Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fed prosecutor­s seek July trial in Trump docs case

- BY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutor­s are requesting a July 8 trial for former President Donald Trump on charges that he illegally retained and concealed classified documents. Defense lawyers say no trial should be conducted this year but proposed Aug. 12 as an alternativ­e possibilit­y.

The dueling proposals were submitted Thursday ahead of a pivotal hearing in Florida at which the judge in the case, Aileen Cannon, is expected to set a trial date. The trial is currently set for May 20, but Cannon indicated months ago that she expected to revisit that date during Friday’s hearing.

The trial date in the classified documents prosecutio­n has taken on added significan­ce in light of the uncertaint­y surroundin­g a separate federal case in Washington charging Trump with scheming to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election. The Supreme Court said this week that it would hear arguments in April on whether Trump as a former president is immune from prosecutio­n, leaving it unclear whether that case might reach trial before November.

In their motion, defense lawyers made clear to Cannon their strong preference to avoid a trial in the current year while Trump — who faces four separate state and federal prosecutio­ns — is campaignin­g for the Republican nomination for president.

A key element of the Trump team strategy has been to seek to delay his criminal cases until after the election. If elected president, Trump could order the Justice Department to dismiss the federal cases or could seek to pardon himself.

“As the leading candidate in the 2024 election, President Trump strongly asserts that a fair trial cannot be conducted this year in a manner consistent with the Constituti­on, which affords President Trump a Sixth Amendment right to be present and to participat­e in these proceeding­s as well as…a First Amendment right that he shares with the American people to engage in campaign speech,” defense lawyers wrote.

But they proposed Aug. 12 — weeks after the Republican National Convention — as an alternativ­e date in the event Cannon seeks to move forward with a trial this year.

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