Trump Co-Defendant SMACKED with Million Dollar Lawsuit LYING for TRUMP
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00:00 case, after it has been reported that Mark Meadows accepted an immunity deal by special
00:05 counsel Jack Smith to testify against Donald Trump in connection with the Washington DC
00:12 federal criminal prosecution of Donald Trump.
00:16 And the basis of this lawsuit is that the representations made by Mark Meadows in his
00:22 autobiography that was published by this book publisher back in 2021 was false. Specifically,
00:30 in the autobiography by Mark Meadows, there is a chapter called the Long Con, and there
00:36 is another chapter that's called I Know He Didn't Lose, among other things. And where
00:43 Mark Meadows claims in the book that the election was rigged, the election was stolen, all of
00:49 the lies. And while Mark Meadows was saying this in the autobiography, Mark Meadows has
00:54 been cooperating with special counsel Jack Smith, essentially admitting that he was lying
00:59 in the book now that he is under oath.
01:03 Isn't that the story we talk about over and over again here at the Midas Touch Network,
01:07 how these MAGA Republicans think that they should just be able to get away with lying
01:11 to the public and grift off the public and make millions of dollars by lying there. But
01:17 then when they're placed under oath, whether it's in a criminal case or in connection with
01:23 an investigation where they have to be under oath or before special counsel Jack Smith,
01:27 they admit that they were lying. And now the book publisher alleges that that is a violation
01:34 of the publishing agreement.
01:36 I'm Ben Myselis. This is the Midas Touch Network. Let's dig into it, folks. Let's pull up right
01:42 here the lawsuit that was filed by All Seasons Press LLC, also known as ASP, versus Mark
01:50 Meadows. And ASP says that they are a conservative, small, independent publisher, although I don't
01:57 like to use the term conservative when it refers to some of these right-wing conspiracy
02:02 theories. But that's how they refer to themselves. So for purposes of this, that's why I'm stating
02:07 it. And here's what the lawsuit says. It's for over $1 million. And here's what the lawsuit
02:12 says. This case arises from Meadows' breach of a publishing agreement with ASP, pursuant
02:18 to which ASP published a book authored by Meadows entitled The Chief's Chief. In the
02:25 agreement, Meadows, the former White House chief of staff under Trump, promised and represented
02:31 that "all statements contained in the work are true and based on reasonable research
02:36 for accuracy" and that he has not made any misrepresentations to the publisher about
02:41 the work. As detailed below, upon information and belief, Meadows breached those warranties,
02:48 causing ASP to suffer significant monetary and reputational damage when the media widely
02:53 reported on October 24th, 2023, that Meadows told special counsel Jack Smith and/or his
03:01 staff investigating the January 6th insurrection and attack at the United States Capitol and
03:07 testified before a federal grand jury under oath in exchange for immunity from prosecution
03:13 that he warned Donald Trump against claiming that the election fraud corrupted the electoral
03:18 votes cast in the 2020 presidential election and that neither he nor Trump actually believed
03:25 such claims. Meadows reported statements to the special counsel and/or his staff and his
03:30 reported grand jury testimony squarely contradicts the statements in his book, one central theme
03:37 of which is that Trump was the true winner of the 2020 presidential election and that
03:42 the election was "stolen and rigged" with the help from "allies in the liberal media"
03:48 who ignored "actual evidence of fraud right there in plain sight for anyone to access
03:54 and analyze, leading to the wrongful election of Biden." That is what Meadows stated in
03:59 the book. He got a huge advance. The book publisher thought that this would be a profitable
04:05 book. Now the book publisher saying Meadows lied to us because he said something different
04:11 when under oath. This harmed our reputation. We want restitution. We want to claw back
04:16 $350,000 in the advance and we want over a million dollars in expectation profit damages
04:25 that we thought we were going to get, which we're not going to get because this book that
04:29 Meadows published is complete and total crap. This lawsuit was filed in the circuit court
04:36 for the 12th Judicial Circuit in Sarasota County, Florida, in state court there. Let's
04:44 just dig into some of the statement of facts, some profoundly interesting stuff here, folks.
