LegalEagle

LegalEagle

Ever wondered how the law works? Real life lawyer, Devin Stone, is on a mission to explain the most important legal issues of the day . . . and also ruin your favorite legal TV shows. From the courthouse to Night Court, LegalEagle will break it all down and teach you how to think like a lawyer.

  1. 22 hr ago

    Graham Platner Rape Allegation: What Due Process and Evidence Really Mean

    The Democratic Party is scrambling to replace its Senate candidate in Maine after Graham Platner suspended his campaign over a rape allegation. Months earlier, Congressman Eric Swalwell went from gubernatorial frontrunner to resigning from Congress in about a week. Two high-profile Democrats, two sets of serious sexual-misconduct allegations, and the same online split every time: one camp says it's disqualifying, the other reaches for "due process," "guilt by accusation," and "there's no evidence." Most of the second group uses lawyer-sounding language and gets it wrong. So this episode explains how evidence actually works. We cover Platner himself: the prep-school background, the oyster-farmer-veteran image that won the primary, the Totenkopf tattoo, the Reddit posts, and the July 2026 Politico report in which a former girlfriend alleges he raped her in 2021, an account she says she disclosed to a therapist and friends at the time. Platner calls it categorically untrue. We lay out the Swalwell allegations too: four women, a former staffer, and reporting that found corroboration for key parts of each account. Then the law. "Evidence" isn't just DNA and bloody knives; testimony is evidence, and often the most important kind. We break down direct versus circumstantial evidence, admissibility versus weight, why most hearsay comes into court, and why character evidence usually stays out. "He said, she said" doesn't mean there's no evidence; it means the central evidence is competing testimony, and a single witness's testimony can sustain a conviction. We get into what "corroboration" really requires (independent facts that make an account more credible, not a second eyewitness), and the biggest sleight of hand in the debate: mixing up a criminal prosecution with the public deciding who deserves their vote. Due process limits the government's power to jail you. It was never a rule that citizens must withhold judgment until a trial that, for most sexual assaults, never comes. Presumption of innocence, beyond a reasonable doubt, the Sixth Amendment, Brady v. Maryland, the Roy Moore precedent, and why "not guilty" has never meant "innocent." It's all here. CHAPTERS (00:00) Two Democrats, two allegations(00:50) The two camps online(01:51) Who is Graham Platner(02:41) Tattoo, Reddit, and the primary(03:18) The allegations against both(03:57) Pundits invoke due process(05:16) What counts as evidence(05:58) Direct vs. circumstantial(06:53) Admissibility vs. weight(08:14) Hearsay and character evidence(09:31) He said, she said(10:16) Stacking evidentiary pebbles(12:48) Due process, explained(14:03) Online debate isn't a mob(14:39) Corroboration in both cases(17:25) Court vs. a hiring decision(18:22) Use your own judgment(19:04) EagleTeam Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  2. 4 days ago

    Elon Musk Threatens to Sue Ro Khanna Over USAID Deaths Claim

    Elon Musk spent a weekend "feeding USAID into the wood chipper," his words, and 83% of the agency's programs were gone within weeks. Now Congressman Ro Khanna says Musk should answer for what came next, and Musk wants to sue him for saying it. Khanna and Musk were once friendly enough that Musk blurbed Khanna's first book. Then Musk took a chainsaw to the federal government, froze foreign aid, and laid off 94% of USAID's staff. When Khanna went on the "I've Had It" podcast and said Musk's cuts could contribute to 4.5 million child deaths by 2030, Musk called it "time to sue this liar," branded him "Ro the robber," and accused him of insider trading. We break down whether that lawsuit goes anywhere: where Musk could even file, the anti-SLAPP laws in California and D.C., California's slander statute, and why Khanna's hedged "possibly" plus a peer-reviewed Lancet study likely make this protected opinion. Because Musk is a public figure, the actual malice standard from New York Times v. Sullivan applies, which makes falsity and malice nearly impossible to prove. Plus the DOGE and USAID litigation we've tracked, Nicholas Kristof's reporting on children who died after the cuts, and Musk's "we accidentally canceled Ebola prevention" clip. Real attorneys, real filings, one very online billionaire. (00:00) Don't say Elon killed kids(00:52) What this fight is about(01:44) Elon and Ro Khanna's history(02:36) Feeding USAID to the wood chipper(04:27) Time to sue this liar(05:00) How Trump and DOGE cut aid(05:41) The AIDS Coalition lawsuit(06:43) Recklessness as a legal standard(07:46) The scale: 83% of programs cut(08:52) Musk demands a show orphan(09:50) Kristof's receipts: dead kids(11:00) The constitutional claims(13:04) What the courts ruled(13:54) GAO findings and the ICA(15:00) Is the money flowing now(16:20) Doe v. Musk and Elon's role(17:14) The deadly consequences(18:53) The Lancet study explained(20:20) Could Elon win a lawsuit(22:20) Anti-SLAPP and slander law(25:10) Actual malice and Sullivan(28:00) The Ebola mistake(28:53) The fraud claim doesn't add up(30:08) Sponsor: The EagleTeam Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERThis is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Everything here is for informational purposes only. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  3. 6 days ago

