Justice Department (DOJ) special counsel Jack Smith, who was assigned to investigate Donald Trump days after the launch of the former president’s reelection campaign, has pushed back against Mr. Trump’s request to schedule the trial until after the 2024 elections.
“The demands of the Defendants’ professional schedules do not provide a basis to delay trial in this case. Many indicted defendants have demanding jobs that require a considerable amount of time and energy, or a significant amount of travel,” he wrote.
800,000 Pages of Discovery
The sheer amount of material in discovery was cited as one reason to delay the trial.“The Government’s investigation into the matters at issue in the indictment has been ongoing for over a year. During that time, the Government collected many hundreds of thousands of documents, interviewed dozens of witnesses, and presented many witnesses before two separate Grand Juries. The Defendants will require ample time to fully study that entire process,” Mr. Kise wrote.
But Mr. Harbach says although the government provided “over 800,000 pages, the set of ‘key’ documents was only about 4,500 pages.”
He further added that a third of those 800,000 pages were email headers and footers, without content, and that the “nine months of CCTV footage” was not from nine continuous months.
The case began more than two years ago when the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) requested Mr. Trump return certain documents, and NARA said it found documents marked “classified,” though Mr. Trump maintains he had declassified the materials as president. This led to the FBI searching Mar-a-Lago.
Mr. Kise had also argued that due to the sensitive nature of the discovery documents and the difficulty of selecting an impartial jury during a national presidential election it was prudent to wait.
DOJ in Other Cases
Mr. Trump is involved in several other ongoing cases.On Tuesday, the DOJ stepped in on a civil lawsuit and said it would no longer shield him from a defamation case brought by columnist E. Jean Caroll.
“The Department has determined that there is no longer a sufficient basis to conclude that the former President was motivated by ’more than an insignificant' desire to serve the United States Government,” it wrote.
Support Strong Despite Indictment
Despite the barrage of legal action, Mr. Trump continues to pull ahead in the polls, leading by around 30 points. Approval had surged with the announcement of his two indictments earlier this year, and supporters have continued to flock to his rallies in droves.The former president remained undeterred, giving a speech the same night of his arraignment, and responding frequently on social media to various charges.