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CNN —Former President Donald Trump is again claiming that special counsel Jack Smith is trying to influence the November presidential election by seeking to make new evidence and witness testimony public as voters start to go to the polls. The brief is aimed at convincing the trial judge in the case – and eventually, higher courts – that Smith’s case can survive under the Supreme Court’s recent ruling that said Trump had at least some presidential immunity in the prosecution. The filing is expected to reveal new evidence against Trump, including what several witnesses testified to in the grand jury proceedings. Sources say the proposed redactions are minimal, blacking the sources of the information and removing witness names, but leaving the substance of what they said about Trump for public view. When Smith filed the sealed brief last week, he defended the proposed redactions as striking the balance between protecting witnesses and maintaining public access to the case.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Smith, Trump, Department’s, ” Trump, Tanya Chutkan, redactions Organizations: CNN, Republican White House, Trump, Justice Locations: United States, Florida
ET, according to Peter Carr, the special counsel office’s spokesman. It is likely the filings will dig into Trump’s pressure campaign on Pence – conduct that the Supreme Court indicated might be covered under immunity. The footnotes alone citing their various exhibits would account for more than 30 pages of the main brief, prosecutors have said. The former president vehemently opposed the plan to file the Smith immunity brief now, as his lawyers equated the brief to the types of special counsel reports that aren’t released until after the work of a special counsel is done. Trump will have the opportunity to respond to the prosecutors’ brief with a filing due October 17.
Persons: Jack Smith, Donald Trump, Mike Pence, Ivanka Trump, Mark Meadows, Tanya Chutkan, Peter Carr, Trump, Chutkan –, Pence, , Smith, aren’t, Chutkan, , ” Chutkan Organizations: CNN, White House, Prosecutors Locations: United States
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
He was still at large in July 2021, when he took part in a fight in Salt Lake City that left another man dead. He’d been living in a park in downtown Salt Lake City, and he’d decided to cook for his hungry new friends. The Salt Lake City Police Department also declined, even though its investigation into Senn’s death was complete. In recent years he appeared to split his time between Chicago and Salt Lake City. Mark Peterson/ReduxReturning to Salt Lake City by unknown methods, Banuelos resumed his frequent appearances in local police reports.
Persons: John Banuelos, ” “, ” — Derrick Evans, Banuelos, Christopher Senn, Victoria Thomas, “ Chris, , John, he’s, he’d, Chris Senn, John Banuelos Long, Chris, Chris ’, Gabe Hamilton, Thomas, Taylorsville, ” Christopher Senn, Victoria Thomas Chris, they’re, Randall, Talisha, Toro, , ” Victoria, , vaping, ” Banuelos, Michael Lawlor, George Floyd, Trump’s, I’m, Donald Trump, Mark Peterson, ‘ He’ll, , Senn, ‘ I’m, FBI hasn’t, John Banuelos “, Steven Parisot, Det, Weldon Wilson, ” Parisot, ” Wilson, Banuelos wasn’t, Sim Gill, … He’s, Gill, Rick Bowmer, ” Gill, that’s, “ Banuelos, Gary Wickersham, Rebecca Lavrenz, Grandma, Lavrenz, , Derrick Evans, who’d, Evans, Will Price, ” Evans, “ …, hadn’t, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Judge Chutkan, Trump, He’d, ” Chutkan, “ I’ve, Lawlor, ” Lawlor, ” Victoria Thomas, Victoria, Christopher Senn's, Victoria Thomas “, — Victoria Thomas, ” Randall Organizations: CNN, Capitol, FBI, Banuelos, Chicago Police Department, Independence, Salt Lake City —, U.S, Attorney’s, District of Columbia, Salt Lake City Police Department, DC, Federal Bureau of Prisons, Salt Lake City . Chicago Police Department, Police, U.S . Capitol, TRUMP, Trump, Salt Lake City, National Threat Operations Center, Vice News, Liberty, ” Police, KUTV, KSL, NBC, Army, Congress, West Virginia House, West, West Virginia Legislative, Justice Department Locations: Salt Lake City, Senn, Illinois, Liberty, Utah, Randall’s, Victoria, Salt Lake, Chicago, Burger, Washington, Banuelos, Salt Lake County, Colorado, West Virginia, , Salt, Valley, Provo , Utah
A nearly four-year-old legal effort by Black voters to convince a court to prevent former President Donald Trump and the Republican Party from potentially intimidating voters and poll workers is quietly coming back to life as the 2024 election approaches. First brought in the days following the 2020 election, the lawsuit has moved slowly through the federal courts in Washington, DC, as Trump’s claims of presidential immunity from civil lawsuits were being litigated. It coincidently has landed before US District Judge Tanya Chutkan, the judge handling the federal election subversion charges against Trump. But now, the case is beginning to show signs of movement. If the plaintiffs ultimately prevail, their victory could provide them with a significant deterrence against potential intimidation and harassment of election workers and voters from Republicans as Trump and his allies signal that they will again try to undermine the results of the election.
