aggiehawg said:
TXAggie2011 said:
captkirk said:
aggiehawg said:
captkirk said:
More than likely they have it (assuming Trump was actually holding one) but they just don't know which one it is. And if they can't figure it out from the contents of the audiotape, the people with which Trump was speaking could not figure it out either.
I guess that means Trump didn't show it to them
Were they all blind? I don't know that they do or do not know what the contents were. But it doesn't follow that if you don't know from an audiotape those physically there cannot know.
Trump uses the words "look", "read it", and "let's see here" in the audiotape. The depositions of those at that meeting will be rather fascinating, I'm sure.
These people were writers. Maybe even journalists. If they read the document, wouldn't that have been in a book or article somewhere?
Funny you mention this. The other day I was wondering who these writers were.
Short answer:The Chief's Chief, by Mark Frank Meadows
Much longer version with my commentary added:Between Mark Meadows testifying to the special counsel grand jury (in early June 2023?), and others connecting the dots across book interviews, it seems like his autobiography fits the bill.
What the indictment says about this recorded interview. The June 8 Trump indictment cites two examples, starting on Page 2, claiming:
Edit: All of below pertains to Example (a) above, the book interview.Who the indictment says is in the room:POTUS
a writer
a publisher
two members of his staff
Not sure if Meadows is in the room. You'd think he was as much of the book is based on these recorded interviews. I've never written an autobiography but I imagine publishers provide a writer(s) to help the primary author. The indictment states none possessed "a security clearance".
Does anything from that interview end up in the book? Regardless, there is speculation surrounding the following excerpt from the autobiography as mentioning the same plan of attack as the one cited/referenced in the indictment:
Does DOJ possess the same document mentioned by Trump in the recording? We don't know. We do not know whether the 4-page plan of attack document Trump mentions in
The Chief's Chief is associated to
any specific document # listed in the indictment. Actually, it is disputed whether Milley wrote the plan of attack himself, as Trump states. The closest is probably document #20, shown below. However, roughly two-thirds of the documents cited in the indictment are military or defense related (#3, #4, #8-14, #17-18, #20-22, #24-27, #29-31).
Does "showing" the document really matter for Trump? But as others here have noted, FPOTUS Trump is
not being charged with any crime associated with "showing" classified documents to others, specifically. So perhaps this is added to the indictment's narrative to elicit concern. Note it's written into the introduction of the indictment. It's not specifically part of the 793(e) Espionage Act charge. Presumably DOJ has access to the interview recording audio from
The Chief's Chief.
This raises an important question. Why do politicians and bureaucrats spend so much time interviewing, researching, and writing these books? Coming soon from the same publisher:
https://www.allseasonspress.com/store/p/tucker-by-chadwick-moore-preorder https://tips.fbi.gov/
1-800-225-5324