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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Monday, January 26, 2026

For Trump, the Truth in Minneapolis Is What He Says It Is - The New York Times

For Trump, the Truth in Minneapolis Is What He Says It Is

"The Trump team has advanced one-sided narratives to justify each of the killings, even when bystander video shows something else entirely.

Donald Trump sits at a large desk wearing a blue tie. A standing person holds a laptop showing a winter street scene.
President Trump has found that putting out a story line early and repeating it often can convince a sizable share of the public that does not credit contrary evidence.Doug Mills/The New York Times

By Peter Baker

Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent, is covering his sixth presidency. He reported from Washington.

Sign up for the Tilt newsletter.  Nate Cohn, The Times’s chief political analyst, makes sense of the latest political data.

Twice since the start of the year, federal officers have gunned down protesters in Minneapolis with cellphone cameras rolling, and twice President Trump and his lieutenants have rushed forward with a message to the American people: Don’t believe what you see with your own eyes.

Without waiting for facts, the Trump team has advanced one-sided narratives to justify each of the killings and demonize the victims. Renee Good, a mother of three, was engaged in “domestic terrorism” and “viciously ran over the ICE Officer,” they declared. Alex Pretti, an I.C.U. nurse at a veterans’ hospital, was an “assassin” aiming to “massacre law enforcement.”

The trick is that the Trump versions of reality have collided with bystander videos watched by millions who did not see what they were told. Ms. Good did not run over the ICE agent who killed her; a video analysis suggested she was trying to turn away from him and he continued to shoot her even as she passed him. Mr. Pretti approached officers with a phone in his hand, not a gun; he moved to help a woman who was pepper sprayed and he was under a pileup of agents when one suddenly shot him in the back.

The videos, sometimes shaky, incomplete or at a distance, may not show the totality of what happened in those confusing split seconds on the street and they do not speak to what was going through the minds of the officers who were described as fearing for their lives and acting in self-defense. Many questions about exactly what happened remain unanswered and further investigation could change the understanding of the deadly events in Minneapolis, perhaps even bolstering the Trump administration’s assertions, but the administration is blocking independent inquiries.

Mr. Trump has found that putting out a story line early and repeating it often can, with the help of an ideological media and online surround-sound machine, convince a sizable share of the public that does not credit contrary evidence. Even after investigations, recounts and his own advisers and attorney general refuted Mr. Trump’s claim that he won the 2020 election, polls show that most Republicans still believe the election was stolen.

And so Mr. Trump and his team have taken the same reality-bending approach to the violence in Minneapolis in evident hopes of persuading the president’s political base, at least, that the protesters were responsible for their own deaths and that “the victims are the Border Patrol agents,” as Gregory Bovino, the official in charge of Mr. Trump’s Border Patrol operations, put it on CNN on Sunday.

And indeed, many of Mr. Trump’s supporters watch the same videos from Minneapolis and find in the sometimes murky images details that to them vindicate the shootings, actions by Ms. Good or Mr. Pretti that appear more threatening than what many others see. In effect, the videos have become a national Rorschach test for American polarization.

The families of Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti have expressed outrage over the distortions presented by the Trump administration. “The sickening lies told about our son by the administration are reprehensible and disgusting,” Mr. Pretti’s parents said in a statementto The Associated Press hours after his killing.

Minnesota officials have lashed out at Mr. Trump and his team, too. “When I hear the officials from the Trump administration describe this video in ways that simply aren’t true, I just keep thinking, ‘Your eyes don’t lie,’” Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, said on “Meet the Press” on NBC on Sunday. “The American people aren’t sitting at a Trump cabinet meeting having to say everything to make him happy. They’re going to make their own judgments.”

Even some Republican lawmakers have been disturbed by the instantaneous jump to conclusions and the efforts to stymie inquiries that might contradict the government’s accounts. “Any administration official who rushes to judgment and tries to shut down an investigation before it begins are doing an incredible disservice to the nation and to President Trump’s legacy,” Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina, wrote online.

