- Supreme Court decision keeps case alive, but puts it at risk
- Lower court judge will need to schedule high-stakes mini trial
The
The timing of such a hearing will be consequential, with Trump’s campaign to return to the White House reaching a fever pitch and his rematch against President
The Supreme Court will soon return the case to US District Judge
To do that, Chutkan will likely hold a hearing later this summer that would span several days. Lawyers for Trump and Special Counsel
WATCH: The US Supreme Court ruled that Donald Trump has some immunity from criminal charges for trying to reverse the 2020 election results. Source: Bloomberg
“The hearing could devolve into something that is also going to be political in nature,” said David Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor. “This will be the one and only opportunity the prosecution is going to have to present to the judge and the public what evidence they have that the former president was not immune.”
Chutkan would certainly get extensive briefing from both sides before the hearing, as they argue about what evidence can be presented under the Supreme Court’s guidance that Trump’s official acts can’t be used against him.
Prosecutors may seek to bolster their case by presenting testimony for the first time from Trump’s alleged co-conspirators who haven’t previously been named, said Weinstein. Those individuals previously took the witness stand in secret before a federal grand jury, and their testimony may be needed, now more than ever, to illustrate that Trump’s actions were private rather than official, he said.
The Supreme Court criticized the lower court for issuing a decision against Trump without every aspect of the case being fully briefed. That means the expected mini-trial will need to revisit every element of the indictment in greater detail. But unlike a jury trial, the government won’t need to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump’s actions were private conduct.
“What this judge is going to consider is whether the government presented enough evidence that the acts rebut the presumption of immunity” created by the Supreme Court, according to Weinstein. “The way they’ll do that is to show that the actions were beyond the outer fringes of his official duties, and were private.”
Smith could also seek to streamline the process by preemptively amending the indictment to remove any problematic details and narrow the fight.
Once the high-stakes hearing is over, Chutkan will issue a ruling on which aspects of the indictment survived the Supreme Court’s guidance. Any ruling would almost certainly be appealed, setting up another path to the Supreme Court and further delaying a jury trial.
“Unless the judge completely dismisses the case, which seems unlikely, I imagine Trump will appeal,” said former federal prosecutor
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By that time the issue could be moot, because Trump has said he would instruct the Justice Department to drop the case if he wins the election.
Trump is accused of conspiring to defraud the US by promoting false claims of voter fraud, pressuring the Justice Department to conduct sham investigations, pushing then-Vice President
Chief Justice
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WATCH: Biden responds to the Supreme Court’s ruling that Trump has some immunity from criminal charges over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. Source: Bloomberg
Chutkan will have to determine whether the remaining alleged conduct was official, including Trump’s outreach to politicians in swing states to send fake presidential electors to Pence and the US Senate. The majority opinion signaled the remaining arguments may be complex and time consuming.
The Washington-based judge, an appointee of former President
“Unlike Trump’s alleged interactions with the Justice Department, this alleged conduct cannot be neatly categorized as falling within a particular presidential function,” Roberts wrote.
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Steve Stroth, Anthony Aarons
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