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1. This is some sort of new type of motion? A motion for the Judge to determine presidential immunity.
The motion ruled on was "Motion for Leave to File Unredacted Motion Under Seal, and to File Redacted Motion on Public Docket"
The immunity motion itself has not been ruled on
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2. Whether or not #1 is right or not, the judge made a decision on this motion within 24 hours of the defense filing their motion to keep it under seal? How often do judges rule that quickly? Especially on something new and has never been done before.
I don't believe Trump argued in the reponse to this motion to keep the whole thing under seal. He wanted identifying titles also redacted. IMO, Chutkan was wrong to not grant that. She knows it takes little effort to figure out who those people are.
Trump also wanted a show cause order issued for smith to establish why releasing info from witness statements was permissible. She says that wrongly flipped the burden from Trump to smith. No idea if that was correct, not my area so I'd need to read the case law
24 hours is very fast, but a standard motion to file redacted items is generally ruled on quickly. Granted, this is far far from standard.
But at this motion, it's not really "new" in issues being ruled on.
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3. Because of the newness of presidential immunity in court cases, would it be prudent for the judge to actually have an oral hearing on the motion?
On the immunity question, I would think an oral hearing would be very useful. If one happens, don't think it will be anytime soon
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4. Is it normal for this large of a motion to be put on the public docket so early? Doesn't it prejudice the defendant? Or taint a prospective jury? Isn't this essentially trying a defendant in public without the defendant being able to put forth a defense?
Yes on all, but on last Trump does get to file a defense response, but that is not the issue. its that this grand jury stuff is out there that there was not an opportunity at the time to challenge or cross examine the witnesses on
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5. Isn't the judge supposed to protect the defendant from prejudicial treatment? Or overbearing government prosecutors?
Yes on both
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6. What avenues does Trump have to fight this biased judge/prosecutor? I mean the damage has already been done, so probably nothing in the short term.
Like you said, the cats out of the bag on this one. Usually, you could appeal such a ruling. The ruling on the identifying job titles was wrong and also highly wrong IMO to not give Trump a chance to appeal.
But he did have a chance to appeal the concept of this immunity motion ever being filed. It was on September 5 that Chutkan put out the order setting the schedule for this current massive immunity motion to be filed. Did Trump appeal that? I don't think he did. Likeky because they imagined it futile. But even if DC circuit went against him, he had SCOTUS to go to in order to try to at least delay. ( If I missed an appeal, my apologies)