I'm aware. Why I posted the Goveia discussion of the issues. With Chutkan, I would be shocked if she granted even one Trump motion in limine if we get to that point, that is.TXAggie2011 said:
They're seeking to strike a few allegations in the indictment relating to events on January 6 as not relevant.
Its unlikely to succeed as a matter of practice. Striking allegations is "highly disfavored" in court terminology. The real action will be efforts to suppress/preclude particular pieces of evidence...they'll find the most traction on evidence of violent conduct at the Capitol.
Gosh.TXAggie2011 said:
Motion to Strike denied
https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/67656604/158/united-states-v-trump/
TANYA CHUTKAN, A TYRANT IN A JUDICIAL ROBE
— Mark R. Levin (@marklevinshow) November 28, 2023
Chutkan rules against Trump over and over again, despite the seriousness of his motions -- she has violated his 1st (gag rule), 5th (due process), and 6th (effective representation of counsel) amendment rights; she has said outrageous…
JUST IN: Jack Smith is planning to introduce a range of evidence in Trump's trial that isn't directly part of the charges — including Trump's repeated efforts to cast doubt on the 2012 and 2016 election results. https://t.co/tYpobnV0Xd pic.twitter.com/KoBKUDnfrY
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) December 5, 2023
Lastly, Smith wants to show evidence of Trump's open embrace of some of the most violent Jan. 6 rioters — and his promise to consider pardoning many of those who breached the Capitol. https://t.co/tYpobnV0Xd pic.twitter.com/JFUD74bK6d
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) December 5, 2023
That's too optimistic to me. DC jury, horrible judge. It is a bunch BS that should not be allowed under the case law on 404 evidence but Chutkan does not care about procedure nor rules of evidence.Quote:
This is mentioned to make it appear as if Trump had engineered a long-term plan to claim voter fraud if an election did not go his way, rather than a spontaneous reaction to the outcome of the 2020 race.
In the end, Smith's filing claims he will prove that Trump was a sort of evil genius who masterminded an entire plot to dispute the outcome if he lost an election, even going so far as to concoct a violent attack against the government.
Let's be blunt, shall we? If this is the best that Smith's team has, this case might not go well for them.
This "evidence" is rather shaky, at best and I haven't seen anything that would suggest that Trump inspired a bunch of people to riot at the U.S. Capitol. Sure, Trump uses strong language, but he is not the first or last politician to do so.
Moreover, the notion that a politician should be responsible for people taking it upon themselves to engage in violence could lead to a terribly dangerous place. Should the state prosecute Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) because the man who tried to assassinate Republican politicians was allegedly inspired by his rhetoric?
Of course not.
Basically, this indictment boils down to arguing that because Trump disputed the election results and said some mean things about people, the state should prosecute him. If the court handles this fairly, it seems doubtful to me that the prosecution will be able to make these particular allegations stick.
And then Trump reached through the phone and tried to grab the steering wheel of the car she was driving at the time...Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Liz Cheney says she secretly listened in on Trump's call planning Jan 6th.
This was a good listen though it just makes me angrier about the whole setup and how libs continue to try and act like it was an insurrection.aggiehawg said:
Laura Logan does a recap of her episodes about Jan 6th. About 27 minutes.
LINK
Yuck. Were Trump still President, that might have some merit. As it is, I find it unpersuasive. Of course we are in unchartered waters here, so migh as well make the argument.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Trump arguing on interlocutory appeal that his acquittal at impeachment trial invokes doctrine of double jeopardy.
Will blast through that scheduled March 4th trial date.
He's forcing the Judge to make a public determination as to whether the pending deadlines remain in force or not. Once that is done, he can seek an administrative stay of all such deadlines from the Appeals Court while the appeal is pending. Can't ask for that until the… https://t.co/IIDSJj1Gbp
— Shipwreckedcrew (@shipwreckedcrew) December 7, 2023
BMX Bandit said:
Immmunity means not just immunity from judgment, trial or punishment, but immunity from suit and the burdens that go with it.
thus, everything should be stayed pending appeal.
This case will impact DJT’s DC case significantly. Two of the four counts in his indictment are under this section. https://t.co/dKX3Qyf5IX
— Leslie McAdoo Gordon đŸ‡ºđŸ‡¸ (@McAdooGordon) December 13, 2023
Quote:
The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear an appeal brought by a man charged with offenses relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol in a case that could have a major impact on the criminal prosecution of former President Donald Trump.
The justices will hear a case brought by defendant Joseph Fischer, who is seeking to dismiss a charge accusing him of obstructing an official proceeding, namely the certification by Congress of President Joe Biden's election victory, which was disrupted by a mob of Trump supporters.
Two other Jan. 6 defendants, Edward Lang and Garret Miller, brought similar appeals, the outcome of which will be dictated by the Supreme Court's ruling in Fischer's case.
Fritz Ulrich, a federal public defender representing Fischer, said he was pleased that the court will clarify the scope of the law in question but had no further comment.
Trump has been charged with the same offense as well as others in his federal election interference case. The court's decision to take up the issue, as well as the timing of its ultimate ruling, could therefore affect his case.
It will take months for the justices to hear oral arguments and issue a ruling sometime during the court's current nine-month term, which ends in June.
Trump's lawyers could use the Supreme Court's involvement as one opportunity to delay his election interference trial, which is scheduled to start in March.
