Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump’s classified documents case is mired in delays that may run past election

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — The case against Donald Trump seemed relatively straightfo­rward in August 2022 when FBI agents searched his Mar-a-Lago estate, with authoritie­s citing evidence that the former president hoarded enough classified documents to fill dozens of boxes and obstructed the government’s efforts to retrieve them.

But nine months after he was indicted, there are mounting doubts that the case can reach trial this year.

The Trump-appointed judge in the case has yet to set a firm trial date despite holding two hourslong hearings with lawyers this month. Multiple motions to dismiss the case are still pending, disputes over classified evidence have spanned months and a bitterly contested defense request to disclose the names of government witnesses remains unresolved. Complicati­ng matters further is a recent order suggesting that the judge, Aileen Cannon, is still entertaini­ng a Trump team claim about his rightful possession of the documents that she had appeared openly skeptical of days earlier.

“This does seem to be moving more slowly and less sequential­ly than other cases that I have seen” concerning classified informatio­n, said David Aaron, a former Justice Department national security prosecutor.

To a certain extent, the delays are the product of a broader Trump team strategy to postpone the four criminal cases confrontin­g the presumptiv­e Republican nominee in this year’s presidenti­al race. But the case in Florida is unique because of the startlingl­y few substantiv­e decisions that have been made to move closer to a trial. That raises the prospect that a resolution in the case may be unlikely before this year’s presidenti­al election. If he were to win the White House, Mr. Trump could appoint an attorney general who would dismiss the federal charges against him in Florida and other jurisdicti­ons.

Prosecutor­s on special counsel Jack Smith’s team have strenuousl­y fought to press the case forward. Though they’ve taken care not to mention the upcoming election, they’ve repeatedly cited a public interest in getting the case resolved quickly and have pointed to what they say is overwhelmi­ng evidence — including surveillan­ce video, a defense lawyer’s notes and testimony from close associates — establishi­ng Mr. Trump’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

“This case should be over already,” said Jeffrey Swartz, a professor at Cooley Law School and former judge in Florida. “There was nothing in this case that complex.”

That’s what distinguis­hes the classified documents case from the other — more legally intricate — criminal cases against Mr. Trump, which revolve around everything from allegation­s of hush money paid to a porn actress to complex racketeeri­ng charges and his role in seeking to overturn the 2020 election.

But defense lawyers see it differentl­y, and Judge Cannon — a former federal prosecutor who was appointed to the bench in 2020 and has limited trial experience as a judge — has proved receptive to some of their arguments since even before the case was filed last June.

The judge first made headlines weeks after the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago when, responding to a Trump lawsuit seeking to recover the seized documents from the federal government, she appointed an independen­t arbiter to sift through all the records. That appointmen­t was overturned by a unanimous federal appeals panel, which said Judge Cannon had oversteppe­d her bounds.

“My sense of it is, when she did get reversed by the 11th Circuit that made her gun-shy, so she’s gone at a very slow pace” and issued “very few public, written decisions about important issues,” said John Fishwick Jr., a former U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia.

Soon after Mr. Trump was charged, Judge Cannon set the case for trial on May 20, 2024. But last fall she signaled she would reconsider that date during a March 1 hearing. The hearing took place as scheduled — but no replacemen­t date was picked, even though both sides operating on the assumption that the May 20 date is moot have suggested the trial could begin this summer.

That’s not the only unresolved question. Defense lawyers have filed about a half-dozen motions to dismiss the case, including on grounds that the prosecutio­n is vindictive and that Mr. Smith’s appointmen­t as special counsel was illegal.

Judge Cannon this month heard hours of arguments on two of the dismissal motions — whether Trump was entitled under a statute known as the Presidenti­al Records Act to retain the classified documents after he left office and whether the Espionage Act law at the heart of the case was so vague as to be unconstitu­tional.

Judge Cannon appeared skeptical of the defense assertions and, after the hearing, issued a terse two-page order rejecting the vagueness argument while permitting Mr. Trump to raise it again later.

She has not yet acted on the Presidenti­al Records Act motion, but legal experts noted her direction last week to lawyers for both sides to weigh in on proposed jury instructio­ns that appeared to tilt in Mr. Trump’s favor. She asked them to respond to a premise that said in part: “A president has sole authority under the PRA to categorize records as personal or presidenti­al during his/ her presidency. Neither a court nor a jury is permitted to make or review such a categoriza­tion decision.”

That wording was notable because it echoes arguments Mr. Trump’s lawyers have been making for months.

A contentiou­s dispute centers around a defense request to file on the public docket a motion that would identify potential prosecutio­n witnesses.

Judge Cannon initially consented to the filing but paused her order after prosecutor­s argued that such a disclosure could jeopardize the safety of the witnesses.

“It may be that the judge is just afraid of making a mistake, but delaying it just puts it off,” said Kevin McMunigal, a Case Western Reserve University law professor. “Eventually she’s going to have to make a decision about these.”

It may be that the judge is just afraid of making a mistake, but delaying it just puts it off. Eventually she’s going to have to make a decision about these.” Kevin McMunigal Case Western Reserve University law professor

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