04:50 Meadows said that ASP is a recently formed small independent book publisher and they
04:55 say they call themselves a conservative book publisher. Since launching, ASP has focused
05:02 on conservative writers. Meadows served as the White House Chief of Staff. On January
05:09 9th, 2021, just three days after the January 6th attack, Meadows signed the agreement with
05:17 True Road Books, a copy of which is submitted here with as Exhibit A, pursuant to which
05:22 Meadows agreed to deliver a book for publication. Then that company assigned the publishing
05:28 rights to ASP by assignment dated September 21, 2021. And ASP issued all payments to Meadows
05:36 in connection with the publication of the book. At the time of the assignment, ASP anticipated
05:41 that Meadows would follow the tradition of other former presidential chief of staff accounts
05:47 of their time as the gatekeepers of the president of the United States. Instead, Meadows chose
05:52 to emphasize events from the 2020 presidential election through the January 6th attack. One
05:58 of, play pause here, it's very interesting because you have the book publisher saying
06:03 we just expected that what Meadows was going to talk about was we didn't ask him, we didn't
06:08 pressure him to talk about the insurrection or to spread the big lie. We just wanted to
06:13 hear his insight as just what was it like to be the chief of staff. Meadows chose to
06:18 spend the majority of the book focusing on the insurrection and it turns out that he
06:23 wanted just to lie, like Meadows wanted to lie to the public. I thought that was interesting
06:29 there. One of the book's primary thesis is that Trump was the true winner of the 2020
06:35 election and that the election was stolen by President Biden through widespread election
06:40 flood. Here, the publisher says we didn't tell Meadows to write that. Chapter 15 of
06:47 the book entitled The Long Con begins with this sentence, "I knew he didn't lose," and
06:53 the capital letters are in the original of the book and chronicles how the 2022 presidential
06:59 election was stolen from Trump and rigged with the help from allies in the liberal media
07:04 who ignored actual evidence of fraud right there in plain sight for anyone to access
07:09 and analyze. Meadows concludes, "It's time it became clear that the media's plan, the
07:14 Long Con, had worked." Describing the liberal media and the fake news, Meadows writes, "It
07:20 was one thing for them to rig the election and get away with it, but even for them bragging
07:25 about the theft would be a bridge too far." Meadows quotes Donald Trump as stating, "Mark,
07:32 he would say to me, 'Look, if I lost, I would have no problem admitting it. I would sit
07:36 back and retire, probably have a much easier life, but I didn't lose. People need me to
07:41 get back to work. We're not done yet.'" Meadows adds, "He was absolutely correct." In chapter
07:47 16 of the book entitled The Ride Out, Meadows repeats his central theme of this book that
07:53 the election was stolen. Then it goes through the agreement. In section 19 of the agreement
08:00 under author's warranties, Meadows warrants that all statements contained in the book
08:05 in his autobiography are true and correct based upon a reasonable search and diligence.
08:10 In the book's prologue entitled Hanging Around, Meadows assured readers that the statements
08:15 in the book are accurate. In section 20 of the contract with Meadows, indemnities and
08:21 insurance, Meadows agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the publisher from and against
08:27 all liabilities, damages, costs, and expenses in connection with any claim, action, or proceeding
08:33 arising from a breach of this agreement. Section four of the agreement provides that ASP shall
08:39 pay Meadows in advance against all amounts accruing to him. Under the agreement, a total
08:45 of $350,000 payable as follows. And it goes through all of the contractual terms there.
08:54 And then it basically says that the publisher then learned that this was all a lie, that
09:00 Meadows lied, that Meadows then went to special counsel Jack Smith and told special counsel
09:06 Jack Smith the exact opposite of what's in the book, that Meadows told special counsel
09:11 Jack Smith and the Department of Justice that the election was of course a free and fair
09:16 election that Meadows says that he told Donald Trump that he needs to stop what he was doing
09:23 and stop spreading the big lies.
09:25 What Meadows told special counsel Jack Smith, and that of course, everybody knew that President
09:31 Biden was the real winner of the 2020 election and that Donald Trump knew that and that Meadows
09:38 knew that Donald Trump knew it. By the way, that's why Meadows is going to be such a devastating
09:42 witness against Donald Trump now that he's been provided with immunity by special counsel
09:47 Jack Smith. But here what the book publisher is saying, give us our money back. And not
09:53 only that, pay us our consequential damages. You now screwed up the book because the whole
09:58 book was saying that the big lie was real. And now the big lie actually turns out to
10:04 be a big lie. Here's count one breach of contract. And then the prayer for relief, what is the
10:11 amount of money being asked restitution of $350,000 in the advance and expectation damages
10:19 in the form of lost profits and an amount to be proven at trial exceeding $1 million
10:26 out of pocket damages and amount exceeding $600,000. Attorneys fees and costs in this
10:33 case pursuant to section 20 of the agreement. So Mark Meadows is now finding himself being
10:40 sued and he's going to lose this case and he's going to lose it. And so he took a, just
10:45 think about this though, to just from a practical standpoint, what an idiot Meadows is, what
10:50 a crook he is. So he took $350,000 entered into these terms, knew he was lying. So he
10:57 lied for 350 K and now he's being sued. When you add them up over a million dollars, potentially
11:04 over two, two and a half million dollars. So Meadows could get it hit with a judgment
11:08 in the two, $3 million range with attorney's fees more. This contract has attorney's fees
11:15 on it as well. Well, that's what you get Meadows. And you're still a criminal defendant in the
11:20 Georgia criminal Rico case, even though you got immunity by special counsel, Jack Smith.
11:26 So folks, very, very, very interesting developments there. And we will of course keep you posted,
11:32 but, uh, Oh, and by the way, I shouldn't mention reported first by Midas touch.com and our
11:38 editor in chief, Ron Phillip Kowski. Great work, Ron Phillip Kowski. If you want to support
11:43 the Midas touch network, go to patreon.com/midastouch p a t r e o n.com/midastouch and have an excellent
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12:03 (upbeat music)