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M. Evan Corcoran, a lawyer who accompanied former President Donald J. Trump to court this week for his arraignment on charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election, has given crucial evidence in Mr. Trump’s other federal case — the one accusing him of illegally hoarding classified documents. Another lawyer close to Mr. Trump, Boris Epshteyn, sat for an interview with prosecutors this spring and could be one of the former president’s co-conspirators in the election tampering case. And Mr. Epshteyn’s lawyer, Todd Blanche, is defending Mr. Trump against both the documents and election case indictments. The legal team that Mr. Trump has assembled to represent him in the twin prosecutions by the special counsel, Jack Smith, is marked by a tangled web of potential conflicts and overlapping interests — so much so that Mr. Smith’s office has started asking questions.
Persons: Evan Corcoran, Donald J, Trump, Boris Epshteyn, Epshteyn’s, Todd Blanche, Jack Smith
He may soon face more charges in Georgia, where a state prosecutor is investigating his attempts to overturn the election there. TRUMP STILL THE REPUBLICAN FRONT-RUNNER Trump's legal woes have done little to damage his status as Republican front-runner. The indictment describes a phone call in which Pence told Trump there was no legal basis for the theory that Pence could block certification of the election. Although Pence repeatedly told Trump he lacked the authority to reject electoral votes from certain states, Trump kept repeating the claim. On Jan. 6, as he spoke to his supporters before they attacked the Capitol, Trump said: "If Mike Pence does the right thing, we win the election."
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, Judge Moxila Upadhyaya, Joe Biden, Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Upadhyaya, Chutkan, John Lauro, Thomas Windom, Biden, Todd Blanche, Judge Moxila, Jane Rosenberg, Donald J, Fani Willis, Ron DeSantis, Mike Pence, Pence, Sarah N, Lynch, Jacqueline Thomsen, Andrew Goudsward, Luc Cohen, Jason Lange, Tim Reid, John O'Connell, Jeff Mason, Patrick McFarland, Joseph Ax, Scott Malone, Daniel Wallis, Howard Goller Organizations: U.S, U.S . Capitol, Republican, Democratic, Biden, America, Republicans, Secret, REUTERS, TRUMP STILL, Reuters, Trump, White, Justice Department, U.S . House, Capitol, Thomson Locations: Washington, Bedminster , New Jersey, Ukraine, American, United States, America, New York, Georgia, Atlanta, Florida
There were hints of a similar strategy in the first hearing in the election subversion case. Key prosecutors make their public debutThursday marked the public debut of the Smith team that will handle the election subversion prosecution. Smith himself attended the hearing, as he did for Trump’s first appearance in the classified documents case in Florida earlier this year. Windom – who moved from the US attorney’s office in Maryland to play a central role in the federal election subversion investigation, spoke on behalf of the government Thursday. In the election subversion case, Trump’s attorneys have previewed arguments that the case should be moved elsewhere, given the city’s political bent.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith’s, Smith, John Lauro, they’ll, ” Lauro, Thomas Windom, Tanya Chutkan, Fani Willis, There’s, Jean Carroll, Windom –, Molly Gaston, Gaston, Steve Bannon, Rick Gates –, , Paul Manafort, Lauro, Todd Blanche, Blanche, Evan Corcoran, He’s, he’ll, didn’t, , he’s Organizations: CNN, Trump, Republican, Fulton, New, DC US, Justice Department, Trump . New Trump, Capitol, Metropolitan Locations: Washington, DC, Georgia, Fulton County, Manhattan, New York, Florida, Maryland, Manhattan’s, egging
Trump’s attorneys, including Todd Blanche, received the target letter from Smith’s team informing them that their client could face charges in the investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election, two sources familiar with what happened tell CNN. A target letter from federal prosecutors to Trump makes clear that prosecutors are focused on the former president’s actions in the investigation into overturning the 2020 election – and not just of those around him who tried to stop his election loss. The target letter cites three statutes that Trump could be charged with, according to multiple news outlets, including The Wall Street Journal, that cited a person familiar with the matter. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg charged the former president with falsifying business records in March, and Smith charged Trump in the classified documents investigation last month. Read more about the Trump target letter.
