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President-elect Donald Trump said Thursday he will nominate Todd Blanche, one of his criminal defense lawyers, to be deputy attorney general. The statement noted that Blanche has experience working for the Justice Department — something former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., Trump's choice for attorney general, does not have. Blanche was Trump's lead lawyer when he stood trial on charges of falsifying business records related to a hush money payment this year. If Blanche's nomination is confirmed before Gaetz's, he could serve as acting attorney general while Gaetz goes through the process. He will also nominate D. John Sauer, who argued Trump's successful immunity case before the Supreme Court, for solicitor general.
Persons: Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, Todd, Trump, Blanche, Justice Department —, Matt Gaetz, Trump's, Juan Merchan, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith's, Smith ., Tanya Chutkan, Gaetz's, Gaetz, Emil Bove, Emil, John Sauer, John, Antonin Scalia, Sauer's Organizations: Justice Department, Justice, of New York United, of New York United States Attorney’s, Trump, State, Manhattan, White House, U.S, Smith . U.S, Senate, National Security Unit, United States Supreme, Supreme, MAGA Locations: Southern, of New York United States, ., Florida, Missouri
Prosecutors sought to vacate remaining deadlines in Donald Trump's election-interference case. Justice Department policy says a sitting president cannot be prosecuted while in office. AdvertisementA federal judge on Friday granted special counsel Jack Smith's request to vacate all pending deadlines for President-elect Donald Trump's federal election interference case. There is long-standing Justice Department policy that a sitting president cannot be prosecuted while in office. Over the last month, the federal judge overseeing the election interference case released a trove of prosecutors' evidence against Trump.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Jack Smith, , Jack Smith's, Smith, Trump, John Moscow, Steven Cheung Organizations: Service, Trump Department of Justice, Manhattan, Department of Justice, Department, Trump
A federal judge has released additional evidence against Donald Trump in his election interference case. The release follows a previously unsealed motion with new evidence against Trump by special counsel Jack Smith. Trump tried to delay the release of Friday's court documents until after the 2024 presidential election. The collection is related to special counsel Jack Smith's 165-page bombshell motion that included a trove of new evidence against Trump in the case. Advertisement"That's exactly what I did," Bowers told committee member Adam Schiff during the June 19, 2022 interview.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, , Tanya Chutkan, Jack Smith's, Smith, Brad Raffensperger, Chutkan, Mike Pence, Anna Moneymaker, Mike Pence's, Joe Biden's, Rusty Bowers, Ross D, Biden, Bowers, Adam Schiff, Bower's Organizations: Trump, Service, United States, Georgia, Prosecutors, Former Arizona, AP, Arizona House
Trump's lawyers argued in a court filing that evidence is being used in Kamala Harris ads. Trump's attorneys asked a judge to hold off on the release of documents until after the election. AdvertisementDonald Trump is fighting to delay another release of prosecutors' evidence in the 2020 election interference case against him. AdvertisementChutkan has previously admonished Trump's team for seemingly raising conspiracy theories in their arguments. Additionally, the court documents said that Trump replied, "So what?"
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , Trump's, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Harris, Chutkan, Smith, Trump, Mike Pence, Pence, President's Organizations: Service, United States, Democratic, Trump, Politico, Business
Trump's team had asked Chutkan to compel prosecutors in special counsel Jack Smith's office to provide them with additional evidence, including "all information" about foreign interference and influence efforts in the 2020 election. It's part of the Trump team's attempt to present Trump's concerns about mass voter fraud — which were roundly rejected by independent arbiters and courts — as "reasonable" and grounded in reality. Judge Tanya Chutkan pushed back on Trump's claims on Wednesday in an order that rejected all but three of his 14 categories of requests for additional evidence. Trump's state of mind is essential to the case, and Smith's team has alleged that Trump "knew" his election lies "were false." The Supreme Court gutted part of Smith's case over the summer with its ruling on presidential immunity, but the case against Trump is — very slowly — churning towards a potential trial.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Jack Smith's, Trump, Trump’s, of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, Mark Milley, Chris Miller, Mike Pence, Pence, Merrick Garland, Smith's, Trump “, Joe Biden’s, Steven Cheung, Witch Hunt Organizations: Capitol, Trump, Biden Administration, of National Intelligence Locations: Black, Detroit, United States, Trump's
Special counsel Jack Smith, left, seen in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 1, and former President Donald Trump, seen in Palm Beach, Florida, on Nov. 8, 2022. WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal brought by X, Elon Musk's social media company, declining to decide whether prosecutors should have been able to obtain data from former President Donald Trump's Twitter account without him being notified. The case arose as part of special counsel Jack Smith's investigation into Trump over alleged election interference in 2020, which the Supreme Court stymied earlier this year by ruling that presidents have broad immunity from prosecution for official acts taken in office. Smith has already obtained the data at issue in the appeal brought by X, as Twitter is now known following Musk's takeover of the social media company. A federal judge approved the warrant, as well as a nondisclosure order that prevents X from telling Trump or anyone else about it.
