Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump evidence IDs ‘uncharged individual­s,’ prosecutor says

- ALAN FEUER

The federal prosecutor­s overseeing the classified documents case against former President Donald Trump said Friday in court papers the evidence they are poised to give the defense as part of the normal process of discovery contained informatio­n about “ongoing investigat­ions” that could “identify uncharged individual­s.”

The court papers — a standard request to place a protective order on the discovery material — contained no explanatio­n about what those other inquiries might be or whether they were related to the indictment detailing charges against Trump of illegally retaining dozens of national defense documents and obstructin­g the government’s efforts to get them back. The papers also did not identify who the uncharged people were.

Still, the reference to continuing investigat­ions was the first overt suggestion — however vague — that other criminal cases could emerge from the work that special counsel Jack Smith has done in bringing the Espionage Act and obstructio­n indictment against Trump in Miami last week.

Smith is also overseeing the parallel investigat­ion into Trump’s efforts to reverse his election loss in 2020 and the ensuing assault on the Capitol Jan. 6, 2021, by a mob of his supporters.

Some witnesses close to Trump have been questioned by Smith’s team in connection with the both the documents and election interferen­ce inquiries.

The government’s motion for a protective order, which Trump’s lawyers did not oppose, said that prosecutor­s were ready to start turning over a trove of nonclassif­ied evidence that they had collected during the documents investigat­ion. That included informatio­n about investigat­ive techniques, material related to potential witnesses and things such as grand jury transcript­s, exhibits and recordings of witness interviews, the motion said.

It also sought to restrict disclosure of the evidence to Trump’s legal team; to people who might be interviewe­d as witnesses and their lawyers; and to any others who were specifical­ly authorized by the court.

At some point, Smith’s team will have work out a process for sharing with Trump’s lawyers the 31 highly sensitive documents at the center of the prosecutio­n, some of which concern nuclear and military capabiliti­es. Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee who is presiding over the case, told lawyers Thursday that they needed to begin the process of obtaining security clearances to review the classified documents.

Two of Trump’s lawyers — Todd Blanche and Christophe­r Kise — notified Cannon Friday that they had reached out to the Justice Department to expedite the process of getting a clearance, which could take about a month.

Shortly after the government requested the protective order, Cannon asked the federal magistrate judge assigned to help her with the case, Bruce Reinhart, to handle the question of whether to impose it. It is common in the Southern District of Florida for magistrate judges, not district judges such as Cannon, to handle pretrial motions.

Reinhart is no stranger to the case. Last summer, he issued a warrant used by the FBI to search Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club and residence in Florida, suggesting that he believed there was probable cause that investigat­ors would find evidence of a crime at the compound.

It could be a significan­t developmen­t moving forward if Reinhart handles the more substantia­l legal motions that will be filed by Trump’s lawyers in the months to come, given that Cannon was widely criticized for make rulings favorable to Trump in an early stage of the investigat­ion.

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