Sweetwater Reporter

Cannon Rejects Trump Bid to Throw Out Case

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(continued from Page 3) But it left unanswered questions over when the case might proceed to trial and only covered one of the two motions argued in court on Thursday. A separate motion about whether Trump was permitted under the Presidenti­al Records Act to retain the documents after he left the White House remains pending, but the judge also seemed disincline­d to throw out the case on those grounds.

“It’s difficult to see how this gets you to the dismissal of an indictment,” she told a Trump lawyer. Trump attended Thursday’s arguments, listening intently with his hands sometimes clasped in front of him on the defense table as his attorneys pressed Cannon to throw out the case.

The hearing was the second this month in the case in Florida, which has unfolded slowly in the courts since prosecutor­s first brought charges last June. Cannon heard arguments on March 1 on when to schedule a trial date, but has yet to announce one and gave no indication Thursday on when she might do so. Prosecutor­s have pressed the judge to set a date for this summer. Trump’s lawyers are hoping to put it off until after the election.

After the hearing, Trump on his Truth Social platform took note of the “big crowds” outside the courthouse, which included supporters with flags and signs who honked their car horns in solidarity with the ex-president. He again said the prosecutio­n is a “witch hunt” inspired by President Joe Biden. Some of Thursday’s arguments centered on the 1978 statute known as the Presidenti­al Records Act. The law requires presidenti­al documents to be turned over to the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, though former presidents may retain notes and papers created for purely personal reasons.

His lawyers say the act entitled him to designate as personal property the records he took with him to Mar-a-Lago in Florida and that he was free to do with the documents as he pleased.

“He had original classifica­tion authority,” said defense lawyer Todd Blanche. “He had the authority to do whatever he thought was appropriat­e with his records.” Prosecutor­s countered that those records were clearly presidenti­al, not personal, and included top-secret informatio­n and documents related to nuclear programs and the military capabiliti­es of the U.S. and foreign countries. They say the presidenti­al records statute was never meant to permit presidents to retain classified and top-secret documents, like those kept at Mar-a-Lago.

“The documents charged in the indictment are not personal records, period. They are not,” Harbach said. “They are nowhere close to it under the definition of the Presidenti­al Records Act.”

Trump’s lawyers separately challenged as overly vague a statute that makes it a crime to have unauthoriz­ed retention of national defense informatio­n, a charge that forms the basis of 32 of the 40 felony counts against Trump in the case. Defense lawyer Emil Bove said ambiguity in the statute permits what he called “selective” enforcemen­t by the Justice Department, leading to Trump being charged but enabling others to avoid prosecutio­n. Bove suggested a recent report by special counsel Robert Hur that criticized President Joe Biden’s handling of classified informatio­n did not recommend charges proved his point about the lack of clarity.

When a law is unclear, Bove told Cannon, “The court’s obligation is to strike the statute and say ‘Congress, get it right.’” Jay Bratt, another prosecutor with Smith’s team, disputed that there was anything unclear about the law, and Cannon pointedly noted that striking down a statute would be “quite an extraordin­ary step.”

In her subsequent ruling rejecting the defense request, she cited “stillfluct­uating definition­s of statutory terms/phrases” along with “disputed factual issues” that could be decided by a jury.

Trump is accused of intentiona­lly holding onto some of the nation’s most sensitive documents at Mara-Lago — only returning a fraction of them upon demand by the National Archives. Prosecutor­s say he urged his lawyer to hide records and to lie to the FBI by saying he no longer was in possession of them and enlisted staff to delete surveillan­ce footage that would show boxes of documents being moved around the property.

Cannon has suggested in the past that she sees Trump’s status as a former president as distinguis­hing him from others who have held onto classified records.

After the Trump team sued the Justice Department in 2022 to get his records back, Cannon appointed a special master to conduct an independen­t review of the documents taken during the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago search. That appointmen­t was later overturned by a federal appeals court. On Thursday, she wrestled with the unpreceden­ted nature of the case, noted that no former president had ever faced criminal jeopardy for mishandlin­g classified informatio­n. But, Bratt responded, “there was never a situation remotely similar to this one.”

Trump is separately charged in a federal case in Washington with conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. Trump has argued in both federal cases that presidenti­al immunity protects him from prosecutio­n, though Cannon has not agreed to hear arguments on that claim in the documents case.

The U.S Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments on Trump’s immunity claim in the election interferen­ce case next month.

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