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DOJ Special Counsel Rejects Trump’s Bid for Live Trial Broadcast

He called Trump’s gambit to broadcast the trial “a transparent effort to demand special treatment, try his case in the courtroom of public opinion, and turn his trial into a media event”…reports Asian Lite News

DOJ Special Counsel Jack Smith has rejected ex-President Donald Trump’s demand for broadcast live the election subversion case on grounds that he would use the courts to create a media circus and generate a “carnival atmosphere”.

Smith urged a federal judge overseeing Trump’s criminal election interference case in Washington DC that allowing live TV coverage of the trial would “create a carnival atmosphere” that the former President desires, as per a four-page filing lodged on Monday. 

He called Trump’s gambit to broadcast the trial “a transparent effort to demand special treatment, try his case in the courtroom of public opinion, and turn his trial into a media event”.

Since 1946, there has been a media prohibition in courtrooms. Certain pilot programmes have experimented allowing certain types of recording equipment to document civil proceedings in federal trial and appellate courts, but never for criminal proceedings, media reports said.

Several news outlets asked US District Judge Tanya Chutkan to allow live broadcast of the trial, saying the historic nature of the case warranted an exception to what they characterised as a strict rule that violated the First Amendment. They also argued that live video coverage would help undermine conspiracy theories surrounding the case, media reports said.

Ironically, Trump’s trial in Georgia’s Fulton County, where the former President has been charged in a sweeping racketeering scheme that accuses him and 18 co-defendants of plotting to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in that state, will be broadcast live. States make their own broadcasting decisions for state cases and, according to a Supreme Court precedent, may broadcast trials as long as the defendants’ rights to due process and a fair trial are protected, reports said.

Trump initially took “no position” on televising the trial, according to a filing that cites his lawyers. However on Friday, he did an about-turn filing a motion to Chutkan asking her to permit his trial to be broadcast live.

A televised trial is needed, his lawyers argued, because Trump is being treated “unfairly” by the Biden administration and because Smith had “sought to proceed in secret” with the election case.

To be sure, neither claim is true. News organisations have arranged around-the-clock coverage of the DC election interference case, along with Trump’s other indictments and criminal charges, reports said.

The filing, however, fails to set any legal precedent, but his lawyers argued that “President Trump absolutely agrees, and in fact demands, that these proceedings should be fully televised so that the American public can see first-hand that this case, just like others, is nothing more than a dreamt-up unconstitutional charade that should never be allowed to happen again”, an US News and World report said

Smith argued in response Monday that Trump’s purported interest in providing “sunlight” on the judicial process – a phrase he’s used in the last few days, including at a rally in New Hampshire – is undercut by the fact that high-profile federal criminal trials have long abided by the broadcast prohibition rules and still managed to garner significant and detailed media coverage without eschewing the rules.

“The defendant peppers his response with various references to ‘fairness’, but what he actually seeks is to defy a uniform and longstanding broadcast prohibition that was crafted precisely with fair and orderly trial proceedings in mind,” Smith wrote.

“He desires instead to create a carnival atmosphere from which he hopes to profit by distracting, like many fraud defendants try to do, from the charges against him.”

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US Justice Dept feels delaying Trump probe harms national security

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it would appeal the Trump Mar-a-Lago Special Master order, reports Ashe O

 Any further delay in delaying criminal investigations into former President Donald Trump and the records he kept at Mar-a-Lago Florida residence could put America’s national security at risk, says the US Department of Justice.

The DOJ has made this claim in the wake of US District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump-appointed federal judge, granting the former president’s request for a special master to review evidence seized during the raid independently.

The DOJ claimed that pausing the FBI’s criminal investigation while separately continuing the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s damage assessment was essentially impossible, media reports said.

The DOJ said it would appeal the Trump Mar-a-Lago Special Master order.

The DOJ’s motion was filed by Matthew Olsen, the assistant attorney general for the National Security Division, Jay Bratt, the chief of the DOJ’s counterintelligence and export control section, and Juan Antonio Gonzalez, the US attorney for the Southern District of Florida.

“The government seeks a stay to the extent the Order (1) enjoins the further review and use for criminal investigative purposes of records bearing classification markings that were recovered pursuant to a court-authorized search warrant and (2) requires the government to disclose those classified records to a special master for review,” the DOJ officials wrote.

The DOJ revealed that during the Mar-a-Lago search, the FBI seized 33 boxes that contained roughly 100 “classified” documents.

“The Intelligence Community’s review and assessment cannot be readily segregated from the Department of Justice’s and Federal Bureau of Investigation’s activities in connection with the ongoing criminal investigation, and uncertainty regarding the bounds of the Court’s order and its implications for the activities of the FBI has caused the Intelligence Community, in consultation with DOJ, to pause temporarily this critically important work,” the DOJ said.

“Moreover, the government and the public are irreparably injured when a criminal investigation of matters involving risks to national security is enjoined.”

An ODNI spokesperson told the Washington Examiner that “in consultation with the Department of Justice, ODNI temporarily paused the classification review of relevant materials and assessment of the potential risk to national security that would result from the disclosure of the relevant documents.” The Office of the Directorate of National Intelligence (ODNI) is to lead the IC in intelligence integration, forging a community that delivers the most insightful intelligence possible. ODNI’s National Centers integrate and coordinate the activities of the entire IC, or in some cases, broader US government in the IC’s major mission areas: counterterrorism, counterproliferation and counterintelligence.

Alan Kohler, the assistant director of the FBI’s counterintelligence division, also included a statement with the DOJ’s filing.

Trump’s winning Special Master (3rd independent person to review documents seized by FBI from Trump’s Florida home) order from the Florida judge may be short lived, says the Washington Examiner in a report.

“The connection between the national security and criminal investigative aspects of this matter are grounded in the dual nature of the FBI,” Kohler wrote.

“The IC assessments necessarily will inform the FBI’s criminal investigation, including subsequent investigative steps that might be necessary…. The FBI is the only IC element with a full suite of authorities and tools to investigate and recover any improperly retained and stored classified information in the United States.”

It comes after Cannon said Monday that she “temporarily enjoins the Government from reviewing and using the seized materials for investigative purposes pending completion of the special master’s review or further Court order.” But she said that her ruling “shall not impede the classification review and/or intelligence assessment by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.”

Prosecutors argued late last month that the “appointment of a special master would impede the government’s ongoing criminal investigation and — if the special master were tasked with reviewing classified documents — would impede the Intelligence Community from conducting its ongoing review of the national security risk that improper storage of these highly sensitive materials may have caused.”

Trump’s team countered: “The Government now has the temerity to argue that any involvement by a Special Master will ‘interfere’ with the now ongoing Intelligence Community review of the materials. Never has an argument against ‘interference’ better underscored the need for judicial involvement. “The judge ruled largely in Trump’s favor.

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