Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, I know one thing, just to be a lot
of employed lawyers on November the fifth, more than to
even employed now. One of those attorneys that probably will
be working I would think for President Trump would be
David Gelman. Welcome to our show. David. We want to
talk to you about the cases that are pending against
President Trump and what do you think is likely to
(00:21):
happen should he become elected. I would assume the first
thing he would do is to hire an attorney general
and then fire Jack Smith.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Good morning guys here, and by the way, you're right,
this is like an economic boom for attorneys right now
and in November fifth. But you are exactly right. When
he becomes president, the first thing he's going to do.
I think he's going to fire Jack Smith, that's the
first thing, and then get the attorney general. So it's
going to be one in one a. But Jack Smith,
(00:51):
obviously he was unconstitutionally appointed by the Attorney General mayorck
Garland right now, so he has no business doing any
the injustice against President Trump. So he's going to be
the first to go if they got anybody in the government.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Y know, some of this just smacks a deliberate election
interference on their part, but it ever gets reported that way.
It's always about, well, Trump is going to save himself
by getting elected. Well that's not really the truth here.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
Is it. No, not at all? Not all again. Look,
even Justice Thomas Claire Thomas said in his opinion that
the appointment of Jack Smith is unconstitutional. Now, what they're
doing is completely just something that's never happened in our
(01:43):
country's history. So they appointed a special counsel to go
after a president all right during the election. So and
you remember the d OJ has an unwritten rule that
you're not going to deal with anything regarding any candidate
within the ninety days of an election. Well, obviously we're
what six days away, five days away, and we're still
(02:05):
dealing with Jack Smith and President Trump. It is completely
election interference. They would try to keep him off the
campaign trail and it backfired a tremendously one hundred percent.
And because of that, the American people they see what
has happened with the DOJ. It has become a very
corrupt place. And when President Trump is re elected, I
(02:29):
think he's going to clean everything up and we're going
to have a DOJ that does its job, goes after
individuals and or companies that are, you know, doing the
wrong thing, not an individual who just threatened the the
way that the liberals want to act. I guess in Washington, well,
you know.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
New York is also a very corrupt place. What happens
to the state cases?
Speaker 2 (02:54):
So that's a good question. The problem is President Trump,
in his powers as if he is re elected, will
not really be able to do anything with the New
York cases because he only has the powers or Jack
Smith has the powers federally, not for the states. So
what would happen is for the for the one for
(03:15):
Alvin Bragg, that case, he has not President Trump has
not been sentenced, and I don't think he'll be sentenced
until after his presidential term is over. So they're going
to have to wait four years to sentence him. Now
at that time, I don't even know if that case
will even be around. They may dismiss it, they may
(03:36):
you know, there's there're gonna be individuals that were here
four or five years ago that are not around anymore.
So it's going to be a very difficult time for
whoever is the attorney, the district attorney, and the judge.
In four or five years.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
Okay, in the wan Moreshawn case there in Manhattan, he's
gonna see set sentencing for November twenty six. So what
happens tod that that one? How much collusion is that?
With the US attorney there, they can prove that too,
can't they? And then Trump can fire have all those
US attorneys fired in his own Justice department.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
Oh, that's going to be like the first thing that
the Attorney General does is fire every US attorney in
the country and appoint new ones who actually, you know,
follow the law.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
And Obama did it. Let's point out Obama did that.
Nobody raised a fuss, Yeah exactly.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
But can you imagine the mainstream media what they're going
to say as soon as President Trump doesn't, they're going
to go crazy. But like you just said, yeah, President
Obama did it and nothing happened. But as for Mersehaun,
I don't see that sentencing happening for the simple reason
that number one, you know, Trump hopefully will be president
(04:50):
at the time or you know, president elect, there's no
way they can sentence him. But number two, you know,
in the unlikely event that President Trump is not elected president,
they're not going to have that sentencing a couple of
weeks after the election. I don't see that happening, all.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Right, David, Thank you, appreciate your time.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Sir.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
David Gelman, attorney in Trump legal surrogate