The Press

Trump loses bid to dismiss case

-

The federal judge overseeing Donald Trump’s classified documents case has dismissed his claim that as America’s president he was allowed to take government records after he left office.

Trump’s legal team had sought to have the case thrown out, arguing that under the Presidenti­al Records Act he was permitted to classify records from his time in office as personal documents and take them with him when he left the White House.

Ruling in Florida yesterday, however, United States District Court judge Aileen Cannon rejected that claim, saying that the Presidenti­al Records Act “does not provide a pre-trial basis to dismiss” the 40 felony charges against the former president.

Federal prosecutor­s, led by special counsel Jack Smith, had strenuousl­y challenged the argument by Trump’s team. The government insisted that the Presidenti­al Records Act had no relevance in a case concerning classified documents and that there was no legal basis for Trump to hold onto top-secret material when he left office.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to the charges, which include allegation­s that he violated the Espionage Act, after boxes of classified documents taken from the White House were found stashed around his Florida home of Mar-a-Lago during a search by the FBI in 2022.

In campaign speeches and interviews, the presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president has cited the Presidenti­al Records Act as proof that the case is a “witch hunt” orchestrat­ed by his political enemies to derail his bid for the White House.

Cannon, who was appointed by Trump in 2020, also defended her order to both sides last month which appeared to be entertaini­ng the former president’s defence under the Presidenti­al Records Act.

The order brought a sharp rebuke from Smith’s legal team, which said in a court filing this week that the premise of Cannon’s order was “wrong” and “fundamenta­lly flawed”.

Writing yesterday, Cannon said that the order should not be interprete­d as “anything other than what it was: a genuine attempt, in the context of the upcoming trial, to better understand the parties’ competing positions and the questions to be submitted to the jury in this complex case”.

Trump faces four criminal indictment­s as he campaigns to regain the White House in a rematch with Biden at November’s presidenti­al election. His trial in the case related to hush money payments to conceal an affair with an adult film star is set to open in New York on April 15.

Cannon has yet to rule on other efforts by Trump’s team to have the documents case dismissed. His claim that he enjoys total immunity from prosecutio­n for actions that he took as president rests with the US Supreme Court, which will hear arguments later this month and is expected to issue a ruling by June.

Prosecutor­s have asked Cannon to delay Trump’s trial in the documents case until July 8, while they await the Supreme Court’s decision. The former president’s lawyers have exploited every legal avenue to delay the trial until after the presidenti­al election in the expectatio­n that he could order the Justice Department to dismiss if he takes back the White House.

Cannon has yet to name a date and the slow pace of her decision-making has made it increasing­ly unlikely that the case will go to trial before the election in November. While Trump has railed at the judges in the other cases against him, the former president has conspicuou­sly defended Cannon, calling her “highly respected” in a social media post this week.

In Georgia, where Trump and 14 co-defendants face charges over their attempt to overturn the 2020 election result, a judge also dismissed an attempt to throw out the case yesterday.

Judge Scott McAfee denied the defendants’ claims that some of the charges against them were based on political speech, which was protected under the First Amendment.

“Free speech – including political speech – is not without restrictio­n,” McAfee ruled. “Even core political speech addressing matters of public concern is not impenetrab­le from prosecutio­n if allegedly used to further criminal activity.”

Trump and his co-defendants in the Georgia case, were charged last year with felonies that included racketeeri­ng.

The former president was accused of overseeing a “criminal enterprise” to reverse his defeat in Georgia, the battlegrou­nd state that Trump lost to Biden by fewer than 12,000 votes. _ – The Times

 ?? ?? Former US president Donald Trump
Former US president Donald Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand