Jamaica Gleaner

Trump appears at federal court in classified documents case

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SEEKING TO turn legal problems into political gain, former President Donald Trump arrived Monday to a crowd of supporters at a federal courthouse in Florida for a closed hearing in the criminal case charging him with mishandlin­g classified documents.

His motorcade left after several hours as supporters called his name.

In the latest mixing of court appearance­s into Trump’s election-season calendar, supporters with signs and flags assembled outside a courthouse barricade as a Trump campaign message to allies with the subject line of “I’m in court. Again!” warned that unspecifie­d opponents “want me arrested” and “erased from the ballot”.

The message reinforced his team’s strategy of politicisi­ng his four criminal prosecutio­ns, including in Florida, where he faces dozens of felony counts accusing him of hoarding highly classified records at his Mar-a-Lago estate and obstructin­g FBI efforts to get them back.

Monday’s court date was scheduled as a procedural hearing, closed to the public, to discuss the procedures for handling classified evidence in the trial currently set for May 20. US District Judge Aileen Cannon set arguments in the morning from defence lawyers and in the afternoon from prosecutor­s, each outside of the other’s presence.

“Defence counsel shall be prepared to discuss their defence theories of the case, in detail, and how any classified informatio­n might be relevant or helpful to the defence,” Cannon wrote in scheduling the hearing.

The closed hearing comes as prosecutor­s have also revealed that a prospectiv­e government witness has received threats over social media that are now the subject of federal investigat­ion.

Trump’s motorcade arrived at the courthouse in Fort Pierce shortly after 9 a.m. Supporters outside held signs with messages including “Trump 2024” and “Florida is Trump Country.” He left the building in his motorcade after 2 p.m. while supporters shouted his name.

The hearing is one of several voluntary court dates that Trump has attended in recent weeks — he was present, for instance, at appeals court arguments last month in Washington — as he looks to demonstrat­e to supporters that he intends to fight his criminal prosecutio­ns while also seeking to reclaim the White House this November.

In addition to the Florida case, Trump faces charges in Atlanta and Washington related to efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. He’s also charged in state court in New York in connection with hush money payments made to porn actor Stormy Daniels. He has denied any wrongdoing.

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