Persons: Black, Donald Trump, coincidently, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Read Organizations: Republican Party, US, Trump, Republican National, Republicans Locations: Washington ,
CNN —A nearly four-year-old legal effort by Black voters to convince a court to prevent former President Donald Trump and the Republican Party from potentially intimidating voters and poll workers is quietly coming back to life as the 2024 election approaches. First brought in the days following the 2020 election, the lawsuit has moved slowly through the federal courts in Washington, DC, as Trump’s claims of presidential immunity from civil lawsuits were being litigated. It coincidently has landed before US District Judge Tanya Chutkan, the judge handling the federal election subversion charges against Trump. Attorneys for Trump and the RNC have asked to dismiss the case, saying any conduct at issue constitutes protected political speech. A federal judge found the two men liable for targeting Black voters in 2023, saying that their actions ran afoul of the KKK Act, the VRA and other laws.
Persons: Black, Donald Trump, coincidently, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Rajiv Parikh, , , ” Chutkan, Jack Smith, Weeks, “ It’s, Parikh, they’ve, Ruth Greenwood, Greenwood, Jacob Wohl, Jack, Harris Organizations: CNN, Republican Party, US, Trump, Republican National, Republicans, GOP, Black, Democratic Party, RNC, Black voters, Ku Klux Klan, White, Michigan Welfare Rights Organization, Democratic National Committee, Harvard Law School, Democratic, Capitol Police, Biden Locations: Washington ,, Michigan, , New Jersey, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Charlottesville , Virginia, Texas
Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a Fox News town hall hosted by Sean Hannity in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S. September 4, 2024. The federal criminal election interference case against Donald Trump resumed in Washington, D.C., on Thursday after a nearly yearlong delay related to arguments on whether he can be prosecuted for conduct committed while he was president. Judge Tanya Chutkan heard arguments Thursday morning over how to schedule legal briefs to be filed in advance of a possible trial in the case. "Probably an exercise in futility to set a trial date now," Chutkan said in U.S. District Court at the end of the hearing. Trump, the Republican nominee, is set to face Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris in November's presidential election.
Persons: Donald Trump, Sean Hannity, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Thomas Windom, Windom, Trump, Kamala Harris Organizations: Fox News, Washington , D.C, Republican, Democratic, U.S, Supreme Locations: Harrisburg , Pennsylvania, U.S, Washington ,, November's
WASHINGTON — U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Friday approved a request from special counsel Jack Smith to allow for more time to propose the next steps in the government's election interference case against former President Donald Trump. The special counsel's office said in its filing Thursday that prosecutors are still assessing the "new precedent set forth" in the Trump immunity decision by the Supreme Court. Smith asked Chutkan to give them and Trump's lawyers until Aug. 30 to submit the joint status report and to schedule the status conference after that. The appeals process made certain that the trial would not happen before Election Day on Nov. 5. Last weekend Chutkan denied an older motion from Trump to dismiss the election interference indictment, filed before the Supreme Court took up the case.