    Reckless Ben vs. Bricks & Minifigs: The Lego TRO Goes Federal

    Reckless Ben is finally headed to federal court, and he's agreed to mediate with Bricks & Minifigs. But if you think the ex parte TRO that ordered him to delete his Lego videos is dead, you're reading the tea leaves wrong. Here's the story. In November 2023, Brian Mansell consigned his father Ed's Star Wars Lego collection to a Bricks & Minifigs store in Salem, Oregon. When the operators left the country and corporate repossessed the store, the collection vanished. YouTuber Reckless Ben Schneider investigated and traveled to Utah to confront the people involved. On May 21, 2026, he published "I Tracked Down the Thief Who Stole $200,000 of Lego," branding the chain a thief and accusing police of helping cover it up. Bricks & Minifigs sued, throwing everything at the wall: trespass, stalking, impersonation, harassment, even a civil RICO claim casting Ben as a real-life Tony Soprano. The same day, a Utah judge signed an ex parte restraining order, no bond required, forbidding Ben from posting anything false, misleading, harassing, or defamatory about the company and ordering his videos pulled from every platform. We break down why the order was riddled with First Amendment problems: Paragraph J is a textbook prior restraint, Paragraph K orders videos deleted before any finding they were defamatory, and a 1,000-yard exclusion zone (more than half a mile) wraps every store and employee home in the country. Along the way: Near v. Minnesota, the Pentagon Papers, Keefe, Balboa Island v. Lemon, and Utah's anti-SLAPP law. Then the turn. Once both sides hired real lawyers, they jointly asked the court to swap the TRO for a much narrower injunction: no prior restraints, a 100-yard buffer, and an express carve-out protecting Ben's journalism, criticism, and commentary. The judge rejected the joint motion on a technicality, so the original, broader order is still in force. Days later, Ben removed the case to federal court on diversity jurisdiction. And here's the misconception worth killing: removal does not dissolve the TRO. Under 28 U.S.C. 1450, state-court orders survive removal until a federal judge changes them. But under Rule 65(b) and Granny Goose, the TRO can simply expire, and no federal judge is likely to reinstate anything this broad. We also meet the new magistrate judge, Cecilia Romero. CHAPTERS (00:00) The TRO twist, explained(01:42) Who is who: BAM vs Reckless Ben(02:40) The lawsuit and RICO claim(03:20) What an ex parte TRO is(04:31) Paragraph J: prior restraint(08:20) Paragraph K: taking videos down(10:20) The other TRO provisions(16:01) Why anti-SLAPP laws exist(16:41) The turn: parties renegotiate(18:01) Judge rejects the joint deal(19:01) What mediation really means(21:21) Removal to federal court(23:21) Why the TRO is not dead yet(24:41) New judge, and what is next(26:26) When you need a lawyer Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  4. 10 Jul

