removing an appointee is core power--this speaks to Smith's allegations that Trump's attempts to replace Jeff Rosen with Jeff Clarke is somehow a crime.

Dreeben says depends on motive. HUH?

"Everything he does...he wants to get re-elected. If you are allowing motive to color that, I wonder how much is left. Presidents have all matters of motives."
Gorsuch reminds Dreeben "we are writing a law for the ages."

He also hints that SCOTUS will soon address the definition of "corruptly" in 1512c2.

Kavanaugh joins Gorsuch in expressing concerns how this case/decision will affect the future.

This precedent will "cycle" back over and over.

Kav asks about a president making false statements to the public and whether prosecutable.

Dreeben says that has never happened so basically no. THAT IS THE EVER-LOVING POINT.
ACB seems to agree absolute immunity is not a thing.

But she asks Dreeben to drop official acts from indictment and only prosecute on personal/private conduct. Dreeben basically argues all the allegations work together as evidence in the indictment.

KBJ seems to agree with ACB that whatever is deemed personal/private isn't protected by immunity.

Lots of back and forth btw absolute immunity v core duties or outer perimeter of authority.
All done.

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More from @julie_kelly2

Oct 22
After a nearly 11-month delay, the DC appellate court finally issued its ruling on Couy Griffin appeal of common J6 misdemeanor. Despite clear consensus during oral arguments 1752 charge required foreknowledge of USSS protectee, the 2 Dem judges affirmed conviction. Trump appointee Greg Katsas, who authored the key dissent that led to SCOTUS overturing 1512c2, again dissented.

Griffin never entered the building. So let's understand what this ruling means--a US citizen cannot protest on government grounds paid for by taxpayers if someone in Secret Service protection is somewhere on the premises. (Pence had been evacuated to an underground garage by this point.)

Absolutely outrageous decision again demonstrating a rigged system controlled by Democrats in our nation's capital to set dangerous precedents for DOJ and judges to continue distorting laws to criminalize political dissent.Image
Image
As I've noted here repeatedly--oral arguments, where Judge Pillard clearly conveyed deep skepticism as to how DOJ applied 1752, were held a week before SCOTUS granted cert in Fischer.

The announcement signaled the court might overturn DOJ's most common felony.

So the Dem-led DC appellate court slow walked this decision for more than 10 months. And now 2 weeks before Election Day, DC circuit (led by Obama judge) publishes the opinion upholding Griffin's conviction.

Keep in mind-- the "restricted' area was not cordoned off by Secret Service but by Capitol Police (and a weak barrier at that). The snow fencing was not related to Jan 6 protest but to protect inaugural set up.

So DOJ and Dem judges took a statute intended to "better protect the President and other national leaders from assassination, kidnapping, and assault" and used it against Americans protesting on federal property OUTSIDE the building.

Read it and weep:Image
Image
Greg Katsas (Trump) in his dissent raised the very same question that Judge Pillard (Obama) did during oral arguments: a concern innocent people walking on "restricted grounds" could be prosecuted under 1752, which the DOJ conceded was true. Image
Read 4 tweets
Oct 1
Today by noon ET, Donald Trump's lawyers will file under seal objections to proposed redactions in Jack Smith's novel (that's being nice) "Motion for Immunity Determinations" currently under seal as well.

Unlike Smith's position in FLA docs case--where DOJ wanted to keep basically all discovery including grand jury testimony and other records under seal over unsubstantiated fears of "witness" intimidation--Jack Smith now is prepared to post what he otherwise refers to as "sensitive" material in an effort to weaponize J6 against Trump as Americans start to vote.

Judge Aileen Cannon routinely denied Smith's broad sealing requests. Here she is in April 2024:Image
In DC J6 case, Smith is ready to post grand jury testimony, FBI 302s, etc--records he wanted sealed in the FLA case when Trump.

Judge Cannon ultimately ruled that some evidence could be posted with names, identifying info mostly redacted.

Here was Smith in FLA in Feb 2024: Image
Here is Jack Smith's top prosecutor explaining to Judge Chutkan last month what this massive motion will entail. DOJ using SCOTUS immunity ruling to justify its new stance about sealing discovery and protecting witnesses.

Does anyone believe Jack Smith will fight to keep this stuff redacted? NO. What Smith just set up is a redaction fight where Trump looks like the one wanting to keep evidence under wraps.

And as far as not including names of witnesses--between the indictment, the J6 committee report, and media coverage--it will take about 6 seconds to figure out who said what to investigators.Image
Read 4 tweets
Sep 25
Jim Jordan opens Weaponization committee hearing today with DOJ IG Michael Horowitz by noting the FBI has not yet found the J6 pipe bomber.