Some administration officials sought to push back on Sunday. “You cannot look at a 10-second video and judge what happened,” Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, said on NBC. “You have to look at it from a full, full situation of what’s been happening in Minneapolis for the past several weeks, which is a simple fact.”

Mr. Trump tried to change the subject, attacking Gov. Tim Walz and other Democratic leaders of Minnesota for what he called stoking “the flames of Division, Chaos, and Violence,” and blaming them for the deaths of Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti. “Tragically, two American Citizens have lost their lives as a result of this Democrat ensued chaos,” the president wrote online late on Sunday.

This is a president and an administration with credibility problems even before the agents sent to Minneapolis by Mr. Trump as part of a broad immigration crackdown shot Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti to death. Trump administration officials have issued misleading accounts of several episodes arising from confrontations involving federal officers in recent months.

In September, a jury in Los Angeles acquitted a protester of assaulting a federal officer after the defense argued that officers, including Mr. Bovino, had lied about what happened. In November, a federal judge in Illinois concluded that officials, including Mr. Bovino, had lied about the actions of protesters. Of 100 people charged with felony assault on federal agents in four Democratic-led cities from May to December, 55 saw their charges reduced or dismissed outright, according to an Associated Press examination.

Just last week, the White House posted a digitally doctored photo to make it appear that a Minnesota protester was crying when she was arrested, even though she was not. Rather than back down when caught dissembling, the White House has doubled down, essentially accusing anyone who challenges its version of the truth of siding with criminals.

In response to those who pointed out that the protester image was fake, Kaelan Dorr, a White House deputy communications director, wrote online: “YET AGAIN to the people who feel the need to reflexively defend perpetrators of heinous crimes in our country I share with you this message: Enforcement of the law will continue. The memes will continue.”

Mr. Trump has a long record of dishonesty. He was convicted of 34 felony counts of falsifying business documents, he was found liable in civil court of defrauding lenders, his family-owned business was convicted of criminal tax fraud, he was indicted though not tried on charges of obstruction of justice and defrauding the United States, his charity was shut down after the authorities found a “shocking pattern of illegality” and his self-named university paid out $25 million to settle complaints by students who called the school a sham.

While in office, Mr. Trump has been a prolific source of prevarication on any number of topics, so much so that The Washington Post counted more than 30,000 false or misleading statements in his first term. Most significantly, he repeatedly spread lies about supposed fraud in the 2020 elections that inspired a mob of supporters to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to try to stop the transfer of power — and he continues to promote lies about those events even now on a White House web page that rewrites the history of that day.

Most Americans do not take Mr. Trump at his word. Only 32 percent of Americans consider Mr. Trump to be honest and trustworthy, according to a survey this month by The Economist and YouGov. A Gallup study in his first term found that barely half as many Americans trusted Mr. Trump as they did Presidents George W. Bush or Barack Obama at similar points in their tenures.

While other presidents have been dishonest at times with the public, they have tended to worry that being caught saying something untrue, even if unintentionally, would detract from their public standing. Mr. Trump boldly and brazenly says things he knows or has been told are not true and even after being corrected continues to say them again and again.

“You say something enough times and it becomes true,” he once told Mary Pat Christie, the wife of Chris Christie, the former governor of New Jersey, who has related his wife’s anecdote to associates. Stephanie Grisham, Mr. Trump’s former White House press secretary who has broken with him, recalled that he told her the same thing: “It doesn’t matter what you say, Stephanie — say it enough and people will believe you.”

John F. Kelly, the president’s longest-serving White House chief of staff in his first term, came to believe that Mr. Trump was a pathological liar. As Mr. Kelly has recounted, the president would sit with him and his press staff to go over what to tell reporters about some issue and Mr. Trump would try out lines without any regard for whether they were accurate or not. “But that’s not true,” Mr. Kelly would object. “But it sounds good,” Mr. Trump would reply.

The challenge for Mr. Trump at this point is the modern cellphone. There are scores or hundreds or more on the streets of Minneapolis these days and they are capturing at least a slice of reality regardless of the president’s storytelling. One of the central questions in American life today is whether a picture is worth more than a thousand of Mr. Trump’s words.