Persons: Tanya Chutkan, Jack Smith, Donald Trump, Smith, Chutkan, Trump Organizations: WASHINGTON —, District of Columbia, Supreme, Government, Trump Locations: WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON — U.S, Tanya Chutkan . U.S
WASHINGTON — The judge overseeing the election interference case against former President Donald Trump scheduled an August conference with defense and prosecution teams to determine a schedule for pretrial proceedings. In the Saturday filing, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan announced that the conference would be scheduled for Aug. 16. The high court sent the case back for lower courts to determine what conduct Trump could be prosecuted for. The Supreme Court also ruled that any of Trump’s conduct that is determined to be official — and therefore immune — cannot be admitted as evidence during a trial. Trial proceedings before Chutkan had been paused as the case made its way to the Supreme Court.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, District of Columbia Chutkan’s, Trump Organizations: District of Columbia, Supreme, U.S . Capitol Locations: Tanya Chutkan . U.S
CNN —A day after getting the election subversion case against Donald Trump back, the presiding federal judge rejected another effort by the former president to have the case dismissed. Earlier this summer, the Supreme Court granted Trump sweeping immunity for official acts as president, and the case, brought by special counsel Jack Smith, is now back in the hands of Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, DC. The judge also found that Trump’s suggestions that Biden attempted to influence prosecutors was unfounded. In her ruling Saturday, Chutkan rejected Trump’s arguments that the case in Washington was brought only because Trump pleaded not guilty to charges of mishandling classified information in Florida — a case that was recently dismissed. “Defendant’s decision to enter a not guilty plea in Florida does not establish a realistic likelihood that this prosecution was vindictive,” Chutkan wrote.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Smith, Trump’s, , ’ ” Chutkan, Joe Biden, Biden, ” Chutkan Organizations: CNN, Justice Department, Defendant, Southern District of Locations: Washington , DC, Washington, Florida, Southern District, Southern District of Florida
CNN —A federal judge will consider how to proceed with special counsel Jack Smith’s election interference case against Donald Trump during a hearing later this month, according to a brief order Saturday. The judge overseeing the case, Tanya Chutkan, scheduled a hearing for August 16 to consider how the case should move forward. It will be the first time the case is back in court since the Supreme Court granted Trump sweeping immunity for official acts as president – a ruling that may gut Smith’s prosecution. Chutkan also asked both prosecutors and defense attorneys to propose a new schedule for the case going forward by August 9. As part of the order Saturday, Chutkan also denied one of the former presidents’ motions to toss the case.
Persons: Jack Smith’s, Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, , Chutkan, Smith Organizations: CNN
The case returns to Judge Tanya Chutkan one month after the Supreme Court issued a game-changing ruling on presidential power. But the Supreme Court interceded earlier this year and put the case on pause to consider Trump’s claims of presidential immunity. Attorneys working on the case believe that Chutkan will move quickly with the case back in her jurisdiction, according to sources familiar with their thinking. Any move she makes will be under extreme scrutiny, given that it’s the only remining federal case against Trump after the Florida federal judge overseeing his classified documents case, Aileen Cannon, dismissed those criminal charges against Trump and his two co-defendants. Cannon appeared to hold hearings on nearly every motion in the Trump case before her, but Chutkan often rules without hearing from the parties in person.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Trump’s, Jack Smith’s, Mike Pence, Trump, Aileen Cannon, , ’ Chutkan, , ” Chutkan, She’s, “ Tanya’s, it’s, shouldn’t, Tim Parlatore, Cannon, , CNN’s Holmes Lybrand, Evan Perez, Paula Reid, Casey Gannon Organizations: CNN, Trump, Capitol, DC, Court Locations: Washington ,, Florida, Washington
The bombshell ruling by Judge Aileen Cannon in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida — who was appointed to that position by Trump — ruling comes two days after a would-be assassin narrowly missed killing Trump during a campaign rally in western Pennsylvania. A federal judge in Florida on Monday dismissed the criminal classified documents case against former President Donald Trump and two co-defendants, ruling that the appointment of special counsel Jack Smith as prosecutor for the case violated the appointments clause of the U.S. Constitution. The ruling is just the latest in a series of controversial rulings and decisions by Cannon that have been seen as favoring Trump. Trump still faces three other pending criminal prosecutions, all of which he had referenced in his Truth Social post. It is not clear yet how that ruling will affect the election case against him.
