RawStory

Jack Smith

Judge Cannon could be yanked from Trump docs case without Jack Smith asking for it: expert

Former Justice Department prosecutor Andrew Weissmann explained that the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals could remove Judge Aileen Cannon from the Donald Trump documents case without anyone asking for it.

Cannon has already been overturned by the higher court twice, and if special counsel Jack Smith appeals her decision on exposing classified information and exposing witnesses, Weissmann thinks they'd overturn her in this case as well. Smith has asked that Cannon reconsider her decision instead.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Cannon blocks Trump lawyers' plan for a deluge of legal filings

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon rejected a request by former President Donald Trump's legal team to file all of his pretrial requests in one go, telling the former president to do each as an individual filing.

Cannon is overseeing the federal case brought by special counsel Jack Smith against Trump for hoarding a trove of highly classified national defense information at his Mar-a-Lago resort in South Florida. Also charged in the case are Trump's valet Walt Nauta and Mar-a-Lago property manager Carlos de Oliveira, who are accused of trying to help him hide the documents and destroy security footage that would incriminate them.

Keep reading... Show less

Revealed: Jack Smith interviewed GA governor in Trump election case 'months ago'

As former President Donald Trump faces criminal charges in his Fulton County election interference trial, Georgia Republican Governor Brian Kemp on Tuesday told CNN that special counsel Jack Smith interviewed him "months ago" regarding the case.

The news outlet reports a Kemp spokesperson "told CNN in July that Smith’s team had contacted Kemp but it was not previously known that he sat for an interview."

Keep reading... Show less

'Two strikes': Experts say Aileen Cannon is getting closer to being recused

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Donald Trump appointee whose decisions have raised concerns about bias toward the former president, might have finally gone too far, wrote legal experts Norm Eisen and Joshua Kolb for Slate on Tuesday.

What's more, special counsel Jack Smith might be gearing up to ask the appellate court to step in and get rid of her.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump shares articles from legal eagles — despite them making him look bad

Former President Donald Trump is known to share links to favorable news stories and right-wing opinions on his Truth Social account, but something changed Tuesday when he appeared to be promoting stories that knock him.

On Tuesday, he shared a Lawfare article by former Assistant U.S. Attorney Jack Goldsmith that stated it was clear special counsel Jack Smith is rushing to trial.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s 'violent fantasies' take center stage in the 'MAGA playbook': conservative

In 2018, The Lincoln Project's Rick Wilson — a former GOP strategist and outspoken Never Trump conservative — told The Observer why he obtained a license to carry a concealed weapon: death threats from Donald Trump supporters.

Wilson explained, "It's not a trivial macho posture thing. I carry because I've had people approach me in public and threaten to kill me."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump to be hit by multiple deadlines in big week at court

Now that a firm court date has been set for Donald Trump's criminal case centered on hush-money payments made to adult movie star Stormy Daniels, the ex-president has all four of his criminal cases moving in earnest — and he has some key deadlines coming up this week.

The first comes on Tuesday, when the "motion for leave to file" is due in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.

Keep reading... Show less

'It should be obvious': Liz Cheney urges SCOTUS to take an ax to Trump immunity claim

Former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) on Monday urged the United States Supreme Court to act swiftly to shoot down former President Donald Trump's claims that he had total immunity to commit crimes while serving as president.

Writing on Twitter, Cheney said that the legal system needed to pick up the pace when it comes to putting the former president on trial for alleged crimes he committed in his efforts to illegally remain in power.

Keep reading... Show less

Needless Judge Cannon delays have Jack Smith under the gun: analysis

According to former U.S Attorney Joyce Vance, this coming Friday will mark a pivotal day in special counsel Jack Smith's attempts to bring Donald Trump to trial for obstruction of justice related to his hoarding of government documents at his Mar-a-Lago report.

After months of what Vance called "unnecessary" foot-dragging, United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon has set the end of the week as a deadline for all the defendants in the stolen documents case to file responses in a discovery squabble with the DOJ.

As Vance explained on her "Civil Discourse" Substack platform, any hope that special counsel Smith will have of finally getting the trial of Trump moving is slipping away and how things go this week may dictate whether he will make a plea to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

As she wrote, the clock is ticking and Smith is under the gun.

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn't become president

"Judge Aileen Cannon continues to string out the timeline, permitting this issue to unnecessarily consume weeks of briefing time," she explained. "But we are getting close to the point where she must make decisions on issues involving both unclassified and classified discovery, and the Special Counsel’s office will have to reach a decision about appealing her if the rulings are as unfavorable as they have been to date."

Vance added that the possibility that the case will go to trial before the election "would take a moon shot."

"Trump is likely to go into the Republican convention and the election without being held accountable for dangerous mishandling of classified materials—something that should be unthinkable and would have been for Republicans in the pre-Trump era," she lamented.

You can read more here.

'These cases should all be thrown out!' Trump lashes out in multi-post midnight meltdown

After spending Sunday posting screenshots of various polls showing him either leading against former Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) and President Joe Biden, Donald Trump went off on a multi-post bender at midnight fuming at the results of the financial fraud trial that could cost him as much as $450 million.

On his Truth Social platform, the former president, who is now looking at paying out over a half billion dollars in two civil suits and the trial just concluded in Judge Arthur Engoron's court room, attacked New York Attorney General Letitia James and then went on to attack Haley for not bowing out of the GOP nomination race.

Keep reading... Show less

Non-Trump Supreme Court ruling could be 'a stake in the heart of the Jack Smith case'

There is a Supreme Court case in which Donald Trump is not a party, yet, depending on how the high court rules, it could make Special Counsel Jack Smith's job prosecuting the former president very difficult.

Jeffrey Rosen, professor at George Washington University Law School, appeared on CNN Newsroom with Jim Acosta, where he was asked about the cases involving Trump. On Fani Willis, Rosen indicated that "defendants are supposed to use every legal avenue, and in fact challenging prosecutions can be productive as we saw in the Hunter Biden case, where the key informant was just disqualified for lying."

Keep reading... Show less

SCOTUS signals Trump decision could come next week: expert

The Supreme Court signaled Friday that a decision regarding a President Donald Trump case could be coming next Wednesday, experts say — but it's not yet clear which one.

CNN analyst Steve Vladeck took to X to share an update to the Supreme Court website marking Wednesday, Feb. 21, as a possible opinion day.

Keep reading... Show less

Dragging feet by Supreme Court suggests immunity ruling will go in Trump's favor: legal expert

Donald Trump is fighting to get time on his side as he urges the Supreme Court to halt his federal election trial while he continues to appeal his immunity case, according to a legal expert who's watching the case.

Every minute that clicks by as he works through appeals over his claim that the office of the president makes him immune from prosecution works in his favor, according to former litigator Lisa Rubin.

Keep reading... Show less