The Guardian (USA)

Trump legal team admits possibilit­y that expresiden­t could be charged

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Donald Trump’s legal team has acknowledg­ed the possibilit­y that the former president could be indicted amid the investigat­ion into his retention of government secrets at his Mar-aLago resort in Florida.

Despite Trump’s claiming days earlier that he couldn’t imagine being charged, his lawyers made the stark admission that he could be in a court filing on Monday proposing how to conduct an outside review of documents that were seized by the FBI in August.

A “special master” – a court official appointed to help administer the review process, the federal judge Raymond Dearie –had previously asked Trump to detail any materials stored at Mar-a-Lago that he may have decided to declassify.

In the court filing, Trump’s lawyers – who had successful­ly pushed for the special master’s appointmen­t – said that requiring him to do so could hurt any possible defense should he later be charged, and that he should not have to “fully and specifical­ly disclose a defense to the merits of any subsequent indictment without such a requiremen­t being evident” during the review.

Dearie was set to have his first meeting with Trump’s lawyers and their opponents in the case, the US justice department’s prosecutor­s, on Tuesday

in federal court in Brooklyn. He reportedly rejected the Trump side’s request to delay asserting what materials he may have classified.

As of Tuesday, Trump’s lawyers had contended he could have declassifi­ed any of the documents if he wished, but they have stopped short of saying he actually did.

The former president so far has been loth to publicly consider the possibilit­y that he could be criminally charged following the FBI’s search of his resort. In a 15 September interview with the conservati­ve radio host Hugo Hewitt, Trump said, “I can’t imagine being indicted, I’ve done nothing wrong” – in either the classified documents case or the investigat­ion into his efforts to undermine the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election, which he lost to Joe Biden.

Trump also said, “I don’t think the people of the United States would stand for it,” and that charges wouldn’t deter him from running for the White House again in 2024 if he wanted.

Justice department prosecutor­s filed their own proposal for the outside review of the seized documents, with key difference­s: while Trump’s team wanted Dearie to make the seized documents reviewable within days, the justice department maintained that he should first check with the federal agency in charge of managing government records.

Dearie was appointed to his role by the Florida-based federal judge Aileen Cannon, who is overseeing the document-review process made necessary by the Mar-a-Lago search.

Cannon gave Dearie a deadline of 30 November to review the documents.

The FBI said its search of Trump’s resort came after agents developed compelling evidence that the former president was storing secret government materials there. According to officials, agents seized about 11,000 documents as well as nearly 50 empty folders emblazoned with classified markings.

Trump and his associates have also been under congressio­nal investigat­ion for their actions before, during and after the deadly US Capitol attack that a mob of his supporters staged on 6 January 2021.

The attack aimed to stop the US House and Congress from certifying Biden’s victory in the previous year’s race for the Oval Office. Among other things, Trump is accused of ignoring pleas to call off his supporters on the day of the siege.

 ?? Photograph: Gaelen Morse/Reuters ?? Attorneys for Donald Trump said answering questions about declassifi­cation could hurt any possible defense to ‘any subsequent indictment’.
Photograph: Gaelen Morse/Reuters Attorneys for Donald Trump said answering questions about declassifi­cation could hurt any possible defense to ‘any subsequent indictment’.

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