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Jack Smith

Aileen Cannon could hold Trump's trial where jurors would come from deep red counties: report

Former President Donald Trump carried the state of Florida twice — but that doesn't necessarily mean the jury pool is stacked in his favor if he is tried there in the federal Espionage Act case against him. After all, the alleged crime of stashing boxes full of highly classified defense information in unsecured rooms across his Mar-a-Lago resort took place in Palm Beach County, where Trump lost by 12 points in 2020.

But Palm Beach County may not be where the trial is going to take place. According to The New York Times, District Judge Aileen Cannon appears set to hold the trial at her courthouse in Fort Pierce — where jurors would potentially be drawn from more rural counties that Trump carried by enormous margins.

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Trump’s lawyers turn over audio recordings of more interviews to special counsel: CNN

Attorneys representing Donald Trump have turned over audio recordings of interviews to the special counsel, CNN reports.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s Wednesday court filing revealed that investigators have obtained “more tapes of interviews with Trump conducted by non-government entities and recorded with his consent but did not say what the tapes said or how they were obtained.”

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Donald Trump's Election Day operations chief appears before Jan. 6 grand jury

While the charges have been announced against Donald Trump for the document scandal, special counsel Jack Smith is still at work investigating the Jan. 6 attack on Congress and the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election.

According to NBC News on Thursday, Trump's Election Day operations chief has appeared to answer questions before the grand jury.

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'A terrifying day': Former FBI agent says evidence turned over to Trump is 'overwhelming'

All of the evidence the Justice Department collected about the classified documents case was turned over to Donald Trump and his lawyers on Thursday – and an FBI expert says the trove is likely to be terrifying.

While the specifics aren't public, what is available is a list of the types of information. Documents obtained via subpoena, evidence obtained via search warrants, transcripts of grand jury testimony taken before a grand jury in the District of Columbia, transcripts of grand jury testimony taken in the Southern District of Florida, witness interviews conducted through May 12, 2023, key documents, and photographs, and complete copies of closed-circuit television footage.

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Trump-appointed judge could 'tilt the process in his favor' during jury selection: legal experts

Although many legal analysts believe that special counsel Jack Smith has built a strong case against former President Donald Trump, that doesn't necessarily mean that he will be convicted on any of the federal 37 counts he is facing. Smith and allies in the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) will need to convince jurors that the allegations are true.

Smith alleges that Trump endangered the United States' national security by storing classified government documents at Mar-a-Lago — documents that, according to Smith, should have remained in Washington, D.C. when Trump left office on January 20, 2021. The indictment includes allegations of obstruction of justice and violations of the Espionage Act of 1917.

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Trump's 'self-pardon' gambit has at least two fatal flaws: analysis

According to conservative columnist Jennifer Rubin, Donald Trump's decision to run for president in the belief it would keep him out of jail has been a bust and he needs to throw his support behind another Republican candidate for the presidency if wants to make a federal conviction disappear via a pardon.

In her column for the Washington Post, Rubin suggested that the former president likely thought by announcing he was making another run for the Oval Office would keep the DOJ from indicting him out of fears it would look like a political hit job.

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Trump's legal team now has access to discovery evidence including witness list: report

The Department of Justice on Wednesday handed over discovery evidence to Donald Trump’s legal team in the classified documents case, Politico’s Kyley Cheney reports.

The discovery evidence includes the list of witnesses who will testify for the government in the case against the former president.

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Trump may 'escape accountability once again' due to DOJ 'missteps': historian

Between special counsel Jack Smith's 37-count federal prosecution and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jr.'s 34-count case in New York State, former President Donald Trump is facing a total of 71 felony counts. And Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential results are the focus of criminal investigations by Smith for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and Fulton County DA Fani Willis for the State of Georgia, although he hasn't been indicted in either of those cases.

Trump's Republican defenders have been attacking Smith, Bragg and Willis as politically motivated, insisting that they have a vendetta against Trump. As they see it, Trump is being persecuted at both the federal level and the state level.

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Attorney destroys MAGA 'whataboutists' who compare Trump case to Biden and Clinton

When MAGA Republicans rage against special counsel Jack Smith's 37-count federal criminal case against former President Donald Trump, they often engage in "whataboutism" — as in: What about Hillary Clinton's e-mails in 2016? What about the classified documents that President Joe Biden and former Vice President Mike Pence had in their homes?

Pence is a hardcore social conservative who is seeking the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, but some MAGA "whataboutists" will mention him alongside Clinton or Biden because they believe he let Trump down after the 2020 election.

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Trump’s trial will soon be underway in Florida – here’s why prosecutors had little choice in selecting any other courthouse location

Special Counsel Jack Smith may have wished he could indict and try former president Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., where Trump is disliked, rather than in southern Florida, where Trump is popular.

But based on my experience as a scholar of criminal law and procedure, as well as my time practicing criminal law, I believe that under the Constitution – and under the circumstances – Smith had little choice but to prosecute Trump in Florida.

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Morning Joe marvels at Trump's bungling: 'Every time he goes on the air he moves himself closer to prison'

"Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough on Wednesday marveled at former President Donald Trump's talent for incriminating himself during television interviews.

After he read off reactions from some conservatives to Trump's interview with Fox News' Bret Baier, Scarborough argued that the former president had left himself with no defenses in special counsel Jack Smith's 37-count criminal indictment against him.

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Romney rebuffs MAGA crowd and backs DOJ over Hunter Biden plea deal

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) on Tuesday dismissed assertions by fellow Republicans that Hunter Biden’s plea deal with the Department of Justice on tax charges casts doubt on the agency’s ability to fairly prosecute political figures and their family members.

The 2012 Republican presidential nominee told CNN’s Manu Raju, “This is the sort of thing for which there are typically plea deals that are executed."

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Trump's only way to defend his incriminating videos could destroy him in the end: legal analysts

Legal analysts have spent the 24 hours in wake of Donald Trump's interview with Bret Baier saying that the former president destroyed any hope he had at a defense in the documents case. Now, some are saying that interview is part of a large number of statements that will be used to put Trump in a tough spot in a trial.

The indicted former president is scheduled to face off in court in Aug., according to Judge Aileen Cannon, though experts warn that isn't likely to be a reality. In the case, prosecutors are expected to use some of the interviews with Trump against him.

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