Persons: Trump's, Walt Nauta, Carlos De Oliveira, Trump, Judge Aileen Cannon, Trump —, Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Cannon, General Merrick Garland, , Joe Biden's, Joe Biden, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan Organizations: Republican National Convention, GOP, Southern, Southern District of, Trump, White, U.S . Constitution, U.S, Supreme, U.S . Senate, Washington , D.C, Manhattan, Democrat Justice Department Locations: Lago, Milwaukee, U.S, Southern District, Southern District of Florida, Pennsylvania, Florida, U.S ., United States, Washington ,, York, Georgia, Washington
Advertisement"So that is, in theory, taking power away from unelected officials," Justin Crowe, a professor of political science at Williams University who researches the Supreme Court, told Business Insider. With Corner Post, Entin said, the Supreme Court created a statute of limitations that, from the standpoint of federal agencies, never really expires. But the Court didn't stop at giving itself the reins to interpret regulations that federal agencies are beholden to. In the Trump case, the Supreme Court offered Trump broad immunity for some of his acts concerning his January 6 election interference case. In the July 6 episode of Slate's Supreme Court analysis podcast "Amicus with Dahlia Lithwick," Senior Court Reporter Mark Joseph Stern said the Court spent this term expanding its power and "restructuring representative democracy to make it less representative and less democratic."
Persons: , Raimondo, Reagan, presidentially, Justin Crowe, wouldn't, Loper, Jonathan Entin, Entin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Dahlia Lithwick, Mark Joseph Stern Organizations: Service, Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc, Governors, Federal Reserve System, Business, Chevron, Environmental Protection Agency, Congress, Williams University, EPA, Securities Exchange Commission, of Health, Human Service, Case Western Reserve University, Federal Reserve Board, Supreme, DC Circuit, Federal, Trump v ., Trump, DC Locations: Chevron, Trump v, Trump v . United States
But the court’s opinion also makes clear that this ruling is not a death knell for Smith’s case. Smith charged Trump with engaging in a “criminal scheme” to subvert the 2020 election; Trump has pleaded not guilty to four counts. In Nixon v. Fitzgerald, the Supreme Court held that a president enjoyed civil immunity for all “official acts.” Now, in Trump v. United States, the court grappled with which “official” acts should also receive criminal immunity. In order to settle the extent of Trump’s immunity, Chutkan should expeditiously schedule the mini-trial to hear witness testimony and receive other relevant evidence from both parties. In response to Trump’s assertion of civil immunity there, the DC Circuit put in place a lengthy discovery schedule for the lower court to determine the extent of Trump’s civil immunity.
Persons: Norman Eisen, , Donald Trump, Danya Perry, Joshua Kolb, Neil Gorsuch, Jack Smith’s, Donald Trump’s, Norm Eisen, Tanya Chutkan, Smith, Trump, Nixon, Fitzgerald, , Joshua Kolb CJ, John Roberts, Justice Department —, Mike Pence, Mark Meadows, Jeffrey Clark —, Clark, Steve Jones, Meadows, Brad Raffensperger, Jones, Meadows’s, Sotomayor, Chutkan, Pence, Bill Barr —, Trump’s, slimming, , Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson Organizations: CNN, Perry Law, Division, Southern, of, State, Moreland Commission, Nixon, Trump v ., Justice Department, Trump, White, Trump administration, Georgia, Meadows, Circuit, Congress, Capitol Police, Capitol, DC Circuit, Twitter Locations: of New York, New York, Moreland, Trump v, Trump v . United States, Georgia, Fulton, Meadows
CNN —The Supreme Court handed down a landmark decision Monday granting Donald Trump partial immunity from special counsel Jack Smith’s election subversion case, handing the former president a significant win during his reelection bid. For starters, the Supreme Court ruled that for “core” presidential activity, Trump has the absolute immunity he had sought. The analysis about what’s immune and what isn’t “ultimately is best left to the lower courts to perform,” Roberts wrote. Immune, immune, immune,” she wrote. In a significant break from the court’s other conservatives, Barrett seemed to suggest Trump should go to trial quickly.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith’s, Smith, John Roberts, , ” Roberts, , Trump, Justice Department –, isn’t “, Roberts, What’s, Tanya Chutkan, Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, ” Sotomayor, Honig, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, ” Trump’s, Barrett, Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s, ” Barrett, David Cole, Thomas, Clarence Thomas, Merrick Garland, Garland, hasn’t, ” Thomas, CNN’s Katelyn Polantz Organizations: CNN, Supreme Court, Justice Department, Trump, American Civil Liberties Union, Senate Locations: Washington , DC, Florida