Peter Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The Times. He is covering his sixth presidency and sometimes writes analytical pieces that place presidents and their administrations in a larger context and historical framework."

For Trump, the Truth in Minneapolis Is What He Says It Is - The New York Times

Why Is the Trump Administration Demanding Minnesota’s Voter Rolls? - The New York Times

Why Is the Trump Administration Demanding Minnesota’s Voter Rolls?

"The Justice Department has urged Minnesota to hand over voters’ private data. It is part of a national push that has raised concerns about the Trump administration’s motives.

Attorney General Pam Bondi during a hearing in October.
Attorney General Pam Bondi has pushed Minnesota to turn over its full voter roll. Kenny Holston/The New York Times

After federal immigration agents shot and killed an American citizen in Minneapolis for the second time this month, Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a letter to Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota that outlined what she described as three “simple steps” to “bring back law and order.”

Her final step, however, seemed to have little to do with immigration or the state’s fraud scandal, the stated reasons for the federal government’s presence in Minnesota.

“Third, allow the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice to access voter rolls to confirm that Minnesota’s voter registration practices comply with federal law,” she wrote. Minnesota’s secretary of state, Steve Simon, a Democrat, swiftly rejected the demand, calling it an “outrageous attempt to coerce Minnesota into giving the federal government private data on millions of U.S. citizens in violation of state and federal law.”

Ms. Bondi’s request was part of a nearly yearlong fight in which the Trump administration has sought voters’ private data from states across the country. Numerous states, including Minnesota, have not complied, and the Justice Department has sued them.

Here’s a look at what is happening and the concerns over privacy and elections that have arisen:

What, exactly, are these voter rolls?

Nearly every state has a public version of its voter roll that includes basic information like first and last names. Some of these rolls include addresses.

But the complete, unredacted voter file includes personal identifying information, like driver’s license numbers and Social Security numbers. This list is kept private and is maintained by top election officials in each state.

Traditionally, no one can obtain it through public records requests — not even the Justice Department.

Why does the Justice Department want these files?

Ms. Bondi has said that the Trump administration is trying to keep elections secure. But President Trump and his allies — who tried to overturn the 2020 election and continue to deny its legitimacy — have long pushed unsubstantiated claims about undocumented immigrants voting illegally.

And last year, the Justice Department began to try to build the largest set of national voter roll data it has ever collected, raising concerns that the data could be used to cast doubt on future election results.

Is this a normal request?

No, it’s highly unusual.

The Justice Department has taken aggressive steps in the past to try to root out voter fraud, including during former President George W. Bush’s administration. But the idea of the federal government obtaining states’ private voter information was long seen as an overreach, because the Constitution dictates that elections are run mainly by individual states, not the administration in Washington.

How many states have complied?

At least 11, all of them at least partly run by Republicans, according to data from the Brennan Center for Justice, a voting rights and democracy group. Some other states, largely Republican-led ones, have provided their voter data to a separate but related program in the Department of Homeland Security.

But roughly half of the country’s states, most of them led by Democrats, have rejected the requests. The Justice Department has sued at least 24 states and territories, including Minnesota, to force them to turn over their voter data.

Why have states refused?

Some states, including Minnesota, have laws that prevent the transfer of private information. Others have expressed worries about how the Justice Department will keep the enormous troves of private information secure.

But for many election officials and voting rights experts, the main concern is that the Justice Department’s effort is led by Trump allies who long falsely denied that former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. won the 2020 election.

“These data can be manipulated to support false claims about ineligible voting and justify efforts to thwart free and fair elections,” Wendy Weiser, who directs the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center, wrote on social media.

The Minnesota secretary of state, Mr. Simon, said this possibility was on his mind.

“Though I’m not necessarily predicting direct federal interference with elections, I am planning for it,” he said in an interview, “and it would be irresponsible to not do that.”

Do states have a right to withhold the data?

