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    Home » Blog » Battle of the experts: Trump legal backers facing off against government over special counsel’s ‘legitimacy’

    Battle of the experts: Trump legal backers facing off against government over special counsel’s ‘legitimacy’

    June 21, 2024Updated:June 21, 2024 US News No Comments
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    Camp PIERCE, Florida — The U.S. government’s classified records case against previous president Donald Trump sounded more like a law college lecture than a defense-possession reading on a motion to ignore.

    The security made the explanations for the prosecution, highlighting that there is no legislation that allowed the appointment of Special Counsel Jack Smith to look into the information from the National Archives that Trump had probably classified papers at his Mar-a-Lago house in Palm Beach.

    The topic of conversation on Friday veered from the question of who is Smith’s manager to decades-old precedents involving prior specific prosecutors. At one point, Bove claimed that the Justice Department could in fact create a” dark state” through session of specific lawyers.

    Smith’s group has maintained that Attorney General Merrick Garland, as brain of the U. S. Justice Department, was empowered to nominate Smith and to delegate legal decisions to him.

    A number of third-party attorneys will testify in a provincial courtroom in Fort Pierce to decide whether Smith’s visit to fight his alleged handling of classified documents and attempts to stop the government from obtaining them will be discussed with prosecutors working for the government and attorneys arguing for Trump and co-defendants Waltine Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira.

    Many critics believe the judge should have decided this issue quickly months ago because he was reportedly asked by two other Southern District of Florida judges to step aside in favor of a more experienced jurist. According to anonymous attorneys who were quoted by The New York Times, Cannon was said to have rejected the suggestions.

    Similar arguments to those that other judges rejected in challenges to special counsels Mueller, who investigated Trump’s relationship with Russia, and David Weiss, who have been prosecuting President Joe Biden’s son Hunter on gun and tax charges, are the focus of the daylong hearing at the Alto Lee Adams Sr. United States Courthouse.

    A related defense challenge to Smith is expected to be heard on Monday, with an emphasis on the funding of his office. That question, too, has failed to gain traction with other judges.

    On Tuesday, Cannon is scheduled to hear arguments on whether a federal judge in Washington, D. C. improperly allowed testimony from onetime Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran, under a crime- fraud exception to attorney- client privilege. Smith has alleged Trump misled the lawyer during his bid to obstruct the government’s investigation.

    Trump has entered a not-guilty plea in a first-class case filed in June last year, followed by a second-degree charge in a subsequent superseding indictment. His co- defendants, Nauta, a personal valet, and De Oliveira, a Mar- a- Lago property manager, also have pleaded not guilty.

    Judges ‘ critics claim that Cannon has essentially embraced a defense tactic of postponing a trial until after the November presidential election. They claim that she has conducted lengthy hearings on issues that most other judges would have quickly decided to decide after reviewing written motions submitted to the court.

    Instead, Cannon canceled a May 20 trial start date, citing a myriad of pre-trial issues to be decided, including more than a half-dozen motions to dismiss, as well as a number of litigious legal issues between Trump’s attorneys and the prosecution over the handling of confidential information at trial.

    Recently, the judge has rejected some dismissal motions, saying it is too early in the proceedings to consider them, or more appropriately presented as jury instructions.

    The defense had brought legal challenges to allegations of duplication and false statements made in the name of duplicators and prejudicial witnesses. However, Cannon stated in an order that” the identified deficiencies are either permitted by law, raise evidentiary challenges not appropriate for disposal at this juncture, and/or do not require dismissal even if technically deficient, so long as the jury is instructed appropriately and presented with adequate verdict forms as regards each Defendant’s alleged conduct,” even if they “engender some arguable confusion.”

    Previous rulings by the judge included one that suggested that Trump had the right to keep the documents with him after he leaves the White House in 2021 and to designate them as his own, according to the Presidential Records Act.

    There are still more third parties coming to Fort Pierce to voice their opinions on a variety of issues, most recently the government’s request to impose a gag order against Trump for disclosing information from FBI agents in public about their search for documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach.

    Cannon light-upped a filing backing Trump by America First Legal, a Washington-based nonprofit organization led by former West Wing senior adviser Stephen Miller, late on Thursday.

    The foundation claimed in a court filing that it “has a special interest in protecting First Amendment liberties like those at issue in this case.”

    The foundation continued,” The most important thing is that the foundation writes to protect the right of a major party presidential candidate to speak freely on issues affecting politics and government — fundamental areas of First Amendment expression.”

    ________

    ©2024 South Florida Sun Sentinel. Visit at&nbsp, sun- sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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