Persons: Jack Smith, Donald Trump, WASHINGTON —, Elon, Donald Trump's, Jack Smith's, Trump, Smith, X Organizations: Washington , D.C, WASHINGTON, X, Twitter, Communications, U.S, Circuit, Appeals, District of Columbia Locations: Washington ,, Palm Beach , Florida
2020 is back on the 2024 campaign trail
  + stars: | 2024-10-06 | by ( Brent D. Griffiths | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
pic.twitter.com/mcgmR3q0SU — Kamala Harris (@KamalaHarris) October 4, 2024Former Trump 2020 staffer Matt Wolking said the Harris' campaign focus on January 6 illustrates a return to the core of what made Biden's campaign struggle. Trump's campaign blamed the media for the renewed focus on January 6. "Did Kamala Harris censor Americans from speaking their mind in the wake of the 2020 COVID situation?" Harris' campaign soon cut what Walz described as Vance's "damning non-answer" into an attack ad. AdvertisementAsked again about his views on the 2020 election, Vance remained defiant after a Friday rally.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Liz Cheney, , Trump, Harris, Cheney, Cassidy Hutchinson, Bob Lange, Donald Trump, mcgmR3q0SU — Kamala Harris, Matt Wolking, Kamala, Wolking, Biden, hasn't, Karoline Leavitt, Jack Smith's, Mike Pence, Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, Tim Walz, Tim, Vance, Walz Organizations: Service, Capitol, Trump, Republican Party, Business, Biden, Voters, PBS, Marist, United States Maritime Alliance, Washington Post, Gov, Tuesday's, GOP Locations: Ripon , Wisconsin, Trump's, Pennsylvania, Michigan , Wisconsin , Pennsylvania, Arizona, Washington, Ohio
The GOP's SCOTUS dreams: From the Politics Desk
  + stars: | 2024-10-02 | by ( The Politics Desk | ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +10 min
In today’s edition, senior national political reporter Sahil Kapur looks at the excitement among Republicans over the prospect of confirming new Supreme Court justices if Donald Trump wins. Republicans eye confirming even more Supreme Court justices if Trump winsBy Sahil KapurDuring Donald Trump’s White House tenure, Republicans assembled the most conservative Supreme Court in a century. Five almost seems too much to hope for.”On the campaign trail, Harris hasn’t said much about the prospect of Supreme Court vacancies under the next president. Read more →Harris’ campaign targeted Trump’s age for the first time in paid media since she became the Democratic nominee with a new digital ad. Read more → Follow live coverage from the campaign trail →That’s all from the Politics Desk for now.