    The Supreme Court Almost Killed Birthright Citizenship

    A US World Cup star almost couldn't play for his own country over a fight about four words in the Constitution. Folarin Balogun was born in the States by accident — his mother's flight home to London got grounded by her own pregnancy — and the guarantee that makes him American just survived the Supreme Court by one vote. That's Trump v. Barbara. Chief Justice John Roberts closed it out 5-4: birthright citizenship means what the 14th Amendment says — anyone born in the US, subject to its jurisdiction, is a citizen. The Reconstruction Congress wrote it that way on purpose, to put the guarantee beyond the reach of any future Congress, president, or Court. It still took a year to get here. Trump's day-one executive order tried to end birthright citizenship. The Supreme Court ducked the question in Trump v. Casa, ruling on nationwide injunctions instead while Sotomayor dissented from the bench. Within hours, New Hampshire families filed a class action; a judge blocked the order again, citing Wong Kim Ark v. United States (1898). The DOJ appealed once more for the merits — that became Trump v. Barbara. Roberts traces jus soli through Dred Scott, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the Reconstruction Amendments, landing on: citizenship "was the right to have rights." Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's concurrence goes further, rebutting Clarence Thomas's 90-plus-page dissent and reclaiming the 14th Amendment as a universalist promise, not one written only for freed Black Americans. Kavanaugh ducks the constitutional question on a technicality (why some outlets called this 6-3, not 5-4). Gorsuch tags along with Thomas. Alito calls the plain text a "medieval rule," then warns about birth tourism and statelessness — claims this episode checks against the record. Birthright citizenship survives, but 5-4 isn't a mandate. Vance is already telling Fox News one Court vacancy could undo it. Elie Mystal calls this the new Roe-style litmus test for judicial nominees. And Amy Coney Barrett is a self-professed fan of Bari Weiss's Free Press — which tells you where these "new" theories keep coming from. CHAPTERS (00:00) The Verdict: 5-4 for Citizenship (00:57) Meet an Accidental American (01:52) Why Wasn't This Unanimous? (03:24) The New Hampshire Case (04:25) How Delay Fed Bad Theories (06:50) The Citizenship Clause, Plain (07:27) Roberts's Spotty Record (08:02) Inside Roberts's Majority Opinion (11:29) Kavanaugh's Statutory Dodge (13:45) Gorsuch's Dissent (14:23) Alito's Medieval Rule (17:02) Thomas vs. Justice Jackson (17:59) Vance, Mystal and the Next Fight (19:57) Jackson's Concurrence in Full (24:50) A Word From EagleTeam Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMER Sorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  5. 9 Jul

    Trump v. Slaughter: Supreme Court Lets Him Fire FTC Commissioners

    In March 2025, FTC Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter got an email telling her she'd been fired, effective immediately, no reason given. Five months later, Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook got her own pink slip, after a cabinet official accused her of mortgage fraud on social media, followed within 30 minutes by a Trump Truth Social post demanding she resign. Both women sued. Both won in the lower courts. Only one is still standing. In Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook, decided the same day, the Supreme Court split. In a 6-3 ruling, Chief Justice Roberts overturned Humphrey's Executor v. United States, the 90-year-old precedent protecting FTC commissioners from being fired without cause. Slaughter's firing, once ruled unlawful by a federal district court and the D.C. Circuit, now stands, under the unitary executive theory: Article II gives the president near-total control over the executive branch, full stop. Cook got a different result. The Court let her keep her Fed seat while her case proceeds, carving out a special exception Justice Sotomayor calls undefined and made up on the spot. Kavanaugh's concurrence is blunter: money is too important to leave to a president who can't be trusted. We break down how Slaughter and Cook ended up fired months apart, amid Trump's broader purge of independent watchdogs, how the lower courts ruled before the Supreme Court stepped in, why Roberts reached back nearly a century to gut Humphrey's Executor, and why the Fed, for now, keeps its independence while every other agency Congress designed to operate at arm's length from the White House doesn't. Sotomayor's dissent, read aloud from the bench, warns that dozens of independent commissions, including the EEOC, the NLRB, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission, are now likely to become purely executive agencies. We also look at what's already happening: the FTC's retaliatory probe of Media Matters, and FCC Chairman Brendan Carr's investigations into Disney and CBS. Reward friends, punish critics, no independent agency in the way. By the end: whether civil servants are covered, what "for cause" even means for a Fed governor now, and why "vibes, not law" might be the most accurate description of where this doctrine stands. CHAPTERS (00:00) Intro: SCOTUS's firing-power win(01:06) Trump v. Slaughter, the case(02:25) Trump v. Cook, and the firing spree(04:20) How Slaughter got fired(05:11) Cook's mortgage fraud fight(07:28) Slaughter sues, and wins in court(09:13) SCOTUS overturns Humphrey's Executor(09:44) The unitary executive theory(11:06) Myers precedent, Roberts' logic(14:13) Sotomayor's dissent in Slaughter(15:38) Trump celebrates, Cook fights back(17:02) The Fed's shadow-docket exception(17:44) SCOTUS lets Cook stay, for now(18:57) Roberts rejects Trump's arguments(21:15) Vibes, not law: the takeaway(21:51) Fallout: every agency now at risk(25:34) Sotomayor's closing dissent(26:46) Get the right lawyer: EagleTeam Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  6. 8 Jul