This is still being litigated, but some legal experts have pointed to the Constitution’s language that the “times, places and manner” of elections are governed by the states, and that only Congress — not the president — can make or change election laws.

This month, a federal judge in California dismissed the Justice Department’s lawsuitagainst California seeking to obtain its full voter roll.

“The taking of democracy does not occur in one fell swoop; it is chipped away piece-by-piece until there is nothing left,” wrote Judge David O. Carter, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton. “The erosion of privacy and rolling back of voting rights is a decision for open and public debate within the legislative branch, not the executive.”

Are there any other concerns?

Election officials also say that any national voter roll within the Justice Department would probably be rife with errors because each state’s voter file is updated every day, changing as voters move away or die.

“If any state were to provide a voter list, and the list against which the federal government or anyone else is checking it is out of date, you’re going to have a lot of falsely identified ineligible voters,” Mr. Simon said.

Nick Corasaniti is a Times reporter covering national politics, with a focus on voting and elections."

Why Is the Trump Administration Demanding Minnesota’s Voter Rolls? - The New York Times

Sunday, January 25, 2026

George Conway on MN shooting: Trump administration is “a criminal organi...

Inside ICE Detention: Stripped, Shackled, Starved

Woman dragged from car by ICE agents speaks out for first time

The Execution of Alex Pretti Broke Me

The Constitutional Plan to End The Trump Regime

Alex Jeffrey Pretti Knew He Wanted to Help Others

 

Alex Jeffrey Pretti Knew He Wanted to Help Others

“Alex Jeffrey Pretti, a 37-year-old registered nurse and U.S. citizen, was fatally shot by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis. Colleagues and neighbors described him as a kind, hardworking, and passionate individual dedicated to helping others and advocating for social justice. His death has left those who knew him shocked and grieving.

Shot and killed by immigration agents on a Minneapolis street, he wanted to be a ‘force of good in the world.’

Armed and masked immigration agents stand in the street amid clouds of tear gas.
Protests broke out in Minneapolis near the site where federal officials shot and killed Alex Jeffrey Pretti, a 37-year-old Minneapolis resident, on Saturday morning.David Guttenfelder/The New York Times

The man fatally shot by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis was Alex Jeffrey Pretti, a U.S. citizen with no criminal record, officials said.

Mr. Pretti, who was 37, was a registered nurse who worked in the intensive-care unit at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Minneapolis, according to interviews and public records, and lived in an apartment in Minneapolis a short drive away from where he was killed.

He had a firearms permit, required by state law in Minnesota to carry a handgun, officials said.

Colleagues and acquaintances of Mr. Pretti were stunned by his death, recalling a friendly neighbor and hardworking professional who was devoted to his patients.

Dr. Dimitri Drekonja said that the two had worked together for years. Mr. Pretti was capable, competent and friendly, he said, the kind of person who cared deeply about his work and his patients.

“He was a really great colleague and a really great friend,” he said. “The default look on his face was a smile.”

The two chatted regularly about mountain biking, one of Mr. Pretti’s passions.

Family members of Mr. Pretti declined to comment on Saturday. Michael Pretti, Mr. Pretti’s father, told The Associated Press that he had warned his son to be careful in Minneapolis.

“We had this discussion with him two weeks ago or so, you know, that go ahead and protest, but do not engage, do not do anything stupid, basically,” Michael Pretti said. “And he said he knows that. He knew that.”

Mr. Pretti received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Minnesota in 2011, a spokeswoman said. He graduated from a high school in Green Bay, Wis., in 2006, and was listed on the honor roll in a local newspaper. His parents now live in Colorado, and his former spouse lives in California.

A next-door neighbor, Jeanne Wiener, said she believed Mr. Pretti lived alone with his dog, but saw him walking frequently, and would speak with him several times a week.

Standing in her home, Ms. Wiener said she was shocked to hear of his death.

“We talk over the fence all the time,” she said. “He’s the sweetest, kindest, most unoffensive, most nonviolent person you’d ever want to meet.”