Persons: Sahil Kapur, Donald Trump, Chuck Todd, Donald Trump’s, Kamala Harris, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, ” Sen, Josh Hawley, , I’m, ” Hawley, Thomas, Alito — “, Trump, Franklin D, Roosevelt, Sen, John Cornyn, Harris hasn’t, Roe, Wade, Dick Cheney, Joe Lieberman, John Edwards, Joe Biden, Sarah Palin, Paul Ryan, Tim Walz, JD Vance, Vance, Walz, Kamala Harris ’, Harris, Read, Chuck → 🗞️, Filip, $4 Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Trump, Republicans, GOP, Republican, , Biden, aig Locations: Texas
The filing asserts that Trump knew that the claims he was spreading about the 2020 election were lies, with Smith's team arguing that Trump didn't believe his own falsehoods but instead spread them as part of his broader scheme to stay in power. Trump, Smith's team said, was informed that election night results might be misleading because it would take a while to count mail-in ballots, which were expected to be favorable to Joe Biden. Trump, Smith's team said, declared to his advisors that he "would simply declare victory before all the ballots were counted and a winner was projected" and publicly began laying the groundwork by telling his supporters he'd only lose if there was fraud. Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung called the Smith team's filing “falsehood-ridden" and tied its release to the vice presidential debate, even though it was known to be coming soon. "President Trump is dominating, and the Radical Democrats throughout the Deep State are freaking out.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, Trump, Smith's, Joe Biden, he'd, Steven Cheung, Smith, Jack Smith, Cheung, Witch Hunt Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, FBI, Republican, Washington DC Radical Democrats, Justice Department, Radical Democrats Locations: United States, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada , New Mexico , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
Prosecutors from Smith's office have said that such a filing is necessary because it would address the Supreme Court's concerns about presidential immunity issues in the case while limiting the number of possible appeals. They have asked U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, who is overseeing the election interference case, to allow them to file a 180-page brief on the issue by Thursday. Smith's office declined comment Monday night. If Chutkan allows prosecutors to file their motion, it's unclear how much of it would be made public. In a separate filing over the weekend, Smith's office said "the opening brief and its exhibits contain a substantial amount of Sensitive Material, as defined by the Protective Order" and would require redactions.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Trump's, Chutkan Organizations: White, Washington , D.C, Prosecutors, U.S Locations: Washington ,, United States, Chutkan
The previous indictment, which clocked in at 45 pages, had included what the US Supreme Court says is the kind of official-act evidence that can no longer be used in prosecuting presidents. The replacement indictment — which uses the same font and spans 36 pages — removes references to Trump's presidential acts with surgical precision, said Michael Bachner, a former Manhattan prosecutor and frequent commentator on Trump's legal travails. But in the new indictment, it's Trump the 2020 presidential candidate, not Trump the former president, who is charged. AdvertisementIn refiling his indictment, Smith was smart to convene a new grand jury rather than re-submit the case to the original panel. Still, the new indictment doesn't guarantee that judges won't throw out the case before it ever reaches a jury.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Jack Smith, Michael Bachner, it's Trump, Trump, Smith, Candidate Trump, Jeffrey Clark, Bachner, Joe Biden, Trevor Morrison, Morrison, it's, Judge Chutkan, Jack, I'm, Hunt Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, Department, Bachner, Associates, DOJ, NYU, DC Circuit, Democracy Locations: Manhattan, Washington
Read previewThe Supreme Court on Monday handed former President Donald Trump a partial victory by kicking the future of his January 6 criminal case down to a lower court. But on a 6-3 vote, a majority of the high court decided that former presidents do hold some immunity. Before Monday's ruling, former presidents already held sweeping immunity from civil prosecution thanks to a Nixon-era case. In taking its time to craft this ruling, justices have essentially handed Trump another victory for his delay tactics. If he were to win the election, he would likely scuttle the January 6 case and Smith's other criminal case in Florida related to Trump's hoarding of classified documents.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump's, Justice Roberts, Roberts, Monday's, Nixon, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Jack Smith's, Jeffrey Clark, Clark, It's, Neil Gorsuch, Gorsuch, recoiled, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Samuel Alito, Alito, Martha, Ann Alito Organizations: Service, Business, Department, Justice Department, Trump, Democratic, New York Times Locations: U.S, Florida, Alito's Virginia
Supreme Court Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Elena Kagan laid out grim visions of U.S. democracy in their joint written dissents to the court's Monday decision on former President Donald Trump's claim of presidential immunity from criminal prosecution. "In every use of official power, the President is now a king above the law," Sotomayor wrote. It's more of a warning," LaCroix told CNBC in an interview about the three dissents, written by the only three justices nominated to the court by Democratic presidents. The immediate effect was to send special counsel Jack Smith's criminal election fraud case against Trump back to U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan. She will have to rule on whether the criminal charges pertain to official acts Trump carried out as president, granting him immunity, or his private conduct.