LINKQuote:
In the Supreme Court case, the only provision of the federal criminal code at issue is 18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2), which criminalizes any effort to "corruptly" obstruct, influence or impede any official proceeding. Conviction can result in a prison sentence of up to 20 years.
The provision was enacted in 2002 as part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a bill passed in the aftermath of the Enron accounting scandal. As such, defendants say it was never intended to apply to an incident such as Jan. 6.
Trump's lawyers have already made that argument in asking for his indictment to be dismissed.
The application of the provision in Trump's case could also raise issues separate from those in the Supreme Court appeals, in part because Trump himself did not participate in the Capitol attack.
LINKQuote:
The Justice Department, in its arguments against the plaintiff in this case, says that regardless of how the Supreme Court feels about taking up the case, it would be too premature to rule on it, given that the defendants have yet to be convicted in their cases, let alone gone to trial.To further complicate the matter, as noted above, over 300 individuals have been charged under the same statute, with several of those individuals having already been convicted of that charge or accepted plea agreements for lesser charges. With a hypothetical decision by the Court in the plaintiff's favor, that alone would have massive implications for those individuals.Quote:
"The government is prepared to proceed to trial and to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioners corruptly obstructed, influenced, or impeded the joint session on January 6, or attempted to do so," Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote. She also said that a subsequent appeals court ruling in a different Jan. 6 case, which prosecutors won, has clarified the meaning of "corruptly."
Another argument being used in the defense of Trump and the hundreds of others charged with the same crime is that the DOJ is applying the charge too broadly, with prosecutors often relying on mere statements on social media, or that the certification/electoral count is merely a ceremonial or administrative event and not an official proceeding. A former Virginia police sergeant, Thomas Robertson, who was convicted of that charge, used that defense in his case, albeit unsuccessfully.
.that Congress' work on Jan. 6 was outside the fundamental scope of the law. "The electoral count is a ceremonial and administrative event that is not an 'official proceeding' contemplated in 1512; it is not an adjudicative proceeding involving witness testimony and evidence," his lawyer wrote.
Further, the courts' historical definition of "corruptly" requiring an individual intentionally breaking the law in an effort to "obstruct" something had been stretched in Robertson's case to encompass social media posts. Robertson generally objected to the ill-defined nature of the statute as well as DOJ's selective use of it.
"(Inconsistent) charging decisions, along with the inherently vague words in the statute … that is the basis for charging these defendants, all show that 18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2) is unconstitutionally vague."
The Trump DC Case has just been stayed by the Judge due to the appeal of the immunity issue.
— Shipwreckedcrew (@shipwreckedcrew) December 13, 2023
March trial date and all filing deadlines are all canceled pending the outcome of the appeal.
She, IMO correctly, notes that she still has jurisdiction over some administrative things like the gag order & conditions of release, etc.
— Leslie McAdoo Gordon đŸ‡ºđŸ‡¸ (@McAdooGordon) December 13, 2023
But all else - discovery, motions, trial - is stated until the appellate courts speak.
/2
Some very seasoned and smart attorneys on the liberal side of the spectrum allowed their personal and partisan desires to cloud objective judgments on "nuts and bolts" issues of federal criminal procedure.
— Shipwreckedcrew (@shipwreckedcrew) December 13, 2023
They were Captain Ahab and having a trial in the spring of 2024 was their…
As I said. Agreeing to hear the Fischer case changed the calculus on the immunity appeal.Quote:
The decision by SCOTUS this morning to take up the challenge to Sec. 1512 -- with 2 of the 4 counts charged against Trump being connected to that charge -- was the final straw. There is no reason now for SCOTUS to expedite the appeal of the immunity issue. While the cases are different, both will have a huge impact on what happens with the DC case if/when it ever gets to trial. So SCOTUS can deal with both on parallel tracks with similar schedules.
Oral arguments at the end of April and decisions at the end of June is the most likely result.
THEN an entirely new scheduling order will be necessary in the case -- if there still is a case.
And for everyone yelling at me in the replies, I'm not being coy. I *don't know* why they'd take only Fischer and not the other two, but it suggests that *perhaps* this is not as major an intervention as it's being portrayed—and is about something narrower in just Fischer's case.
— Steve Vladeck (@steve_vladeck) December 13, 2023
aggiehawg said:
This ruling by Chutkan was inevitable. There was no way this case could have been tried in March.
After reminding myself of more of the in and outs of Fischer's appeal, the thrust of his appeal is he didn't do anything with regards to "evidence", or maybe more specifically, his actions didn't have enough of a nexus to documents. (There is also debate about the meaning of "corruptly" in the statute but SCOTUS didn't take the two cases that deal most directly with that.)aggiehawg said:As I said. Agreeing to hear the Fischer case changed the calculus on the immunity appeal.Quote:
The decision by SCOTUS this morning to take up the challenge to Sec. 1512 -- with 2 of the 4 counts charged against Trump being connected to that charge -- was the final straw. There is no reason now for SCOTUS to expedite the appeal of the immunity issue. While the cases are different, both will have a huge impact on what happens with the DC case if/when it ever gets to trial. So SCOTUS can deal with both on parallel tracks with similar schedules.
Oral arguments at the end of April and decisions at the end of June is the most likely result.
THEN an entirely new scheduling order will be necessary in the case -- if there still is a case.