Persons: Donald Trump, he’s, Jack Smith, Todd Blanche, Trump, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Smith Organizations: CNN, Trump, Street Journal, Department, Manhattan, Attorney Locations: United States
Lawyers for former President Donald J. Trump met on Thursday with officials in the office of the special counsel, Jack Smith, as federal prosecutors edged closer toward bringing an indictment against Mr. Trump in connection with his wide-ranging efforts to overturn the 2020 election, according to three people familiar with the matter. It was not immediately clear what subjects were discussed at the meeting or if Mr. Smith took part. But similar gatherings are often used by defense lawyers as a last-ditch effort to argue against charges being filed or to convey their version of events in a criminal investigation. The former president’s legal team — including Todd Blanche and a newly hired lawyer, John Lauro — has been on high alert since last week, when prosecutors working for the special counsel sent Mr. Trump a so-called target letter in the election interference case. It was the clearest signal that charges could be coming.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Jack Smith, Smith, Todd Blanche, John Lauro — Organizations: Mr Locations: United States
Lawyers for Donald Trump were told Thursday by prosecutors to expect an indictment against the former president in connection with his efforts to reverse his loss in the 2020 election, NBC News reported. At around the same time, the grand jury that could soon vote on criminally charging Trump assembled in Washington federal court. A number of those anonymous grand jurors were spotted in the cafeteria and then going to the grand jury room on the courthouse's third floor, according to NBC. Trump last week revealed that Smith had told his lawyers on Sunday that the former president was a criminal target of that investigation and had been offered a four-day window to testify to the grand jury. Smith in early June obtained a grand jury indictment of Trump in Florida federal court on several dozen criminal counts related to his retention of classified government documents at his Mar-a-Lago club after he left office in early 2021.
Persons: Jack Smith, Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, John Lauro, Trump, Barrett Prettyman, Smith, Joe Biden, Biden, wasn't, Peter Carr Organizations: US Department of Justice, Lawyers, NBC News, Washington , D.C, Department of Justice, NBC, Justice, Electoral College, Congress, Trump Save America, Department, CNBC, Trump Locations: Washington ,, Washington, Trump, Florida, Lago
Former President Donald Trump's trial on charges of mishandling classified documents will begin on May 20, 2024, a federal judge ordered Friday. Trump last month pleaded not guilty to 37 criminal counts related to his retention of classified documents after leaving the White House in 2021 and subsequent alleged efforts to conceal them from the government. The DOJ's proposal to start the trial in December, meanwhile, "is atypically accelerated and inconsistent with ensuring a fair trial," she added. Cannon's schedule laid out dozens of procedural deadlines ahead of the spring 2024 trial. The government has until Sept. 7 to turn over relevant classified documents to the defense in discovery.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's, Judge Aileen Cannon, Cannon, Todd Blanche, Walt Nauta Organizations: U.S, Republican, Conference, Department of Justice, Trump, Republican National Convention, GOP, White House, NBC News Locations: West Palm Beach , Florida, U.S, Fort Pierce , Florida, Cannon, Milwaukee, Trump's
CNN —Donald Trump’s legal troubles deepened earlier this week when he was informed by special counsel Jack Smith that he’s the target of the criminal investigation into the aftermath of the 2020 election – the clearest sign yet that the former president could soon face more criminal charges. But without more detail, it’s hard to know exactly what shape the charges will take or what Trump 2020 election-related conduct they are aimed at. Among the potential charges Trump has been warned about is one pertaining to witness tampering, according to the Wall Street Journal and other outlets. Trump’s alleged involvement in a criminal conspiracy has been invoked in the litigation around the House select committee that investigated January 6’s pursuit of Trump lawyer John Eastman’s emails. That ruling pointed both to the obstruction of an official proceeding statute and the general conspiracy statute.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Jack Smith, Smith, Trump, Todd Blanche, , Norm Eisen, “ Trump, Shan Wu, CNN’s Manu Raju, Mike, Joe Biden, ” Eisen, , Justin Levitt, Levitt, Douglass Mackey, ” Mackey, Joe Biden’s, Enrique Tarrio, Trump’s, John Eastman’s, David O, Carter, Eastman, Elie Honig, ” Honig Organizations: CNN, Sunday, White, Trump, ABC, The New York Times, Loyola Law School, Obama Justice Department, Biden White House, Klux Klan, Wall Street, Justice Department, Boys, Eastman, Capitol Locations: United States, New York, Georgia, Arizona
Attorneys for former President Donald Trump Chris Kise (C) and Todd Blanche (R) arrive at The Alto Lee Adams Sr. United States Courthouse on July 18, 2023 in Fort Pierce, Florida. The judge presiding over Donald Trump 's federal criminal case appeared skeptical Tuesday of the former president's argument that the trial over his handling of classified documents should be delayed beyond the 2024 election, NBC News reported. Walt Nauta, personal aide to former U.S. President Donald Trump, exits Fort Pierce U.S. courthouse after a hearing in Fort Pierce, Florida, July 18, 2023. Trump faces 37 criminal counts related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents after leaving the White House. But on Monday, Cannon told the parties to be prepared to discuss their proposals for when the trial should start.
