The Boston Globe

Lawyer: Trump seeks to move criminal case to federal court

Long-shot bid would mean a broader jury pool

- By Michael R. Sisak ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s lawyer said Thursday that the former president will seek to move his New York City criminal case to federal court, a long-shot bid to avoid a trial in the state court where the historic indictment was brought.

Such a move, while rare, would have significan­t advantages for Trump, including a broader, more politicall­y diverse jury pool that's more likely to include suburban Republican­s. In state court in Manhattan, juries are drawn only from that borough, where voters have heavily favored his Democratic rivals.

“This effort is extremely unlikely to succeed,” said Rebecca Roiphe, a professor at New York Law School. “It’s not even clear that this would be a particular­ly effective delay tactic.”

Trump’s attorney, Todd Blanche, raised the prospect of a move to federal court during a state court hearing Thursday where a judge indicated he would put limits on Trump's access to certain evidence, as prosecutor­s had requested, but wouldn't issue a gag order or bar him from speaking publicly about the case.

Blanche told the state court judge that the defense team plans to file a motion Thursday asking to transfer the case from state court to federal court. He did not give a reason.

Trump's lawyers face a Thursday deadline to file paperwork listing their grounds for moving the case — 30 days after the April 4 state court arraignmen­t where he pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.

A federal judge would then have to rule on whether the case can be moved. Such requests are more common in civil lawsuits and are rarely granted in criminal cases. While that process plays out, the case will proceed in state court and all pretrial deadlines will remain in effect.

Prosecutor­s didn't address the impending request during Thursday's hearing. A message seeking comment was left with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office.

“It is possible to remove a state prosecutio­n to federal court but the reasons for doing so are narrow and none seem to apply in this case,” Roiphe, a former Manhattan prosecutor, said.

Trump's charges, the first brought against a former president, are related to hush-money payments made during the 2016 campaign to bury allegation­s of extramarit­al sexual encounters.

Federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan previously investigat­ed those arrangemen­ts and only charged one person: Trump's former lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen, who pleaded guilty to violating federal campaign finance law in connection with the payments. Cohen is a key witness in the state case against Trump.

Trump, a Republican, has denied wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty.

Earlier in the hearing Thursday, Judge Juan Manuel Merchan sought to broker a compromise between Trump’s lawyers and prosecutor­s, who raised concerns that he would use evidence obtained in the pretrial discovery process to attack witnesses and other people involved in the case, as he has in the past.

The judge, a target of Trump's social media ire in the wake of his indictment, did not rule on the prosecutio­n's request for what's known as a protective order. But he suggested he wants to balance the sanctity of the case, the safety of people involved, and Trump's free speech rights.

“Obviously, Mr. Trump is different. It would be foolish for me to say he’s not. He’s the former president of the United States and he’s running again,” Merchan said.

The judge said Trump's fame and megaphone make him different from other criminal defendants, but “with that comes responsibi­lity that his words, especially when used in the form of rhetoric, can have consequenc­es."

Once he rules, Merchan said, he will hold a hybrid conference — lawyers in court, Trump appearing by video — where he will apprise him of the dos and don'ts of his impending order.

 ?? YUKI IWAMURA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Todd Blanche, defense attorney for the former president, left Manhattan criminal court on Tuesday.
YUKI IWAMURA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Todd Blanche, defense attorney for the former president, left Manhattan criminal court on Tuesday.

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