RawStory

Jack Smith

Federal judge to set the date for the historic U.S. v. Trump trial on Monday

Washington (AFP) - A federal judge is expected to set a date on Monday for what could be one of the most momentous trials in American history: the United States of America versus Donald J. Trump. Special counsel Jack Smith has asked for the trial of the 45th US president -- who faces charges of conspiring to overturn the 2020 election which he lost -- to begin on January 2, 2024. Trump's attorneys have countered with a proposed date of April 2026 -- well after the November 2024 election in which the real estate tycoon is seeking to return to the White House. US District Court Judge Tanya Chutk...

'He can't control himself': Trump put on notice judges may be forced to jail him

During an appearance on MSNBC, former Watergate attorney Jill Wine-Banks warned Donald Trump he could end up in pre-trial detention if he doesn't tone down his rhetoric about his criminal indictments.

In a segment with host Ayman Mohyeldin on the former president's attacks on prosecutors, including Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and special counsel Jack Smith, Wine-Banks suggested sanctioning Trump financially would be ineffective since he would just pay the fines with his supporter's donations.

As the expert explained, Trump is putting the judges in a tough spot if they decide to jail the former president, but that he may leave them no choice.

According to Wine-Banks, Judge Tanya Chutkan, who is overseeing Trump's Washington D.C. federal trial, is "up to the task" of handling the former president's attacks.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"I think that she can handle it, but she is in a very difficult position because putting him in custody has to be a last resort," she explained. "He may push her to that, but he will see it as a political advantage, and so she has to be careful not to give him that advantage. But there is a limit to what she can do to enforce his compliance with what her reasonable requirements for his release are."

"She can penalize him with a monetary fine but his supporters are paying his legal bills already so it doesn't hurt him and he doesn't care about them and their money," she added. "And so I don't know how much benefit in terms of his compliance it would be to fine him if he doesn't obey the fine. She said she would move to trial date up but she can only move it up so far without denying him due process and the adequate time to prepare, and he knows that and she knows that."

"So there's a very limited amount of things that she can do other than incarceration, and I think that that may have to be if he -- you know [political consultant] Stuart Stevens is right: he can't control himself," she elaborated. "And so if he goes way beyond the bounds and is clear in his threats and provoking his supporters to create violence in response to these threats, I think that he will have to be shut up by being incarcerated, and we have an example of Eugene Debs who ran for president from jail and so it is possible that he can continue his campaign from jail."

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Trump's lawyers can expect a major loss when they face Judge Chutkan on Monday: former prosecutor

Appearing on MSNBC's "The Katie Phang Show" early Saturday morning, former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner claimed Donald Trump's lawyers can expect their proposal to delay their client's trial into 2026 to be burned to the ground by U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Judge Tanya Chutkan on Monday.

Speaking with the host, he agreed with her assertion and that of co-panelist Hugo Lowell of the Guardian, that the motion from the former president's lawyers was blatantly "ludicrous."

"Glenn, you and I have tried cases in federal court, asking for a trial date as far out as April 2026 is not only laughable, but ludicrous. What do you expect to see on Monday with Judge Chutkan?" host Phang prompted.

"Katie, it was not a reasonable ask, and frankly I think that that will make Judge Chutkan's decision a little bit easier," Kirschner replied. "This is not a legitimate lawyering that's going on by Donald Trump's criminal defense attorneys. It feels more like they're acting as assistant campaign chairmen to Donald Trump."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"So listen, if the most reasonable voice in the room is [special counsel] Jack Smith and his team of federal prosecutors, and I believe that those are the reasonable voices, then Judge Chutkan is likely going to go with their recommendation."

"I suspect you are going to see Tanya Chutkan to set a trial date for sometime in early 2024 so that this case can be resolved well in advance of the November 2024 presidential election," he predicted.

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'A multitude of ways' exist to stop Trump from becoming president again: legal expert

According to former prosecutor Shan Wu, there are multiple avenues to either make Donald Trump ineligible to run for president again or keep him off the ballot at the state level.

In his column for the Daily Beast, Wu made his case that the former president is already ineligible to run under the "Disqualification Clause" found in the U.S. Constitution, adding that the standard required to be banned fits Trump "like a glove."

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From quashing teachers unions to pardoning Trump, voters are rejecting Republican positions

Polling results released Friday in the wake of the first 2024 Republican presidential debate this week show that majorities of Independent voters and those across the political spectrum disagree with key GOP positions addressed during the event.