Persons: Donald Trump Chris Kise, Todd Blanche, Lee Adams Sr, Walt Nauta, Trump, NBC's Ken Dilanian, Cannon, Aileen Cannon, Donald Trump, Jay Bratt, Bratt, David Harbagh, Joe Biden Organizations: United, Republican, NBC, Department, NBC News, Fort, Trump, White, FBI, DOJ Locations: Fort Pierce , Florida, Fort Pierce U.S, Mar
At least two grand juries in Washington have been hearing matters related to Mr. Trump’s efforts to stay in office. Two of Mr. Trump’s lawyers, Todd Blanche and Christopher M. Kise, briefly mentioned the new target letter at a pretrial hearing in Florida on Tuesday on the documents case. In disclosing that he had received the target letter, Mr. Trump said he was given four days to testify before a grand jury if he chooses. Fani T. Willis, the district attorney in Fulton County, Ga., who has pressed ahead with her own investigation of Mr. Trump and his allies, could bring charges as early as next month. If she were to proceed first, that could complicate Mr. Smith’s case.
Persons: Todd Blanche, Christopher M, Kise, Blanche, Trump, Willis, Smith Organizations: Court Locations: Washington, Trump, Fort Pierce, Fla, Florida, Fulton County ,
In the classified documents case, Trump received a target letter from the special counsel’s office on May 19. Three days after that, on June 8, the grand jury returned an indictment against Trump and his co-defendant and aide Walt Nauta. The special counsel has also probed Trump’s knowledge that he lost the 2020 election, pressure within the Justice Department to help with efforts to overturn the election and fundraising efforts after the election. Giuliani’s lawyer, Robert Costello, told CNN that Giuliani has not received a target letter. The grand jury investigating 2020 election interference is meeting Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Washington, DC.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Joe Biden’s, ” Trump, Todd Blanche, Trump’s, Smith, Trump . Trump’s, Trump, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Walt Nauta, Fox News ’ Sean Hannity, Mike Pence, Rudy Giuliani, Robert Costello, Giuliani Organizations: CNN, Joe Biden’s DOJ, Sunday, Trump, Trump ., Manhattan, Attorney, Justice, Fox News, , United, Constitution, Joe, Electoral College, Justice Department, House Locations: Bedminster, Iowa, Washington , DC
Trump seeks to delay trial in classified documents case
  + stars: | 2023-07-11 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
July 11 (Reuters) - Former President Donald Trump and his aide Walt Nauta have asked a federal court in Florida to postpone their criminal trial in a classified documents case, saying Trump's busy presidential campaign schedule ahead of the 2024 election will make the current trial schedule "untenable." "President Trump is running for President of the United States and is currently the likely Republican Party nominee. In addition to citing his campaign schedule, Trump's lawyers also told the judge that the unprecedented indictment raises "significant" legal questions and challenges that will be posed by the classified nature of the evidence. The documents case will unfold under a strict set of rules prescribed by the Classified Information Procedures Act, which aims to protect classified evidence and manage disclosure of such records at a public jury trial. Nauta, Trump's aide, pleaded not guilty last week in a Miami federal courthouse to charges that he had helped Trump hide top secret documents taken when he left the White House.
