- Ex-president accused of trying to illegally overturn election
- Trump lawyers say Supreme Court ruling affects multiple cases
The US Supreme Court officially sent the federal criminal case against
The ruling was issued July 1, but it takes about a month to be entered into the court record on Friday. US District Judge
Chutkan acted fast, entering an order Saturday morning that set a hearing for Aug. 16 to discuss next steps. Trump won’t be required to attend. The judge also directed the parties to file a report by Aug. 9 with proposals for a schedule.
Chutkan will resume the long-delayed case after Trump formally became the Republican Party’s presidential nominee and just three months before the Nov. 5 general election. The judge’s next steps likely will be to decide how she wants to proceed, which could include in-person hearings to consider arguments and evidence, and how quickly to move.
Presidents are entitled to broad immunity against charges tied to their official acts, and Trump is at least partially shielded against a federal indictment for his post-election conduct, the high court’s conservative majority ruled. Special Counsel
The justices directed Chutkan to determine which allegations in the indictment involved official acts by Trump. They said “core” presidential functions are clearly shielded from prosecution and that Trump couldn’t be charged for his discussions with Justice Department officials after the election.
However, the Supreme Court didn’t make a final call on the fate of other key elements of the indictment, including Trump’s alleged efforts to pressure then-Vice President
Chutkan’s next ruling on the immunity question could immediately be appealed and possibly land before the justices again.
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The case is US v. Trump,
(Updates with announcement of next hearing in third paragraph.)
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Steve Stroth, Greg Stohr
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