Trump immunity ruling hands big decisions to Judge Tanya Chutkan
  + stars: | 2024-07-01 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court as justices issue rulings in pending cases on the final day of the court's term in Washington, U.S., July 1, 2024. The U.S. Supreme Court's presidential immunity ruling on Monday sends the federal case accusing Donald Trump of attempting to overturn his 2020 defeat back to Judge Tanya Chutkan for critical decisions that will shape the future of the historic prosecution. Chutkan, a judge on the U.S. District Court in Washington, will have to decide whether a pair of Supreme Court rulings requires some of the allegations against the Republican presidential candidate be tossed out. Chutkan, born in Jamaica and nominated as a judge by former Democratic President Barack Obama, was assigned to oversee the Trump case in August 2023. She has had little to do for more than six months as Trump's bid for presidential immunity stalled any activity until the Supreme Court ruled.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Joe Biden, Chutkan, Barack Obama Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Monday, Republican, Democratic, Trump Locations: Washington , U.S, Washington, New York, Jamaica
CNN —The biggest question now that the Supreme Court has decided Donald Trump is entitled to some immunity from prosecution: What happens next in special counsel Jack Smith’s election interference case against the former president? Those are likely to come in the days after the Supreme Court hands the opinion down formally to the federal courts in DC. The Supreme Court said that that Trump’s pressure campaign on Vice President Mike Pence to help him overturn the election is “presumptively” immune, and put the burden on the prosecutors to rebut the presumptive immunity. The Supreme Court’s ruling strongly suggests that those appeals would need to be resolved pre-trial, making it unlikely this case goes to a jury before Americans cast their ballots for president. Jack Smith’s options going forwardIt’s also possible that Smith’s office winnows down his case to bring it in line with the Supreme Court’s opinion.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith’s, Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Justice Department –, John Roberts ’, Mike Pence, Roberts, Sotomayor, It’s, Organizations: CNN, US, Supreme, Trump, Justice Department, DC Circuit Locations: 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
With Monday’s Supreme Court presidential immunity ruling likely preventing a trial in the federal election subversion case before the election, Trump is poised to avoid pre-election trials in the three most significant criminal prosecutions he faces. It will determine Trump’s legal fate. A Supreme Court ruling that hamstrings the DC federal subversion caseThe charges by special counsel Jack Smith alleging Trump subverted the 2020 election was the second to last of the four cases brought. “You can’t charge a former president for a crime for the first time in history without going to Supreme Court,” Cobb said. But the new Supreme Court immunity standard jeopardizes the use of much of that conduct in the case.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, won’t, , Ty Cobb, , ” Cobb, pardoning, Fani Willis, Paul Rosenzweig, Bill Clinton, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan’s, Smith, Smith’s, Cobb, John Roberts, Rosenzweig, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, She’s, she’s, she’d, Willis, Nathan Wade, it’s, Wade, Nathan Wade's, Kaitlan Collins, Fulton, Scott McAfee, Michael Moore, Moore, Barack Obama, ” Moore, CNN’s Lauren Fox, Zachary Cohen Organizations: CNN, Republican White House, Trump, Fulton, Department of Homeland Security, Maryland Democrat, DC, DC Circuit, White, Justice Department Locations: Manhattan, Russia, Georgia, Florida, , Fulton County
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