    Trump's Voter Purge Plan Blocked Nationwide by Federal Courts

    Federal judges across the country—including eleven district courts and the Sixth Circuit—have killed it. President Trump built a three-step plan to purge millions of voters he insists are casting illegal ballots, despite a decade of investigations finding none. Step one: force states to hand over unredacted voter rolls, Social Security numbers included, using a law written to protect Black voters' access to the ballot. Step two: dump those rolls into a hacked immigration database to manufacture a list of "non-citizens." Step three: have the Postal Service refuse to deliver mail ballots to anyone who doesn't make the list. Every leg of it has been blocked in court. The first executive order tried to rewrite the federal voter registration form and turn DHS, the SSA, and the Attorney General into a purge squad. It got enjoined immediately: the Constitution gives election administration to the states and Congress, not the president. When the SAVE Act and SAVE America Act both died in the Senate, Trump signed a second order and tried to build the machine himself. The DOJ sued 30 states and DC demanding their voter rolls. Eleven trial judges and the Sixth Circuit said no: registrars compile voter rolls, they don't "receive" them, so the statute doesn't apply. Meanwhile, DOGE quietly reprogrammed a 1986 immigration-benefits database called SAVE for bulk voter dumps, violating the Privacy Act of 1974. It also doesn't work: the SSA's own inspector general found 3.3 million actual citizens misflagged as non-citizens in it. When Texas ran 18 million voters through it, the system flagged 97 people in one county, 65 of whom had already proven citizenship. A federal judge shut it down. That left the Postal Service. A proposed rule would have blocked ballots to any voter not registered through a new federal portal, right before the November midterms and after states had already spent real money complying. A federal judge blocked that too, calling it "ultra vires," beyond USPS's legal authority. All three legs down. Trump's response: blowing up a FISA deal and refusing to sign a housing bill that passed the Senate 85-5, leverage to force Congress into passing a bill that can't get 50 votes. This episode breaks down the orders, the lawsuits, the databases, and why every court that's looked at this has ruled the same way. CHAPTERS (00:00) Intro: Trump's Fraud Claims (00:51) Who Actually Runs Elections (01:27) Trump's First Executive Order (02:31) Congress Fails, Trump Acts Alone (03:37) DOJ Sues 30 States for Voter Rolls (04:58) The Rhode Island Purge Deal (05:31) Judge Carter's Ruling (06:21) Sixth Circuit Rules, DOGE Hacks SAVE (07:50) Privacy Act Violations (09:34) 3.3 Million Citizens Misflagged (10:55) USPS's Ballot-Blocking Rule (13:07) States Sue Over Ballot Costs (13:42) Postmaster General Testifies (14:42) Judge Talwani Blocks USPS Rule (15:13) Trump Retaliates Against Congress (17:34) Sponsor: Find a Great Lawyer Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard:  This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice.  I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER.  Sorry!  Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem.  Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship.  Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase.  But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos!  All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes.  See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  7. 1 Jul