While former U.S. President Donald Trump, the GOP front-runner, skipped Fox's debate, eight candidates participated: North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, former Vice President Mike Pence, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, and U.S. Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina.

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DeSantis busted by Florida paper over 'horrific' abortion debate tale

On Saturday morning the Miami Herald called out Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) for a story he told during Wednesday's Republican Party debate about an abortion where he got the facts entirely wrong in order to make his anti-choice point.


At issue was a tale about a woman he called "Penny" who survived an abortion.

The Florida governor told a national TV audience, "I know a lady in Florida named Penny. She survived multiple abortion attempts. She was left discarded in a pan. Fortunately, her grandmother saved her and brought her to another hospital.”

According to the Herald, DeSantis got the story wrong even down to the woman's name.

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Trump launches overnight attack on Jack Smith for making him 'look as bad as possible'

Donald Trump has launched yet another attack on Jack Smith with an overnight complaint on his Truth Social account complaining that the special counsel is making him look "bad."

At approximately 2 a.m., the former president took to his social media account to rage about the indictment in a Florida federal court accusing him and several of his close aides of obstruction of justice related to stolen government documents.

The now four-times indicted Trump appears furious that surveillance tapes at his Mar-a-Lago resort will be used as evidence against him.

"The Security Tapes from Mar-a-Lago that evil and sinister prosecutor, Deranged Jack Smith, 'leaked' or otherwise stated were deleted or altered were, in fact, NOT deleted or altered," he wrote.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

He then continued, "It was a Fake Story put out by the government THUGS. Those tapes were openly handed over, without protest or litigation, and then the 'Deranged One' makes me look as bad as possible. The whole case is FAKE because I come under the Presidential Records Act. Biden or Pence did not!"

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Jack Smith smacks down Trump body man's claim about leaking sealed information

In a new filing reported by The Messenger's Adam Klasfeld, special counsel Jack Smith demolished a claim by former President Donald Trump's valet and body man Walt Nauta that the prosecution in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case illegally released sealed grand jury information.

Specifically, Smith revealed that the material in question was actually authorized for release by a judge in the first place.

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Sentences 'awfully steep' if Trump becomes 'a multi-times convicted felon': Ex-prosecutor

Former United States attorney for the Northern District of Alabama and MSNBC political analyst Joyce Vance told host Andrea Mitchell on Friday that ex-President Donald Trump's "likely" first potential conviction will lead to harsher sentences if he is found guilty of the dozens of criminal charges that were filed by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith, and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

AlterNet noted on Wednesday that the prosecutors allege that Trump:

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'I expect a bunch of them to flip': Legal expert says Trump has too many co-defendants to avoid conviction

The pressure is on for some of Donald Trump's co-defendants in Georgia to flip and testify against the former president, and a legal expert explained how that was baked into the prosecutor's case.

The ex-president was indicted in Fulton County on racketeering and other charges related to his post-election conduct, and Florida prosecutor Dave Aronberg told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that the district attorney there had rounded up a coterie of accused co-conspirators to ensure Trump's conviction.

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Trump glimpsed his 'miserable future' in Fulton County jail: Ex-prosecutor

For all his bluster and defiance in the face of his arrest and booking in the Georgia election racketeering case, former President Donald Trump glimpsed a look at his "miserable future" when he set foot in the Fulton County Jail, wrote former federal prosecutor Harry Litman in an analysis for the Los Angeles Times on Thursday.

In many ways, said Litman, when Trump stepped into the jail to get processed and have his mugshot taken, he was being treated the same way any regular person charged with a crime in Georgia would be. However, "Trump did receive some special treatment that distinguished him — for the worse — even from some of his 18 co-defendants in the sprawling racketeering case. He is now subject to a detailed set of conditions in return for the continued privilege of staying out of the county’s notoriously decrepit jail."

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'Fake elector' co-defendant throws former president under the bus: report

Donald Trump directed one of his co-defendants, a Georgia Republican, to sign false papers claiming to be a legitimate elector in the 2020 election, according to a new court filing.

Trump and more than a dozen others were indicted in Fulton County for a purported conspiracy to undermine the 2020 election. Part of that overall alleged scheme was the fake elector plot.

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Jim Jordan seeks a peek inside Fulton County case against Trump

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) is seeking a peek into the Georgia case against Donald Trump and his allies.

The Ohio Republican sent a letter to Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis seeking records and communications regarding to her office's receipt or use of federal funds, as well as all documents and communications shared with the Department of Justice, special counsel Jack Smith's office or any other executive branch officials.

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