Trump’s out of luck: No immunityThe simplest outcome would be for the Supreme Court to rule that former presidents are not entitled to immunity from criminal prosecution. Nixon and the ‘outer perimeter’ of powerBut the justices could reach more broadly by granting some degree of immunity for “official” actions. That official-versus-private debate emerged as a key component of Trump’s immunity battle and will be closely scrutinized once the opinion lands. In terms of timing, a lot would depend on the direction the Supreme Court gives Chutkan in its opinion. It could also raise the possibility of further pre-trial legal wrangling, unless the Supreme Court explicitly ruled out appeals of those decisions.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Jack Smith’s, Trump, “ Trump, , Jonathan Entin, Trump’s, John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh –, he’s, ” Roberts, ” It’s, Neil Gorsuch, ” Kavanaugh, Nixon, Fitzgerald, Ernest Fitzgerald, Richard Nixon, Rudy Giuliani, Matthew Seligman, Alison LaCroix, , Tanya Chutkan, , ” Entin, Smith, LaCroix, we’ll, ’ ” Organizations: CNN, Trump, Case Western Reserve University’s School of Law, Appeals, DC Circuit, Supreme, Nixon, Air Force, Constitutional, Center, Stanford Law School, Security, University of Chicago Law School, US
On March 4, Judge Tanya Chutkan presided over jury selection for a criminal trial in a Jan. 6, 2021, case. On his first day in court, Mr. Nester sat next to his attorney wearing a collared shirt and a tie, his glasses perched atop his gray hair. He glumly surveyed the potential jurors seated in the benches behind him, 12 of whom would later that week determine his fate. Mr. Trump, whose criminal trial has been put on hold pending Supreme Court review, spent that week on the campaign trail. Mr. Nester is the among the latest in a long string of Jan. 6 insurrectionists who have over the past three and a half years sat for trial in the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S.
Persons: Tanya Chutkan, Donald Trump, Nester, glumly, Trump, Barrett Prettyman Organizations: Capitol, Courthouse Locations: Pennsylvania, Washington, Washington ,
political memoThe outcome of Donald Trump’s Manhattan trial on Thursday had seemed almost unthinkable to the Trump team as recently as last summer. Guilty.”When Mr. Trump got up to leave court, his face looked as if he’d been punched in the solar plexus. Mr. Trump and his allies on Capitol Hill and in conservative media assiduously prepared their audiences to be outraged, whatever the outcome. “There’s a sense of personal resentment,” added the senator, who is on a shortlist to be Mr. Trump’s running mate. He got MAGA’d yesterday,” Mr. Trump said in the hallway outside the courtroom.
Persons: Donald Trump’s Manhattan, Donald J, Trump’s, Trump, Mr, Eric, Eric Trump’s, Steve Witkoff, ” Mr, Witkoff, Adam Gray, Jack Smith, Washington, Tanya Chutkan, Manhattan, Mark Pomerantz, Alvin L, Bragg, Michael D, Cohen, , President Biden, Stephen K, Bannon, Alvin Bragg, Emil Salman, Biden, ” Neil Newhouse, Republican pollster, , Newhouse, , J.D, Vance, MAGA, Robert De Niro, De Niro, ” Ruth Igielnik Organizations: Trump, Republican National Convention, Credit, The New York Times, Democratic, Capitol, Republican, Senate, Republicans, Trump . Credit, Mr, New York Times, Quinnipiac University, “ Voters, Fox, stoke, Biden Locations: Manhattan, Florida, Georgia, New York, U.S, Trump ., Siena, Ohio, Lower Manhattan
But a majority of Supreme Court justices appear ready to hand the former president an immediate victory. Still, the Supreme Court justices do not appear likely to dismiss the former president's claims quickly, raising the likelihood that Trump may not face trial for trying to overturn the 2020 election before November. He drew his arguments from an earlier Supreme Court case that mapped the line for presidential immunity in civil matters. The Supreme Court weighs Trump's immunity claim. It is possible that the Supreme Court could rule that a more detailed review of Trump's conduct is best left to a lower court.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Jack Smith, Trump's, you've, Brett Kavanaugh, Sauer, Kavanaugh, Tanya Chutkan, Smith, Joe Biden, it's, John Sauer, Jabin, Samuel Alito, Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Barrett, Michael Dreeben, Dreeben, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Jackson, John Roberts, Jackon, Justice Alito, Roe, Wade, Anthony Kennedy's, Hodges, Neil Gorsuch Organizations: Service, Trump, Washington, Getty Locations: DC, Dobbs v, Obergefell
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