Persons: Donald Trump, Walt Nauta, Trump's, Trump, Nauta, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Chris Kise, Todd Blanche, Jane, Read, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith's, Cannon, Sarah N, Lynch, Bharat Govind Gautam, Clarence Fernandez, Alistair Bell Organizations: Republican Party, Trump, U.S, United, REUTERS, White House, Thomson Locations: Florida, United States, Miami, Miami , Florida, U.S, Washington, Bengaluru
Trump seeks to delay trial in Mar-a-Lago documents case
  + stars: | 2023-07-11 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
REUTERS/Jane... Read moreJuly 11 (Reuters) - Donald Trump and an aide, Walt Nauta, have asked a federal court in Florida to postpone the criminal trial in the Mar-a-Lago documents case and drop the current date, a filing by the former U.S. president's lawyers showed. But in the filing late on Monday, Trump's lawyers said a December trial date would deny them reasonable time to prepare, and described the government's requested schedule as "unrealistic." "The court should therefore withdraw the current order setting trial and postpone any consideration of a new trial date," the lawyers said, adding that a continuance was both necessary and appropriate. In the filing, Trump's lawyers said a December trial was untenable in view of the logistical demands of his presidential election bid, a potentially large amount of evidence they might need to review, and other cases he faces. Nauta, Trump's aide, pleaded not guilty last week in a Miami federal courthouse to charges that he had helped Trump hide top secret documents taken when he left the White House.
Persons: Trump, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Walt Nauta, Chris Kise, Todd Blanche, Jane, Read, Donald Trump, Aileen Cannon, Trump's, Jack Smith, Bharat Govind Gautam, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: U.S, United, REUTERS, Prosecutors, U.S . Justice, Trump, White House, Thomson Locations: Miami , Florida, U.S, Florida, Miami, Bengaluru
Trump and one of his aides want to delay the classified documents trial until after the 2024 election. Their defense argues that the former president and Walt Nauta could not get a fair trial before then. Holding a trial before the election would undoubtably affect the election itself, they argue. The defense gives no alternative date, but their opposition to any trial before the 2024 election is resoundingly clear. As Politico reported, delaying the trial beyond the election could allow Trump powers to thwart the case if he were to return to the White House.
Persons: Trump, Walt Nauta, Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, Smith's, Smith, Aileen Cannon, Blanche, Kise, Todd Blanche, Christopher Kise, Storm Daniels, Lettia James, James Organizations: White, Service, Trump, Politico, Iowa Republican, New York Locations: Wall, Silicon, United States, Iowa, New York
The payment to a porn star, Stormy Daniels, was made on Mr. Trump's behalf by his former fixer, Michael D. Cohen, to buy her silence about a tryst she said she had with Mr. Trump. Once Mr. Trump was elected, he reimbursed Mr. Cohen. Mr. Bragg’s prosecutors have accused Mr. Trump of falsifying business records to disguise the purpose of the reimbursements. Mr. Trump’s lawyers would have had to convince Judge Hellerstein, who sits in Manhattan, that the accusations were related in some way to Mr. Trump’s official duties as president. At one point, in a phrase that echoed Mr. Colangelo, the judge said of Mr. Cohen that “he was hired as a private matter to take care of private matters.”
Persons: Stormy Daniels, Michael D, Cohen, Trump, Judge Hellerstein, Todd Blanche, Trump’s, Cohen —, , Matthew Colangelo, ” Judge Hellerstein, Colangelo, Mr, , Locations: Manhattan
Former U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during an event following his arraignment on classified document charges, at Trump National Golf Club, in Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., June 13, 2023. A federal judge issued a protective order Monday barring former President Donald Trump from disclosing — or keeping — evidence set to be turned over to him by the government in the classified documents case on social media. The ruling largely tracks with a request for a protective order the government filed in the case on Friday. The government said in that filing that Trump and Nauta's lawyers had "no objections to this motion or the protective order." Prosecutors from the Manhattan district attorney's office said those restrictions were necessary because the "risk" that Trump would use the evidence "inappropriately" was "substantial."