Persons: Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Elena Kagan, Donald Trump's, Sotomayor, Jackson, Alison LaCroix, LaCroix, Jack, Tanya Chutkan, Trump Organizations: University of Chicago, CNBC, Democratic, Trump, Republicans Locations: U.S
Both of his prosecutions of Donald Trump — the Mar-a-Lago documents case in Florida, and the insurrection case out of Washington, DC — will be delayed and diminished by Monday's United States Supreme Court's immunity decision, legal experts predict. The SCOTUS decision found that former presidents are presumptively immune from prosecution for acts they took while in office. That review of the insurrection case — by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals and, likely, the Supreme Court once again — will take many months. Advertisement"The way the Supreme Court set up the new rule is that most everything the president does is 'presumptively immune,'" he said. By that new measure, any communication Trump has with another federal official is, for all practical purposes, immune from prosecution, he said.
Persons: , Jack Smith, Donald Trump —, SCOTUS, Trump, Cliff Sloan, Michel Paradis, Sloan, Paradis, Justice Barrett Organizations: Service, Monday's United, Business, DC, Appeals, Georgetown University, Columbia Law School, Prosecutors, Justice Department, Department, Trump Locations: Florida, Washington, Monday's United States, DC, Beach , Florida
Related stories"Something terrible happens to one of these candidates once every two weeks — usually Trump," Grose said. Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesSCOTUS surprisesLess than 24 hours after the debate, the Supreme Court handed down two major decisions, which, at first glance, appeared to be more good news for Trump. On Friday, legal experts told Business Insider that the decision was good news for Trump's legal prospects. It could remind voters unhappy with the Supreme Court's conservative drift that another Trump term could mean more Trump SCOTUS appointees. Undecided voters with strong opinions on abortion and January 6 could be turned off by Trump's Supreme Court appointees and their increasingly conservative rulings, he suggested.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, Biden, Christian Grose, Grose, it's, David Triana, Justin Sullivan, SCOTUS, Jack Smith's, Triana Organizations: Service, Republican, Supreme Court, Trump, Business, Biden, University of Southern, Conservatives, Department of Justice, Trump's, Court Locations: University of Southern California, Trump
The nation's highest court typically wraps up its business by the end of June, but court watchers count roughly a dozen major pending decisions. Trump v. United States: The Trump immunity caseThe implications for Trump alone made this the most closely-watched case this term. As Justice Neil Gorsuch said during oral arguments, the court may write "a rule for the ages." Justices heard oral arguments in a case brought by commercial fishermen about a rule requiring them to pay for monitors that track potential overfishing. Justice Elena Kagan said during oral arguments that 70 Supreme Court rulings and more than 17,000 lower-court decisions have relied on Chevron.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, Neil Gorsuch, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Jack Smith's, Smith, Lev Radin, Fischer, Joseph Fischer's, John Roberts, Loper, Raimondo, Biden, Elena Kagan, Andrew Harnik, Moyle, Roe, Joshua Turner, Ken Paxton, Brandon Bell, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, . United, Police, United, Enron, Capitol, Electoral, Biden, Washington Post, Loper Bright Enterprises, FDA, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense, Inc, Getty, Idaho, Labor, Paxton, Industry, Gov, The Washington Post, Court, GOP Locations: . United States, United States, Pennsylvania, Chevron U.S.A, Idaho's, Idaho, Texas, Red, Florida
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Roger, who is affiliated with the Haley Voters Working Group. The group is comprised of former primary supporters of UN Ambassador Nikki Haley who are supporting President Joe Biden in the general election or considering supporting the president. I'm an old-school Reagan fan, and Nikki Haley is a genuine Republican. Voters know that President Trump is the only person who will beat Joe Biden and take back the White House. President Trump will put America First instead of getting into more wars and more conflict like Biden has done."
