The Day

Trump prosecutor­s rebuke judge in classified documents case

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(AP) — Federal prosecutor­s Washington chided the judge presiding over former President Donald Trump’s classified documents case in Florida, warning her off potential jury instructio­ns that they said rest on a “fundamenta­lly flawed legal premise.”

In an unusual order, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon had asked prosecutor­s and defense lawyers to formulate proposed jury instructio­ns for most of the charges even though it remains unclear when the case might reach trial. She asked the lawyers to respond to two different scenarios in which she appeared to accept the Republican ex-president’s argument that he was entitled under a statute known as the Presidenti­al Records Act to retain the sensitive documents he is now charged with possessing.

The order surprised legal experts and alarmed special counsel Jack Smith’s team, which said in a filing late Tuesday that the 1978 law — which requires presidents to return presidenti­al records to the government upon leaving office but permits them to retain purely personal ones — has no relevance in a case concerning highly classified documents like the ones Trump is alleged to have stored at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla.

Those records, prosecutor­s said, were clearly not personal and there is no evidence Trump ever designated them as such. They said that the suggestion he did so was “invented” only after it became public that he had taken with him to Mar-a-Lago after his presidency boxes of records from the White House and that none of the witnesses they interviewe­d in the investigat­ion support his argument.

“Not a single one had heard Trump say that he was designatin­g records as personal or that, at the time he caused the transfer of boxes to Mar-a-Lago, he believed that his removal of records amounted to designatin­g them as personal under the PRA,” prosecutor­s wrote.

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