    Chud the Builder: The Racist Streamer's Attempted Murder Charges Explained

    A racist streamer who built a following screaming slurs at Black people now faces up to 60 years in prison for shooting a Black disabled veteran outside a Tennessee courthouse. But what may matter most for prosecutors is the evidentiary paper trail left behind by the defendant himself:  posts, videos, and public statements that could help establish premeditation. Donald Etherly, known online as Chud the Builder, turned harassment and intimidation into a brand. Two orders of protection. A harassment charge. A contempt case. A walked $370 dinner bill at a Nashville steakhouse. Then, on May 13, 2026, he showed up to a debt hearing at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Clarksville with a gun in his jacket, got into a confrontation with Joshua Fox, and opened fire, striking Fox multiple times and, somehow, shooting himself in the arm. Fox survived after emergency surgery. This episode breaks down every charge Chud is facing: aggravated assault, reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon, possessing a firearm during a dangerous felony, and attempted first-degree murder. We walk through the actual Tennessee statutes, why the gun charge rises or falls with the attempted murder count, and what premeditation really requires under the law. Then there's the self-defense claim. Tennessee is a stand-your-ground state, so why is Chud's "I had to defend myself" argument in serious trouble? The answer is the provocation exception, and the fact that Chud spent months posting videos and threats describing almost exactly what he later did, including a stream where he narrated the shooting before it happened. We cover the surveillance footage, the "reaching for mace" defense, the headlock dispute, the $1 million bond, the gag order from Judge H. Reed Poland III, the $300,000 his supporters raised that he can't touch, and the bond revocation in the steakhouse case. This is a case study in how a defendant's own social media becomes the prosecution's best evidence, and how stand-your-ground protection evaporates when you're the one who started it. CHAPTERS(00:00) The charges and 60 years(00:55) Chud's racist origin story(02:29) Steakhouse walkout arrest(03:00) Rise as an internet racist(03:37) The courthouse shooting(05:04) Aggravated assault(05:55) Reckless endangerment(06:21) Firearm during a felony(07:08) Attempted murder & premeditation(08:13) His own posts as evidence(10:05) The self-defense claim(11:52) Why provocation kills it(12:31) Gag order & $1M bond(14:13) Bond revoked, defense fund(14:51) When you need a lawyer Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

  8. 28 Jun

    Trump's $13M Reflecting Pool Disaster and the Olympian Arrest

    Most federal criminal cases start with a crime. This one starts with a paint job. A three-time Olympian named David Hern reached into the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, touched a piece of peeling liner, and got hauled off in handcuffs. Hern is 67. He won eight gold medals in whitewater canoeing and represented the US at three Olympic Games. On Friday he was finishing a 64-mile bike ride, stopped at the Reflecting Pool, noticed a chunk of the new liner already floating loose, and reached in to feel it. National Guard troops materialized, Park Police cuffed him, and he spent five hours in a Park Police lock-up before being charged with misdemeanor destruction of government property and given a July 9th court date. So the same administration that pardoned roughly 1,500 January 6th defendants now wants to put away a curious cyclist for touching the emperor's peeling paint. We take the charges seriously anyway, because Hern and the others arrested could be forced to foot the bill for Trump's Reflecting Pool boondoggle. This episode breaks down what Hern is actually charged with: 18 USC 1361 versus the more likely DC Code 22-303, malicious destruction of property, and why the malice standard is so hard to meet when all the government can show is a man who touched the water. We cover the penalties, the grand jury problem, and US Attorney Jeanine Pirro's track record. Then the real story: a no-bid contract to paint a 100-year-old monument flag-blue, awarded to Eddie Wood's Atlantic Industrial Coatings; a $1.8M promise that ballooned to $13.1M; a second no-bid deal to Greenwater Services tied to donor John J. Cafaro; and the White House's own video of the motorcade rolling across the fresh coating before it cured. Plus six million gallons of algae water dumped into the drainage system, dead ducks, Norm Eisen, and Sen. Blumenthal's investigation. CHAPTERS (00:00) The $14M paint job (00:48) An Olympian in handcuffs (02:34) Norm Eisen: a crime to touch water? (04:56) Two statutes: 1361 vs DC 22-303 (06:09) Proving malice and the penalties (07:30) Pirro promises prosecution (08:36) Trump's shifting gash story (11:00) The no-bid contract to Eddie Wood (12:51) $1.8M becomes $13.1M (13:10) Greenwater and donor John Cafaro (14:58) The Beast drives across the pool (16:00) An environmental disaster (16:41) Why you need a great lawyer Do you need a great lawyer?  I can help!  ⁠https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam⁠ LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMER Sorry, occupational hazard:  This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice.  I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER.  Sorry!  Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem.  Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship.  Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase.  But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos!  All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes.  See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).

About

Ever wondered how the law works? Real life lawyer, Devin Stone, is on a mission to explain the most important legal issues of the day . . . and also ruin your favorite legal TV shows. From the courthouse to Night Court, LegalEagle will break it all down and teach you how to think like a lawyer.

You Might Also Like