Persons: Donald Trump, Walt Nauta, Bruce Reinhart, Blinken, Xi, Trump, Todd Blanche, Nauta, Donald J Organizations: U.S, Trump National Golf Club, Trump, NBC News Spy, NBC News U.S, Materials, Defense Counsel's, New, Prosecutors Locations: Bedminster , New Jersey, U.S, United States, China, New York, Manhattan
Jim Trusty, a former U.S. Justice Department official, filed a notice in Florida federal court asking a judge for approval to withdraw from the CNN case. A spokesperson for Trump thanked Trusty for his work on the case and said the lawsuit is "entering a new phase." Two other lawyers who were already representing Trump in other matters, Todd Blanche and Chris Kise, have now taken the lead in Trump’s defense in the documents case. CNN has asked a judge to dismiss the lawsuit, calling it an attempt to silence criticism of the former president. Lindsey Halligan, who has also worked on the documents investigation, will continue to represent Trump, Trusty said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jim, Trump, Jack Smith, John Rowley, Todd Blanche, Chris Kise, Lindsey Halligan Organizations: CNN, U.S . Justice Department, Trump, Thomson Locations: U.S, Florida, Lago, Washington
Cannon’s order reflects how the case concerns highly sensitive, classified materials – adding another layer of complexity to the high-stakes, first-of-its-kind federal prosecution of a former president. The new order also puts additional pressure on the Trump effort to expand the legal team representing him in the case. The local rules for the Florida court where the case was filed require that Trump have counsel barred in the state. Blanche previously had a clearance and a member of Kise’s legal firm who will be assisting him in the case has a security clearance now, the source told CNN. Trump is still looking to add another attorney to his team who will also need to obtain a clearance.
Persons: Aileen Cannon, Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Cannon, – Todd Blanche, Chris Kise –, Trump, Blanche, Walt Nauta, Trump’s bodyman, Nauta Organizations: CNN, Justice, Justice Department, Trump Locations: Florida
The brief order by the federal judge, Aileen M. Cannon, instructed the lawyers to reach out to the Litigation Security Group at the Justice Department by Tuesday to “expedite” the process for getting a clearance. Neither of the lawyers who appeared with Mr. Trump at his arraignment in Miami on Tuesday — Todd Blanche and Christopher M. Kise — have active security clearances, but both have been in touch with the Justice Department about getting them, a person familiar with the matter said. Mr. Blanche, a former federal prosecutor, used to have one, and a member of Mr. Kise’s law firm has one now, the person said. That member will be assisting in Mr. Trump’s case. Any lawyer representing Mr. Trump — and he is still considering candidates — is going to need an active clearance because he has been accused of illegally taking 31 documents with him when he left office, many of which were classified as top secret, one of the country’s most sensitive security designations.
Persons: Donald J, Aileen M, Cannon, Trump, — Todd Blanche, Christopher M, Kise —, Blanche Organizations: Litigation Security, Justice Department, Mr, Trump — Locations: Miami
Some reporters were granted access to the courtroom through a lottery system. No cell phones or laptops were allowed in the courthouse, leaving us to rely on an old-school journalism approach of pay phones and notepads. Here I was, reporting what happened inside a room that only about 100 people would witness. Journalists with the closest access to the Trump arraignment were inside the courtroom, within feet of the former president. Court rules can vary some, but typically, when reporters receive access to federal court they're allowed to bring along their cell phones and laptops.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump's, Todd Blanche, Blanche, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Donald Trump, Wilfredo Lee, they're, Jonathan Goodman, David Harbach, Waltine Nauta, Kimberly Leonard, Nine Trump, I'd, Marshall, marshall Organizations: Service, Journalists, PBS, Nine, Trump Locations: Miami, South Florida, City
Donald Trump pleaded not guilty in court after surrendering to US Marshals Tuesday. He's the first ex-president to be charged in federal court — and now the first to enter a plea. Trump entered the custody of the US Marshals Service and was arrested on Tuesday ahead of his historical court appearance at an arraignment in Miami federal court. On Friday, the court unsealed a 38-count indictment against Trump and Waltine Nauta, one of his personal aides. Win McNamee/Getty ImagesTrump held on to sensitive national security documents, prosecutors sayThis is the second pending criminal case against Trump.
Persons: Donald Trump, He's, , Jack Smith, Trump, Jonathan Goodman, Todd Blanche, Blanche, Waltine, Prosecutors, Goodman, Win McNamee, Stormy Daniels, Smith, General Merrick Garland, Joe Biden, Bragg, Smith's, Jose Luis Magana, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, She'll, James, John Rowley Organizations: US, Prosecutors, FBI, Service, US Marshals Service, Justice, Trump, National Archives, Getty, Manhattan District, AP, Republican Locations: Miami, North Carolina, Mar, United States
Miami CNN —Former President Donald Trump has pleaded not guilty to 37 charges related to alleged mishandling of classified documents. During the hearing, Trump sat hunched over with his arms crossed and a scowl on his face. The criminal charges in the Justice Department’s classified documents case escalates the legal jeopardy surrounding the 2024 GOP front-runner. What Tuesday’s hearing is aboutAttorneys Todd Blanche and Chris Kise represented Trump in court for the arraignment. The new charges in the DOJ documents case are drastically more serious and present the possibility of several years in prison if Trump is ultimately convicted.
