Albuquerque Journal

Judge rejects Trump request to dismiss classified docs case

Defense had cited Presidenti­al Records Act in effort to get case tossed

- BY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — A federal judge refused Thursday to throw out the classified documents prosecutio­n of Donald Trump, turning aside defense arguments that a decades-old law permitted the former president to retain the sensitive records after he left office.

Lawyers for Trump had cited a 1978 statute known as the Presidenti­al Records Act in demanding that the case, one of four against the presumptiv­e Republican nominee, be tossed out before trial. That law requires presidents upon leaving office to turn over presidenti­al records to the federal government but permits them to retain purely personal papers. Trump’s lawyers have said he designated the records as personal, making them his own property, and that that decision can not be second-guessed in court.

Prosecutor­s on special counsel Jack Smith’s team countered that the law had no relevance to a case concerning the mishandlin­g of classified documents and said the files Trump is alleged to have hoarded at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida were unquestion­ably presidenti­al records, not personal ones, and therefore had to be returned to the government when Trump left the White House.

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who heard arguments on the dispute last month, permitted the case to proceed in a three-page order that rejected the Trump team claims. She wrote that the indictment makes “no reference to the Presidenti­al Records Act” nor does it “rely on that statute for purposes of stating an offense.” The act, she said, ”does not provide a pre-trial basis to dismiss” the case.

The ruling is the second time in three weeks that Cannon has rebuffed defense efforts to derail the case. It represents a modest win for Smith’s team, which has been trying to push the prosecutio­n forward to trial this year but has also expressed mounting frustratio­n, including earlier this week, with Cannon’s oversight of the case.

Other Trump motions to dismiss the indictment remain unresolved by the judge, the trial date is in flux, and additional legal disputes have slowed the progress of a case that prosecutor­s say features voluminous evidence of guilt by the former president.

In Thursday’s ruling, Cannon also defended an order from last month that asked lawyers for both sides to formulate potential jury instructio­ns and to respond to two different scenarios in which she appeared to be continuing to entertain Trump’s presidenti­al records argument.

The order puzzled legal experts and drew a sharp rebuke from Smith’s team, with prosecutor­s in a filing this week calling the premises the judge laid out “fundamenta­lly flawed” and warning that they were prepared to appeal if she pushed ahead with jury instructio­ns that they considered wrong.

“The Court’s Order soliciting preliminar­y draft instructio­ns on certain counts should not be misconstru­ed as declaring a final definition on any essential element or asserted defense in this case,” Cannon wrote. “Nor should it 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 of first impression.”

Still, she said, if prosecutor­s were demanding that jury instructio­ns be finalized prior to trial and the presentati­on of evidence, “the Court declines that demand as unpreceden­ted and unjust.”

In addition to affirming the indictment Thursday, she also rejected a separate motion to dismiss last month that argued that the Espionage Act statute underpinni­ng the bulk of the charges was unconstitu­tionally vague and should be struck down.

Cannon has yet to rule on other Trump efforts to dismiss the case, including arguments that presidenti­al immunity shields him from prosecutio­n and that he has been subject to “selective and vindictive prosecutio­n.”

Trump is facing dozens of felony counts related to the retention of classified documents, according to an indictment alleging he improperly shared a Pentagon “plan of attack” and a classified map related to a military operation. Authoritie­s say the records were stowed in dozens of boxes haphazardl­y warehoused at Mar-a-Lago, which was searched by the FBI in August 2022 in an escalation of the investigat­ion.

The case was initially set for trial on May 20, but Cannon heard arguments last month on a new date without immediatel­y setting one. Both sides have said they could be ready for trial this summer, though defense lawyers have also said Trump should not be forced to stand trial while the election is pending.

Smith’s team has separately charged Trump with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election, a case delayed by a Supreme Court review of his arguments that he is immune from federal prosecutio­n. Prosecutor­s in Fulton County, Georgia, have also charged Trump with trying to subvert that state’s election, though it remains unclear when that case will reach trial.

Jury selection is set for April 15 in Trump’s hush money criminal trial in New York.

That case centers on allegation­s that Trump falsified his company’s internal records to hide the true nature of payments to his former lawyer Michael Cohen, who helped Trump bury negative stories during his 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Among other things, Cohen paid porn actor Stormy Daniels $130,000 to suppress her claims of an extramarit­al sexual encounter with Trump years earlier.

Trump has pleaded not guilty and denied having a sexual encounter with Daniels.

 ?? UNCREDITED/HOGP, ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image, contained in the indictment against former President Donald Trump, shows boxes of records stored in a bathroom and shower in the Lake Room at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla.
UNCREDITED/HOGP, ASSOCIATED PRESS This image, contained in the indictment against former President Donald Trump, shows boxes of records stored in a bathroom and shower in the Lake Room at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States