Ruth Anway, who worked with Mr. Pretti, described him as a passionate colleague and kindhearted friend with a sharp sense of humor.

Ms. Anway, a nurse, said she first met Mr. Pretti around 2014 when he was a research assistant at the hospital. She said she had encouraged him to pursue nursing.

“He really thrived in that environment,” she said in a phone interview on Saturday. “He wanted to be helpful, to help humanity and have a career that was a force of good in the world.”

In his free time, she said, Mr. Pretti loved to bike the trails around Minneapolis, and spent time with his dog, Joule.

Ms. Anway said Mr. Pretti followed the news closely and cared deeply about social justice and fighting for fairness.

“I’m not surprised he was out there protesting and observing,” she said.

Aasma Shaukat, a physician at the V.A. who worked with Mr. Pretti, said she had hired him to his first job in the research department at the hospital.

Mr. Pretti, then fresh from college and in his early 20s, had come to her with no medical training, but a deep drive, she said.

“He was your typical struggling young person with a lot of ambition, but no direction yet,” she said. “But he knew he wanted to help people in some way or another.”

Mr. Pretti spent the next few years working for Dr. Shaukat, assisting on medical studies and enrolling patients — while delivering pizzas at night to make ends meet.

The last time they spoke, Mr. Pretti had been working extra shifts as a nurse, saving up to buy a home and a new car.

“He was happy, and I was happy for him because his life was just starting,” she said. “This feels so senseless and just so wrong.”

Corina Knoll is a Times correspondent focusing on feature stories.

Julie Bosman is the Chicago bureau chief for The Times, writing and reporting stories from around the Midwest.

Maia Coleman is a reporter for The Times covering the New York Police Department and criminal justice in the New York area.“

Timeline: How the Shooting of Alex Jeffrey Pretti Unfolded

 

Timeline: How the Shooting of Alex Jeffrey Pretti Unfolded

Federal agents shot and killed a 37-year-old Minneapolis resident, Alex Jeffrey Pretti, at about 9 a.m. Central time on Saturday morning. A video shared with The New York Times by an eyewitness and her lawyer, as well as other video footage posted on social media, documents the violent scene, where agents appear to fire at least 10 shots in a span of only five seconds.

The footage seems to contradict the Department of Homeland Security’s account of the event, which the agency said began after the victim approached the federal agents with a handgun and the intent to “massacre” them.

48 seconds before shooting

Mr. Pretti filming the scene

Immigration agent

Two civilians

Still from video shared with The Times. The New York Times

Videos show a small group of civilians standing in the middle of a street where a person has recently been detained on the ground; the civilians are speaking to federal agents. Mr. Pretti appears to be filming the scene, and he walks closer to the federal agents while holding his phone.

25 seconds before 

Mr. Pretti holding a phone

Agent pepper-sprays the group

Still from video by Philophon via Reddit. The New York Times

Leading up to this moment, one agent shoved two people away from a D.H.S. vehicle and into the street. Mr. Pretti attempted to put himself between the D.H.S. agent and the two civilians, and the agent pushed one of them to the ground. The video shows the same agent squirting pepper spray in the direction of Mr. Pretti’s face. (This agent will later fire shots at Mr. Pretti.)

Mr. Pretti is holding his phone in one hand, and he holds his other hand up to protect against the spray.

17 seconds before

Mr. Pretti holding his phone

Still from video by witness shared with The Times. The New York Times

Several agents grab at Mr. Pretti, who is still holding his phone. Additional agents approach and attempt to pin Mr. Pretti to the ground.

11 seconds before

Mr. Pretti is restrained by multiple agents

Still from video by Philophon via Reddit. The New York Times

Mr. Pretti is surrounded by a group of seven agents, some of whom have wrestled him to the ground. One of the agents, who wears a gray coat, begins to approach the fray with empty hands and grabs at Mr. Pretti, while the other agents hold him down on his knees. At the same time, another agent strikes Mr. Pretti repeatedly with a pepper spray canister.