The committee, Jordan notes, is investigating the "double standards" at the "Biden/Harris DOJ."
LOL major dbag Glenn Kirschner a witness in weaponization committee. Bragging about his prosecutorial record--he has been tip of the spear in attempted character assassination and harassment of Judge Aileen Cannon.

Kirschner now talking about Project 2025 and bringing up Jeff Clark being charged in Georgia. LOL Kirschner claims Project 2025 threatens the "independence and apolitical work" of the DOJ.

LOLOLOLOLOLOL
I hope someone on @Weaponization asks Kirschner about his coordinated targeting of Cannon.

It got so bad that the 11th Circuit stopped accepting complaints that Kirschner publicly helped organize

GeneralOrder2024-J.pdf ()uscourts.gov
Read 4 tweets
Sep 24
In the most sneering tone possible, Tanya Chutkan as predicted grants Jack Smith motion to file a gargantuan 180-page “brief” in Trump’s J6 case. Image
Chutkan HERSELF described Smith's proposed brief explaining why DOJ believes the new indictment is not covered by presidential immunity as "irregular" and outside the "ordinary course" of court procedure.

She again says the election is of no concern to her--which is bullshit Image
It is this type of glibness and quite frankly, laziness, that got Chutkan smacked down by SCOTUS. Chief Justice John Roberts repeatedly criticized Chutkan for her lack of fact finding and due diligence before hastily issuing her Dec 2023 denying all forms of presidential immunity for Trump in the J6 case.

Chutkan now is saying--ok SCOTUS you want a "careful" assessment of immunity in existing indictment? Fine--I will let Jack Smith do it first.Image
Read 4 tweets
Sep 19
And so it begins.

As I have reported, DC US Attorney Matt Graves is using a new charge in the J6 prosecution to work around SCOTUS decision in Fischer, which overturned how DOJ applied 1512(c)(2).

Yesterday, Graves filed a superseding indictment against a California woman on 18 USC 372, "conspiracy to impede officers."

To my knowledge, this charge has not been brought in the nearly 4-year criminal prosecution of J6ers. (If it has, it applied only to a handful.)

Graves is now referring to elected members of Congress as "officers."Image
Image
It's hard to overemphasize how cynical, defiant, and deceptive this is.

Graves indicted Christina Kelso on 1512(c)(2) on 5/15/24--ONE MONTH AFTER SCOTUS ORAL ARGUMENTS IN FISCHER.

Everyone knew SCOTUS would reverse DOJ but Graves didn't care. In a solid stick in the eye to the court, Graves continued to bring the obstruction felony.

So now Graves is (1) dismissing the count but asking for same prison sentence in existing cases or (2) filing superseding indictment to drop 1512c2 but add another felony in its place.Image
To put this in perspective--Graves brought the 372 charge in high profile cases such as Proud Boys and Oath Keepers.

He is now using it against a 46-year-old woman who never went inside the building, is not accused of assaulting police, or destroying property. Image
Read 5 tweets
Sep 17
Getting up to speed on this batshit crazy lawsuit @nataliegwinters posted earlier today.

A Michigan "welfare rights" organization, 3 black Michigan voters, and NAACP filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump and RNC in WASHINGTON DC in Nov 2020 claiming Trump/RNC violated the Voting Rights Act and Ku Klux Klan act by attempting to uncover election fraud.

Of course the plaintiffs filed the lawsuit in Trump-hating DC federal court. It was initially given to Judge Emmet Sullivan--he went on senior status so it was transferred to Ana Reyes, a Biden appointee, in Feb 2023.

Then MAGICALLY--at the same time she was handling Jack Smith's J6 indictment and addressing unprecedented questions of presidential immunity from criminal prosecution--the case was reassigned to Judge Tanya Chutkan.

The courts claimed Reyes had a "conflict" but it took Reyes 8 months to mention it?

Sounds legitImage
Sullivan refused to toss the case out of DC.

The lawsuit is rife with allegations that are now covered by presidential immunity per SCOTUS. But that isn't stopping the defendants or Judge Chutkan from advancing the case.

When the issue of presidential immunity was raised during a Nov 2023 hearing on the lawsuit, Chutkan said the immunity matter would be "at least resolved in the lower courts shortly."

She issued her order denying immunity one week later.

Of course she was overturned by SCOTUS on July 1; Chief Justice Roberts criticized Chutkan for her hasty handling of the unprecedented issue.

She knew at this point she planned to deny Trump's immunity claims from criminal prosecution thereby greenlighting (at least temporarily) the civil suit.Image
So after SCOTUS opinion on immunity, the Michigan plaintiffs came back to court asking Chutkan to allow them to file a THIRD amended complaint.

They essentially want Chutkan to approve any efforts by Trump campaign and/or RNC to LAWFULLY investigate voting fraud.

Chutkan has not ruled on a Jan 2023 motion by Trump to dismiss the case.Image
Read 4 tweets

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