Persons: Roger, Nikki Haley, Joe Biden, We've, Trump, Donald Trump, we've, Time, I've, I'm, Mike Pence, Mark Peterson, He's, MAGA, he's, Haley, Biden, Herika Martinez, Reagan, Steven Cheung, President Trump, Jack Smith's Organizations: Service, Haley, UN, Manhattan, Barnum, Republican, AFP, Getty, NATO, Voters, America, FBI Locations: York, United States, Rio Grande, New York City, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, Ukraine, Korea, South Carolina, North Korea, Russia, America, Mar
The Florida federal judge overseeing the criminal classified documents case against former President Donald Trump has been the target of more than 1,000 complaints in just one week this month raising allegations of her handling of the case, a top appeals court judge revealed in an order. And "many of the complaints against Judge Cannon also question the correctness of her rulings or her delays in issuing rulings in the case," Pryor wrote. "Although many of the complaints allege an improper motive in delaying the case, the allegations are speculative and unsupported by any evidence," Pryor wrote. "The Complaints also do not establish that Judge Cannon was required to recuse herself from the case because she was appointed by then-President Trump." "Some of those complaints have been acted upon, and others will be acted upon in due course," Pryor wrote, without revealing the nature of those actions.
Persons: Donald Trump, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, William Pryor, Judge Cannon, Pryor, Jack Smith's, Trump, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Trump, 11th Circuit U.S, Public, White Locations: Florida, Florida , Georgia, Alabama, Lago, Palm Beach , Florida, New York, Fort Pierce , Florida
Prosecutors in Donald Trump's classified documents case in Florida asked a federal judge on Friday to block the former president from making public statements that pose "a significant, imminent, and foreseeable danger to law enforcement agents" investigating and prosecuting the case. The Trump campaign also claimed in a fundraising email that President Joe Biden was "locked & loaded ready to take me out" during a search of his Mar-a-Lago property for classified documents. In making the allegations, Trump and his campaign appeared to be citing recently unsealed court filings related to the 2022 search. In making the request, prosecutors are asking for Trump to face higher stakes if he makes statements that the court finds endangers law enforcement. "Repeated attempts to silence President Trump during the presidential campaign are blatant attempts to interfere in the election," campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung wrote.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's, Aileen Cannon, Biden, Trump, Joe Biden, Jack Smith's, Trump's, Steven Cheung, Merrick Garland Organizations: Manhattan, New York City, Prosecutors, Department of, Secret Service, FBI, Attorneys, Trump, Democrat, Mar Locations: New York, Florida, Lago, New Jersey, Palm Beach , Florida
Judge Aileen Cannon on Tuesday delayed Donald Trump's classified documents case indefinitely. AdvertisementUS District Judge Aileen Cannon handed former President Donald Trump yet another legal win when she delayed his classified documents case indefinitely on Tuesday. It's just the latest legal win for Trump in the classified documents case handed to him by Cannon. Ty Cobb, a former Trump White House attorney, told CNN on Tuesday that Cannon's latest decision was "a combination of bias and incompetence." In light of Cannon's latest delay, Kalir said it was not surprising given her prior actions on the case.