1 second before

Agent appears to remove a gun

Agent unholsters his weapon

Still from video shared with The Times. The New York Times

The agent in the gray coat appears to pull a gun from near Mr. Pretti’s right hip. He then begins to move away from the skirmish with the recovered weapon.

At the same time, another agent unholsters his firearm and points it at Mr. Pretti’s back.

First shot fired

Agent removes gun from skirmish

Still from witness video via Associated Press. The New York Times

The agent in the gray coat removes the weapon, which matches the profile of a gun D.H.S. says belonged to Mr. Pretti, from the scene. Then, while Mr. Pretti is on his knees and restrained, the agent standing directly above him appears to fire one shot at Mr. Pretti at close range. He immediately fires three additional shots.

Additional shots fired

Mr. Pretti lying on the ground

Two agents who fired shots

Still from video shared with The Times. The New York Times

Several agents have moved away from Mr. Pretti, who has collapsed. Another agent — the same one who shoved the civilians into the street and pepper-sprayed Mr. Pretti — unholsters his gun and fires at Mr. Pretti. The first agent also fires additional shots. Together, they fire six more shots at Mr. Pretti while he lies motionless on the ground.

At least 10 shots appear to have been fired within five seconds. By the moment of the 10th shot, the agent who had moved away with the recovered weapon has crossed the street.

Mr. Pretti is the second person to have been shot and killed by a federal agent in Minnesota in recent weeks. Footage of Mr. Pretti’s death in Minneapolis was posted to social media almost immediately after the shooting.

The Homeland Security Department said that the episode began after a man approached Border Patrol agents with a handgun, and that an agent fired “defensive shots.” Another incident in Minneapolis this month, in which a Venezuelan man was shot in the leg by a federal agent, was also characterized as “defensive” by the department.

Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota disputed the claims by federal officials that Mr. Pretti had posed a threat. He accused “the most powerful people in the federal government” of “spinning stories and putting up pictures.”

Brian O’Hara, the chief of the Minneapolis Police Department, said that Mr. Pretti was an American citizen with no criminal record, and that he had a valid firearms permit. Under Minnesota law, citizens can legally carry a handgun in public, without concealment, if they have a permit.

Large crowds of protesters continued to gather throughout the day at the site of Mr. Pretti’s shooting. Later in the day, Mr. Walz authorized the deployment of the Minnesota National Guard, who will wear neon reflective vests to differentiate themselves from federal agents.“

Rep. AOC Responds to Federal Agents Killing a Minneapolis Man on CNN

Rep. AOC Responds to Federal Agents Killing a Minneapolis Man on CNN

Saturday, January 24, 2026

BREAKING: MN Shooting Victim IDed, New Video of Incident

Gov. Walz to Trump: 'Remove this force from Minnesota'

HOT TAKES! - MAGA Media FAIL!

🚨BREAKING: ICE MURDERS AGAIN in Minneapolis Amid Growing PROTESTS

BREAKING: Video of Shooting in Minneapolis by Federal Agent on Camera

Trump makes a FOOL of himself on world stage; pretends to solve crisis of his own making

Takeaways From Jack Smith’s Testimony on Trump Investigations - The New York Times

4 Takeaways From Jack Smith’s Testimony Before Lawmakers

"In his remarks, the former special counsel repeatedly denied that he had acted out of partisan animus and bemoaned the Trump administration’s efforts to go after the president’s perceived enemies.

Jack Smith, wearing a blue suit and tie, sits at the witness table in a congressional hearing room.
Jack Smith, the former special counsel, urged the lawmakers on Thursday to stand up for the rule of the law.Kenny Holston/The New York Times

The former special counsel Jack Smith appeared before Congress on Thursday to defend his decision to bring two criminal indictments against Donald J. Trump after he left office in 2021.

Mr. Smith’s restrained five-hour testimony to the House Judiciary Committee was the first and perhaps only chance he will have to make his case in an official forum that he was justified in filing the two sets of charges against Mr. Trump in 2023. In separate indictments, Mr. Smith accused Mr. Trump of seeking to overturn his defeat in the 2020 presidential election and of illegally removing reams of highly classified documents from the White House and taking them to Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence in Florida.

