Florida hearing may determine if Trump’s Mar-a-Lago documents trial is delayed until after election

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By News Room 4 Min Read

Former President Donald Trump will make another attempt on Wednesday to delay one of his scheduled criminal trials past the 2024 election – this time in a federal courtroom in Florida before Judge Aileen Cannon.

Trump’s lawyers have repeatedly complained to the judge in the Mar-a-Lago criminal document-mishandling case that they haven’t had proper access to classified evidence in the case as they prepare for a trial next May.

Those complaints have evolved into the Trump team asking Cannon to postpone the trial “until at least mid-November 2024.”

“After four months of delay, we were allowed to review for the first time documents that are critical to some of the serious felony charges” that special counsel Jack Smith has filed, Trump’s lawyers wrote to the court two weeks ago.

In response, Cannon put on hold October deadlines that she had set in the case and called a hearing for Wednesday afternoon in Ft. Pierce, Florida, at which she may consider just how much to push back the schedule, if at all.

Attorneys for Trump and his two co-defendants, Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, employees who are accused of helping him mislead federal officials, have long aimed to push the criminal trial and other trials Trump faces next year past the election, citing his ongoing presidential campaign, busy court schedule, and what they call the Justice Department’s “rush to trial.”

The classified records indictment has loomed over Trump’s candidacy particularly because of the questions it’s raised – with substantial known witnesses and even audio evidence – about how casually Trump treated national security information that could damage the United States if accessed at his club and about his unwillingness after his presidency to comply with regulations around presidential records.

Cannon, a Trump appointee, has so far given Trump’s team some of the leeway they’ve asked for in the documents investigation.

Trump, Nauta and De Oliveira have pleaded not guilty.

The special counsel’s office is arguing to Cannon to keep the dates as set. The defense teams have access to more than 1 million pages of information in the case, according to court filings.

In a filing last week, prosecutors told the judge Trump’s team has cried wolf about their access to evidence in the case, including classified records. They’ve had access since early October, the prosecutors said, but only received the records more than a week later at a secured facility in Miami.

Trump’s legal team has been reviewing and discussing classified evidence in Miami, most recently on Tuesday, when the former president joined his lawyers in the SCIF during the afternoon, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Also about a month ago, Trump’s team wanted thousands of pages of evidence it already had from the investigation given to them again, so that they could see where copies of classified documents in a box stored at Mar-a-Lago may have existed among other documents, to “ascertain where the pages had been stored,” prosecutors said.

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