is this. i just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more tha we have. fellas, i need 11,000 votes. give me a break. then president trump georgia secretary of state - in order to overturn the election result in that state. the phone call remains shocking, no matter how many times you hear it. but the call was over an hour-long. and there are other parts of that call that prosecutors may now be taking a closer look at for instance, there is thi part so, it did people voted and i think the number is clos to 5000 people and they went to obituaries. they went to all sorts o methods to come up with an accurate number. and a minimum is close to abou 5000 voters. that was president trum insisting, again, to the georgia secretary of state that thousands of dead peopl voted in georgia during th 2020 election. today, the washington post reports that one day befor that infamous phone call, report commissioned by donal trump s own campaign had found that nowhere near 5000 dea
uncovered in multiple federa and state investigations had it s the most damning piece of evidence against donald trum and his ongoing legal battles, remains this phone call. so, look, all i want to d is this. i just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more tha we have. fellas, i need 11,000 votes. give me a break. then president trump, pressuring georgia secretary o state, to find him 11,000 vote in order to overturn the election result in that state. the phone call remains shocking, no matter how many times you hear it. but the call was over an hour-long. and there are other parts of that call that prosecutors may now be taking a closer look at for instance, there is thi part so, dead people voted and i think the number is clos to 5000 people and they went to obituaries. they went to all sorts o methods to come up with an accurate number. and a minimum is close to abou 5000 voters. that was president trum insisting, again, to the georgia secretary of state that t
protecting someone 24/7, how d you bring someone in to ge arraigned? we have never, obviously, had this situation before yeah, yeah! but people with massive security needs have been prosecuted in open court o much more serious charges. you know, i m thinking about terrorists, right? and so i m not worried about that that just seems like a logistical problem that need to be worked out between the da s office in the nypd and th secret service i think the harder questions would come if trump did no surrender, which is what mos people do when they are charge with a nonviolent, white colla crime. they walk in, they don t wan to be arrested and have all of that drama and he has said, so far jo tacopina has said that trump i going to walk in on his own. but if he doesn t, and he s in a different jurisdiction - he s in florida that could get reall complicated really quickly yeah. and paul butler, i want to - there is the basic hurly burly
and other issues to deal with. because we are talking about a former president and because w are talking about donald trump the former president - so, he has security needs, legitimately, because he is former president so - there will have to be some goo faith conversation about wit the secret service about how t bring him in in a way that i safe for him and say for the courthouse but that all seems to me really, doable, alex how does that work, though? if their responsibility is protecting someone 24/7, how d you bring someone in to ge arraigned? we have never, obviously, had this situation before yeah, yeah! but people with massive security needs have been prosecuted in open court o much more serious charges. you know, i m thinking about terrorists, right? and so i m not worried about that that just seems like a logistical problem that need to be worked out between the d s office in the nypd and th secret service i think the harder questions