we know that the grand jury sits on tuesdays and thursdays in d. c.. and the case is gonna be brought in d. c., so for people who are concerned that it might be in florida, again, that s not going to happen because the gravity of the case is there there is cameras all over the place in d. c. looking for the courthouse. on the other side, i ve been there. i know how that feels. and then, the other thing is that before a case is actually indicted, the defense will have an opportunity to be heard by both jack smith and by people named main justice. that s what i ve been waiting for, that piece. once we have that piece, it s gonna go forward. could it happen, could we not know about it? is it particularly very quiet? particularly, this one could be on the phone, this could be by soon. you could see this in person. so, it could be any of those things. it s possible that it is quiet. as you know, when things happen in washington, it s hard to keep things quiet. so, i probably get s
we have no choice. we were absolutely resolved, we would not allow this to be permanent break. if we actually let the day go by, or two days go by, who knows what could ve taken place? the president might have declared martial law. everything could ve been lost at that point. get him out of here, talk we are going to go forward, we re gonna go forward, all here tomorrow, we re gonna go forward. and the next day. we are going to complete the counting of electoral college votes, as called for by the constitution of the united states.
conversations. they know who actually approached them and convince them, as to what the strategy would be, the intent of the strategy, how they were gonna go forward. so, that really gives the dea and her team that behind the scenes look at what people were thinking, and what they were trying to achieve. again, all of this was sent to the national archives to be able to create uncertainty about the certification on january 6th. fani willis is the prosecutor here, a woman very much in the spotlight. governor brian kemp of georgia has signed a bill last week, making it official, a law, that creates a commission with powers to investigate sanction or remove local prosecutors. do you think she about being able to see this i don tshe s been a true prol as i vand i think ela she is not being crushed by all bring an her on a diffeand i think which i took so mu 75 witnesses. 75 witnesses. what, ãand and then wai happens. that may be why s like schaffe pr thank you so much for your time
differences is that in the hawaii situation, the governor signed off on the contingent electors, if that s what you want to call them. we call them fake electors here. that did not happen in 2020. the other thing in hawaii, the ceremony was public yes. and in 2020, there was at least testimony and evidence that they were trying to keep it hidden i think complete secrecy wasn t one of the emails. yes, exactly david schaffer does not have immunity. and there are eight fake electors, maybe nine, that have immunity. how meaningful are these immunity deals at this moment in time? i think they are critical because, again, those are the folks that were in the room. they re part of the backdoor conversations. they know who actually approached them and convince them, as to what the strategy would be, the intent of the strategy, how they were gonna go forward. so, that really gives the dea and her team that behind the scenes look at what people were thinking, and what they
(papers rattling) i was glad i was able to get voltaire in there yesterday. you know, anybody who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. tabitha raskin: oh, yeah. jamie raskin: and i believe that. well, if you had to pick one aphorism to characterize the trump administration, it would probably be that one, you know, because it was just inevitable where it was gonna go. tabitha raskin: yeah. jamie raskin: and the guy had his inauguration and started talking about american carnage. it was just a projection of his career, his destiny. it looks good. you want some cinnamon? tabitha raskin: yeah, i need cinnamon. i need- jamie raskin: i ll find you some cinnamon. jamie raskin: when officer hodges was, you know, caught in the door and he was just howling, it was like torture, i did see mitch crying and kind of wiping away tears. tabitha raskin: here s the cinnamon jamie raskin: but the republicans, man, they re a tough nut to crack, let me tell ya. you know, people