Persons: Aileen Cannon, Donald Trump's, It's, , Donald Trump, Cannon, Trump, Jack Smith's, Canon, Katie Charleston, Justice Department —, Paula Reid, Judge Cannon, I'm, She's, aren't, Ty Cobb, galvanizes, Charlie Kolean, Kolean, Tre Lovell, it's, Doron Kalir, Fani Willis, Nathan Wade, Kalir Organizations: Trump, Service, Business, Justice Department, FBI, Mar, Appeals, Associated Press, Court, Trump White House, CNN, RED PAC, Cleveland State University College of Law Locations: Lago, Southern Florida, Trump's, South Florida, Georgia, New York
The Supreme Court on Thursday is set to consider whether former President Donald Trump is immune from federal prosecution on criminal election interference charges. Along with Smith's case in Washington, D.C., Trump is charged in Georgia with attempting to reverse his loss to Biden in that state's 2020 contest. Trump will not be at the Supreme Court to hear the oral arguments because he is required to attend his New York criminal trial. ET before the nine justices, three of whom were nominated by Trump during his one term as president. The Supreme Court agreed to take up the case after two lower courts rejected Trump's claim that he is immune from the indictment being prosecuted by Smith.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, Joe Biden, Trump, Smith Organizations: Defense Department, HHS, White, Trump, Washington , D.C, Biden, Supreme Locations: Washington , U.S, Washington ,, Georgia, Manhattan, York
Trump's lawyers say a president can get away with crimes if Congress doesn't find out about it while they're in office. If a president leaves before Congress can impeach and convict, they're home free, Trump's lawyers say. Related storiesIn oral arguments Thursday, Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked what would happen if potential criminal conduct wasn't discovered until after a president already left office. "What if the criminal conduct isn't discovered until after the president is out of office, so there was no opportunity for impeachment?" Smith didn't bring his indictment against Trump until the summer of 2023 — more than two years after Trump left office.
Persons: doesn't, they're, , It's, Donald Trump, Trump's, John Sauer, don't, Trump, Jack Smith's, Amy Coney Barrett, wasn't, isn't, Sauer, Antonin Scalia, Smith didn't, Joe Biden's Organizations: Supreme, Service, US, US Senate, Trump
Self-pardoning wasn't on the table at Thursday's Supreme Court hearing. The Supreme Court has never ruled on whether such a move would be permissible. The purpose of the hearing was for the Supreme Court to hear arguments over whether Trump should be immune from criminal prosecution for his conduct as president. He told Michael Dreeben, the lawyer representing Smith's team, that the question might be crucial as the Supreme Court deliberates the scope of presidential immunity. In order to obtain a pardon, he would have to be convicted and serve at least five years of a sentence.
Persons: Alito, , Donald Trump, could've, Trump, — Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch —, Jack Smith's, Smith, Gorsuch, he'll, We've, it's, Michael Dreeben, haven't, Gerald Ford, Richard Nixon, Dreeben, Joe Biden, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Thursday's, Trump, Service, NBC, Mar, DC Circuit, Justice Department's, Justice Department Locations: New York, Manhattan, Georgia
Donald Trump is asking the Supreme Court to recognize that he had total legal immunity as president. Trump is asking the Supreme Court to grant him a sweeping immunity mandate as he runs to recapture the presidency. "This may indeed be the most important US Supreme Court case in the history of our country," he told journalists at a panel organized by the Defend Democracy Project. The Supreme Court will likely issue a decision in late April. "The Supreme Court need not stray into other questions just because Trump has made it easy for them.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, , Trump, Jack Smith, Richard Nixon, David Frost, Smith, He's, Stormy Daniels, Todd Blanche, David Pecker, Tanya Chutkan, Barack Obama, Dana Verkouteren, doesn't, MANDEL NGAN, Nixon, Gerald Ford's, Ford, Leon Jaworski, indicting Nixon, Robert Ray, Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky, Donald Ayer, Ronald Reagan, George H.W, Bush, it's, Justice Department's, Chutkan, BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, framers, Mark Meadows, Norm Eisen, Obama's Organizations: Service, Justice Department, Capitol, Department, Air Force, Nixon, Trump, Prosecutors, AP, Getty, Independent, Department of Justice, Defend, Justice, White House Locations: Washington , DC, Georgia, Florida, New York, Manhattan, United States, AFP, Fulton County
Prosecutors in Trump's classified documents fired back at Judge Aileen Cannon. Jack Smith's team says her order for jury instructions was "fundamentally flawed." In their response, prosecutors raised the prospect of taking her order to a higher court to stop it. AdvertisementIt's also rare for jury instructions to be discussed so early on the process — especially without a trial date even set, according to the outlet. Federal prosecutors with special counsel Jack Smith's office responded late Tuesday night, saying Cannon's order rested on a "fundamentally flawed legal premise."
Persons: Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith's, , Donald Trump's, Cannon, Trump Organizations: Service, Prosecutors, Trump, Presidential Records, Washington Post Locations: Trump's, United States
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