Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - December 13, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A6
A 6 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2020 ? WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COMNEWS I WORLD
'IMMENSELY DANGEROUS'
Former Trump attorney's sloppy, error-riddled and baseless election lawsuits an attack on democracy
A TLANTA - Conservative attorney Sidney Powell has been unrelenting in
her battle on behalf of President
Donald Trump and the Americans
who have pledged their faith in him,
regardless of the facts of the 2020
election - namely, that Joe Biden
won.
She's filed a series of lawsuits in
battleground states that have been
rejected by the courts and even, ap-
parently, was too much for Trump
- she was dropped from his cam-
paign legal team last month after
making incorrect statements about
the voting process and promising to
"blow up" Georgia with a "biblical"
lawsuit. But she continues to press
forward on Trump's behalf, leading
some observers to criticize her for
providing false hope to the presi-
dent's supporters and to question
her true motives.
"I'm going to release the Kraken,"
Powell said in a Fox Business inter-
view in mid-November, an apparent
reference to the film Clash of the
Titans in which Zeus gives the order
to release the mythical sea monster.
Powell did not immediately respond
to a voicemail left Thursday at her
Dallas law firm.
A former federal prosecutor now
in private practice, Powell has played
significant roles in some major cases,
such as defending white-collar execu-
tives in the fallout from the collapse
of Enron, and she's been outspoken
about what she sees as federal over-
reach in law enforcement.
She attracted a following in con-
servative circles in recent years with
her attacks against special counsel
Robert Mueller and his team of
prosecutors. The caricature she cre-
ated of overzealous and unethical law
enforcement officials lined up with
Trump's own talking points against
Mueller and made her a familiar pres-
ence on Fox News.
But her star turn came when she
defended Gen. Michael Flynn, whose
case was eventually dropped by the
Justice Department in a stunning
move.
Despite being tossed off the presi-
dent's legal team, Powell has contin-
ued to push his claim that the election
was stolen.
She filed her lawsuit in Georgia
the day before Thanksgiving, one of
a group of similar "Kraken" suits -
including in Michigan, Wisconsin and
Arizona - that allege widespread
fraud in seeking to overturn the
results of the presidential election.
As they were filed, lawyers across
the country reacted on social media,
some puzzling about her strategy
and others outright mocking her in
paragraph-by-paragraph analysis.
In addition to recycling debunked
claims, the filings are sloppy - rid-
dled with typos, factual mistakes and
other errors.
In an analysis of Powell's Georgia
lawsuit in the Daily Report legal
newspaper, Atlanta lawyer Andrew
Fleischman argued that the Kraken
metaphor is apt: "In Clash of the
Titans, everyone talks about the
Kraken. Everyone is afraid of the
Kraken. And yet the Kraken gets only
about five minutes of screen time
before being soundly defeated."
U.S. District Judge Timothy Bat-
ten promptly dismissed the Georgia
suit at the end of an hourlong hear-
ing Monday. The suits in Michigan,
Wisconsin and Arizona met similar
fates. Powell is vowing to fight on in
appeals.
The repeated failure of her efforts
is not surprising given that election
officials have repeatedly said there's
no evidence of widespread errors or
fraud and the lawsuits don't seem to
have a coherent legal strategy that
could lead to the outcome they seek,
several legal experts said.
"It's hard to believe that the law-
yers actually believe they're going
to win," New York University law
professor Stephen Gillers said. "The
reason you file a lawsuit is to win. But
when their loss rate is as high as it is,
one looks for another explanation for
what they're doing."
That alternate motive isn't entirely
clear, he said. It could be a fundrais-
ing push, with the ongoing fight
allowing the president to continue
asking his supporters for money, or
they could be trying to delay state
certification of electors in an attempt
to have state lawmakers appoint a
slate of electors who would vote for
the president, he said.
Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola
Law School in Los Angeles, offered
another possibility, suggesting that
Powell might be seeking to "satisfy
the president's need for action related
to grievance."
"This is the equivalent of a wartime
general facing certain and complete
defeat screaming at the troops,
'Somebody do something!'," he said.
"So maybe this is an attempt for
somebody to do something."
But even if it is almost certain the
legal challenges won't affect the elec-
tion results, they are a threat to de-
mocracy, which depends on the belief
that elections are fair, Levitt said.
"The continuing litigation is con-
tinuing to convince millions of Ameri-
cans that something was stolen from
them when it absolutely was not," he
said. "Right now what the litigation
is helping to teach Americans is that
they shouldn't have to ever mentally
prepare for the possibility that they
might lose a fair election. That's im-
mensely dangerous."
The message is resonating with
some who are angry about Trump's
loss.
P OWELL appeared Dec. 2 at a "Stop the Steal" rally in Alpharetta, a suburb north
of Atlanta, alongside prominent
Atlanta attorney Lin Wood, who has
teamed up with her on the Kraken
suits and filed his own federal law-
suit challenging the outcome of the
election in Georgia.
Wood invited questions from the
audience. The first woman to climb
onstage to ask a question turned to
Powell and said, "First of all, Sidney,
you're my hero." Then she asked
for advice: "What should we say -
give us some responses to give - to
friends or loved ones who think we're
crazy."
Powell acknowledged that divisions
run deep and encouraged her fans to
have "calm, factual" conversations
with their friends and loved ones.
That's good advice, but it's hard to
square with the baseless allegations
and conspiracy theories Powell has
been pushing, Levitt said.
The sloppiness of Powell's filings
and the repeated findings by judges
that her claims lack merit or are filed
in the wrong jurisdiction are not good
for her professional reputation, but
she's unlikely to face disciplinary ac-
tion, experts said.
There are rules of civil procedure
and ethics rules that forbid lawyers
from filing cases with no factual or
legal basis, and judges can impose
sanctions for frivolous or vexatious
lawsuits or motions. But it's pretty
rare, and judges might be more for-
giving in cases like election-related
lawsuits, where lawyers have less
time to gather facts and draft their
pleadings, Fordham University law
professor Bruce Green said.
"In theory, Ms. Powell could face
discipline if courts concluded that
what she was doing was horrifyingly
bad, but that is just unlikely," he said.
"I think the courts and disciplinary
authorities are going to let the court
of public opinion weigh in."
- The Associated Press
KATE BRUMBACK
BEN GRAY / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION
MANDEL NGAN / AFP
Attorney Sidney Powell, whose rhetoric was too much even for Trump, who fired her from his legal team, continues to advance baseless claims of electoral fraud, including at a rally of
Trump supporters in Alpharetta, Ga. (bottom).
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