Times-Herald (Vallejo)

The spotlight on Trump judge intensifie­s

- By Eric Tucker and Adriana Gomez Licon

>> A month after former President Donald Trump was charged with mishandlin­g classified documents, the judge presiding over the case is set to take on a more visible role as she weighs competing requests on a trial date and hears arguments this week on a procedural, but potentiall­y crucial, area of the law.

A pretrial conference Tuesday to discuss procedures for handling classified informatio­n will represent the first courtroom arguments in the case before U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon since Trump was indicted five weeks ago. The arguments could provide insight into how Cannon intends to preside over the case while she also confronts the unresolved question of how to schedule Trump's trial as he campaigns for president.

Those issues would be closely watched in any trial involving a former president. But Cannon could face additional scrutiny in light of a much-dissected ruling she issued last year that granted the Trump team's request for a special master to conduct an independen­t review of the reams of classified records removed by the FBI from his Mar-a-Lago estate. A threejudge federal appeals panel reversed her order, rebuking Cannon for a ruling it said she lacked the legal authority to make in the first place.

Cannon's ruling, in a lawsuit Trump brought against the Justice Department, elicited criticism from legal experts who saw her as overly preferenti­al to the former president. It also focused public attention on her limited experience

as a judge, particular­ly in hugely sensitive national security matters, given that she was appointed to the bench just three years ago by Trump.

Still, some Florida lawyers say there's no doubt, as the judge assigned to Trump's criminal case, that she's mindful of the stakes of the most politicall­y explosive federal prosecutio­n in recent memory.

“She is not going to want to do anything but go by the book. The challenge is there has never been a book like this,” said Kendall Coffey, a former U.S. Attorney in Miami who served on the advisory committee that reviewed Cannon's judicial applicatio­n. He said he was impressed with her credential­s and felt confident she would be able to oversee the case fairly.

“I think she is going to want to be very well-regarded for her judicial leadership of this case,” Coffey said.

Jeffrey Garland, a criminal defense lawyer in Fort Pierce, Florida — where Cannon's courtroom is based — praised Cannon for her handling of a trial he had before her last year

in which he represente­d a “quite difficult” defendant who'd been charged with throwing a chair at a federal prosecutor.

“She was able to maintain the dignity of the court and courtroom composure, and she was able to express control in ways that were not threatenin­g,” Garland said, adding that he assumed Cannon would be able to do the same in the Trump case. “I think she understand­s that's what a federal judge has to do in a case like this. It's true in any case, but especially in this case.”

Cannon — a Duke University graduate and Colombian-born daughter of a Cuban immigrant — clerked for a U.S. Circuit Court judge and worked as an assistant U.S. attorney in Florida, prosecutin­g several dozen cases as part of her office's Major Crimes Division and later handling appeals of conviction­s and sentences, before being nominated by Trump in 2020. She's also been a member of the Federalist Society, a conservati­ve legal organizati­on.

Her ruling in the Trump lawsuit in September catapulted her into the spotlight because it effectivel­y halted core aspects of the Justice Department's investigat­ion into the hoarding of classified documents. In overturnin­g the order, the appeals court said that letting it stand would have allowed a “radical reordering of our caselaw limiting the federal courts' involvemen­t in criminal investigat­ions.”

As the judge assigned to Trump's criminal prosecutio­n, she'll be empowered to issue rulings that could shape the trajectory of the case, including about what evidence can and can't be admitted and whether to proceed swiftly toward trial or grant the Trump team's request for a delay.

There have been few matters of substance for Cannon to decide in the month since Trump's indictment, although she did set a tentative August trial date — a formality under the Speedy Trial Act — in Fort Pierce and rebuffed a Justice Department request to file under seal a list of witness who prosecutor­s want Trump to be prohibited from discussing the case with.

But major issues lie ahead.

Prosecutor­s and defense lawyers are at odds over the trial date, a question with significan­t legal and political implicatio­ns. The Justice Department has proposed a Dec. 11 trial, while defense lawyers have suggested that it should be put off until after the 2024 presidenti­al election, citing the challenges of scheduling a date while Trump pursues the Republican nomination and legal issues that they say are “extraordin­ary” and complex.

It is not clear when that issue will be resolved.

 ?? U.S. SENATE VIA AP ?? In this image from video provided by the U.S. Senate,
Aileen Cannon speaks remotely during a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight nomination hearing to be U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida on July 29, 2020, in Washington.
U.S. SENATE VIA AP In this image from video provided by the U.S. Senate, Aileen Cannon speaks remotely during a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight nomination hearing to be U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida on July 29, 2020, in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States