Persons: Donald Trump, ” Trump, Todd Blanche, Trump, Trump’s, Walt Nauta, Jonathan Goodman, Nauta, David Harbach, ” Goodman, , Department’s, Jack Smith, Justice Department’s, Aileen Cannon –, Lago, , Chris Kise, Alina Habba, ” Habba, , Jay Bratt, Harbach, Julie Edelstein, David Aaron, Perkins, Cannon, Alan Rozenshtein, ” Kel McClanahan Organizations: Miami CNN, Justice Department, Trump, Justice, Doral, Mar, DOJ, , West Palm Beach, DOJ National Security Division, University of Minnesota, Circuit, George Washington University Law School, CNN Locations: Miami, New York, Ft . Pierce , Florida, West Palm
What to know about Trump’s court appearance
  + stars: | 2023-06-13 | by ( Jeremy Herb | Holmes Lybrand | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
Trump’s aide, Walt Nauta, was also charged in the indictment and is expected to appear in court alongside the former president. Here’s what to know about Tuesday’s court appearance:What happens when Trump gets to the courthouse? CNN reported that Trump’s team has had difficulty retaining seasoned lawyers. The former president is set to return to his Bedminster, New Jersey, resort following his court appearance Tuesday. Following that court appearance, he flew back to Mar-a-Lago and delivered a speech in front of supporters that night.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, He’s, Jack Smith, Trump’s, Walt Nauta, Jonathan Goodman, Alieen Cannon, Cannon, Jorge Colina, Jim, John Rowley, Todd Blanche, Chris Kise, Benedict Kuehne, it’s Blanche, Boris Epshteyn, Nauta, Stanley Woodward, Smith, Karen Gilbert, Gilbert, Nauta –, Police Manuel Morales Organizations: CNN, US, Trump, Miami, Former Miami, Justice Department, Trump’s Save America PAC, Who’s, Miami US, Lago, Trump’s, Navy, Trump White House, Trump –, Prosecutors, FBI, Department of Homeland Security, Miami Police Department, Federal Protective Service, DHS, Service Locations: Miami, Lago, Manhattan, Bedminster , New Jersey, New York, Florida, Kise, Washington, DC, Trump from New Jersey, Mar, Police, Bedminster
But his defense team is still evolving after at least three key members left in recent weeks. Trump has also sought to add a Florida-based criminal defense lawyer to his team in the days since his indictment, according to sources familiar with the conversations. Kise, a former Florida solicitor general who has primarily handled civil cases, was brought on to Trump’s team last year after the FBI seized classified documents kept at Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate. Trump has struggled in recent weeks to bolster his defense team as the documents investigation intensified. The day the indictment was unsealed, the pair abruptly announced their resignation from Trump’s legal team.
Persons: Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, Chris Kise, Jim, John Rowley –, Blanche, Kise, Trump, Lindsey Halligan, Rowley, Evan Corcoran, Halligan, Tim Parlatore, Boris Epshteyn, Parlatore, Epshteyn, Trump’s, Andrew Goudsward, Sarah N, Lynch, Jacqueline Thomsen, Karen Freifeld, David Bario, Alistair Bell Organizations: Trump, FBI, Trump's, New, Reuters, U.S . Justice Department, CNN, Epshteyn, Thomson Locations: Miami, Florida, Lago, New York, Manhattan, Epshteyn, Washington
The first-ever arraignment of a former president on federal charges coincided with the first public encounter between the two men, Mr. Trump and Mr. Smith, at the center of the Mar-a-Lago documents case. But these most dissimilar of adversaries are locked in a legal battle with immense political and legal implications for a polarized nation. Mr. Trump, who has denounced his indictment as a witch hunt and called Mr. Smith a “thug,” did not say a word at the hearing. Mr. Trump has promised to have more to say later. While Mr. Kise absorbed himself in paperwork, Mr. Trump and Mr. Blanche leaned in close to whisper in each other’s ears, one or twice sharing a laugh.
Persons: Trump, Smith, , Jonathan Goodman, Christopher M, Kise, Todd Blanche, Judge Goodman, Blanche
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