Much of what Mr. Smith told lawmakers reprised the testimony he gave last month in a videotaped deposition behind closed doors. In his remarks, he repeatedly denied that he had acted out of partisan animus, and bemoaned the Trump administration’s own efforts to use the Justice Department to go after the president’s enemies.

Here are a few takeaways from his testimony.

Smith’s work was under scrutiny, not his findings

Republican members of the committee spent most of their time attacking various procedural steps that Mr. Smith took in his prosecutions of Mr. Trump in an effort to suggest that he had acted out of political motives. They had less to say, however, about Mr. Smith’s repeated assertion that if the two cases — both of which were dismissed after Mr. Trump won re-election — had gone to trial, there was sufficient evidence to secure convictions.

Skipping from complaint to complaint, the Republican members noted that Mr. Smith had obtained phone records for several Republican lawmakers who were in touch with Mr. Trump and his allies about their plans to overturn the election; issued subpoenas to dozens of Republican fund-raising groups allied with Mr. Trump; and made payments to confidential human sources in the course of his investigation of the election interference charges.

The Republicans expressed outrage about all of these tactics — even though Mr. Smith explained that they were standard tools of criminal prosecutions and that he had followed both the law and the procedures of the Justice Department in using them.

The political attacks were familiar

Instead of raising serious qualms about Mr. Smith’s methods, the committee majority often fell back on familiar political attacks, claiming that he and his team had “weaponized” the criminal justice system on behalf of the Biden administration — an accusation that Mr. Smith repeatedly and adamantly denied.

Several times, under questioning by Democratic lawmakers, Mr. Smith said that he had never received orders from the attorney general at the time, Merrick B. Garland, or from anyone else in the Biden administration about how to pursue his cases against Mr. Trump.

“I am not a politician and I have no partisan loyalties,” Mr. Smith said during his opening statement.

He said that, after three decades as a prosecutor, he had simply followed the facts and the law without “fear or favor.”

“No one should be above the law in this country, and the law required that he be held to account,” he said of Mr. Trump. “So that is what I did.”

Smith remained unbowed by personal broadsides

When asked whether he had any regrets about his investigations, Mr. Smith said he had only one: that he had not expressed more appreciation for the F.B.I. agents and prosecutors who worked under him.

Several of those agents and prosecutors have been fired by the Justice Department because of their service to Mr. Smith. They have also faced efforts by members of Congress to impugn them and their work.

Moreover, Mr. Smith insisted that he would not be cowed by any of the vitriolic broadsides that Mr. Trump has continued to make against him personally. Those included a message that was posted online in the middle of the hearing by an official White House social media account, saying, “Jack Smith is a deranged animal, who shouldn’t be allowed to practice Law.”

Mr. Smith acknowledged that he believed that Trump officials would “do everything in their power” to indict him “because they’ve been told to do so by the president.” But he said he would not bend in the face of the threats.

“I will not be intimidated,” he declared.

Trump’s punitive approach raises concerns about the rule of law

The accusations by Republicans that Mr. Smith had weaponized the criminal justice system came as Mr. Trump’s own Justice Department has done exactly that in ways that have not been seen in a generation. Democratic members — most notably Representative Jared Moskowitz of Florida — pointed out that the Trump administration had gone after dozens of the president’s perceived enemies, bringing charges against some, opening investigations against many more and using other punitive tactics like stripping people of their security clearances.

Mr. Smith expressed concern that the Trump administration was abandoning the traditional norms of criminal prosecution, and he urged the lawmakers to stand up for the rule of the law.

“The rule of law is not self-executing,” he said. “It depends on our collective commitment to apply it.”

He refused to apologize for prosecuting Mr. Trump.

“My belief is that if we do not hold the most powerful people in our society to the standards of the rule of the law, it can be catastrophic,” he said.

Alan Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former President Donald J. Trump. 

Glenn Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and prisons."

Takeaways From Jack Smith’s Testimony on Trump Investigations - The New York Times