RawStory

Jack Smith

‘Injustice’: Experts condemn Supreme Court’s ‘fundamentally corrupt’ Trump decision

Legal and political experts were stunned by the Supreme Court announcing Wednesday it will take up Donald Trump’s claim of presidential immunity, despite there being no contradiction in the lower courts. Compounding experts’ surprise and concern over granting certiorari was the length of time it took to announce the decision, and that they will not hear arguments until April 22.

“The Supreme Court heard and decided Bush v. Gore in THREE DAYS. THAT was expediting a case of national importance,” noted Tristan Snell, the former New York State prosecutor who led the successful investigation and $25 million prosecution of Donald Trump’s Trump University.

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'130 days!?' Angry legal expert flags hypocrisy of Supreme Court's Trump immunity delay

"The Nation" justice correspondent Elie Mystal is beside himself with fury at the Supreme Court's delayed decision to review former President Donald Trump's claim to absolute immunity, jeopardizing the timeline for being able to hold a trial on Trump's federal election charges before the 2024 election.

On Wednesday's edition of MSNBC's "The Beat," he raked the justices over the coals for suddenly deciding to hear the case now that it throws off the timeline, when they refused in December to hear the case at a time when everything could have been wrapped up far more easily.

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'There are some tells there': Expert explains 'upsetting' part of Trump SCOTUS ruling

The Supreme Court gave away their position a bit in its Wednesday ruling on Donald Trump's immunity request, a legal expert said.

Earlier in the day, the court agreed to issue a ruling on former President Donald Trump's presidential immunity claim.

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Expert says Jack Smith will win at Supreme Court: 'Any lawyer could win it blindfolded'

The Supreme Court has now thrown into doubt whether it will be possible to hold former President Donald Trump's federal election subversion case before the election with its move to review the former president's claim to presidential immunity.

But there's one thing that special counsel Jack Smith should be able to win easily, said former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal on MSNBC, and that is the actual immunity argument itself when it is heard in April.

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Jack Smith and Judge Chutkan have a tool to get around the Supreme Court's delay: expert

The Supreme Court's decision to review former President Donald Trump's claim of presidential immunity in the federal election conspiracy case threatens the chances of the trial being held before the presidential election.

But it doesn't entirely eliminate those chances, former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal told MSNBC's Ari Melber on Wednesday. There are some maneuvers that special counsel Jack Smith and District Judge Tanya Chutkan could take to lessen the impact of the delay.

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Supreme Court just took Trump's D.C. trial 'off the board' for pre-election: Trump lawyer

The Supreme Court may have just ensured former President Donald Trump's election interference trial won't begin until after the 2024 presidential election, his former lawyer argues.

Tim Parlatore appeared on CNN on Wednesday evening to discuss with Jake Tapper the court's recent decision to consider Trump's presidential immunity defense in his federal election interference case.

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Trump takes virtual victory lap after SCOTUS agrees to consider presidential immunity case

Former president Donald Trump took a virtual victory lap Wednesday after the Supreme Court ruled it would take up his presidential immunity case.

Trump suggested that the court’s decision to hear arguments — flatly rejected by a D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals panel loath to grant presidents “unbounded authority to commit crimes” — was proof of the validity of his claim.

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Supreme Court agrees to rule on Trump's presidential immunity claim: report

The Supreme Court of the United States agreed to issue a ruling on former President Donald Trump's presidential immunity claim, according to reports.

The high court will issue a ruling on whether Trump can be prosecuted on election interference-linked charges brought by special counsel Jack Smith.

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Aileen Cannon denies Trump request to access classified filings

Judge Aileen Cannon ruled against Donald Trump's request to have access to classified filings in the documents case Wednesday.

The content of the classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago have complicated special counsel Jack Smith's federal court case against Trump as both sides navigate the Classified Information Procedures Act that protects them.

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Jack Smith informs Judge Cannon of Trump's 'egregious' exposure of potential witnesses

Special counsel Jack Smith asked U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon to seal or redact the names of witnesses in the classified documents case against former President Donald Trump.

In a 23-page filing on Wednesday, Smith said Trump's legal team disagreed with most of the proposed redactions.

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Mark Meadows loses another bid to move criminal case out of Georgia

A federal appeals court has denied Mark Meadows' effort to move his Georgia prosecution into federal court.

The full bench of the 11th District Court of Appeals in Atlanta denied his request to reconsider a unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel to remove the criminal case from state court to federal court, although none of the judges requested a poll in this ruling.

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Judge Cannon tells Trump co-defendants they can't see confidential docs in new ruling

Judge Aileen Cannon told former President Donald Trump's co-defendants in his federal Florida case that they cannot look at classified documents, court records show.

The Trump-appointed judge sided with special prosecutor Jack Smith and barred Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira from receiving access to secret materials produced in discovery, Guardian reporter Hugo Lowell was among the first to report.

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Trump sounds like a '1950s redneck' when talking about Black people: ex-GOP chair

During a Friday night speech in Columbia, South Carolina, Donald Trump offered some reasons why he believes that Black voters should support him. Trump, discussing the fact that he is facing four criminal indictments, argued that his legal problems should make him appealing to Black voters.

Trump told the crowd, "The mug shot, we've all seen the mugshot. And you know who embraced it more than anybody else? The Black population. It's incredible. You see Black people walking around with my mugshot."

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