The judge overseeing former President Donald Trump’s election case in Washington has issued a number of orders this week.
The judge overseeing former President Donald Trump’s election case in Washington has issued a number of orders this week.
After the U.S. Supreme Court formally sent the case back to Judge Tanya Chutkan last month, she now has to determine how to proceed further. There was a roughly seven-month pause in the case as the former president appealed the matter, arguing that he should be declared immune from prosecution.
“They do not establish that they qualify as ‘victim’ under the CVRA’s statutory definition,” Chutkan wrote in one of her orders. “Consequently, the victim’s rights enumerated” in the act “do not attach,” and “the court is not persuaded that it is appropriate to depart from the ordinary course and permit this filing,” she wrote.
Days before that, the judge struck down a request from Trump’s attorneys to dismiss the case. At the same time, she also summoned both parties to a court hearing in Washington on Monday, Aug. 16.
In her order, Chutkan rejected Trump’s arguments that he was being selectively prosecuted by Jack Smith, the special counsel who brought the charges.
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s July 1 decision that found presidents enjoy immunity from prosecution for their official acts, Chutkan will have to determine what conduct by Trump in the wake of the 2020 election isn’t immune from prosecution and what is.
Smith’s team may have to “alter or delete some of the four crimes” that they charged Trump with, along with accompanying evidence and allegations to support their charges, she added.
“[There are] a lot of others out there that want, still want, nothing more than to see President Trump go down before the election. And that’s not who we are as a country. That’s not the way the justice system is supposed to work. That’s not the way it’s ever worked before. And we can still right this ship,” Blanche said.
He added that those who want to defeat Trump should “take your message to the voters and tell them to vote. You should not use the court system.”
If Trump gets elected in November, he has several options in dealing with his federal election case, including pardoning himself or appointing an attorney general who would scrap the special counsel’s case.
Early on, Trump’s attorneys had sought to have the judge recuse herself due to public comments he had made during cases involving defendants charged in connection to the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol. She rejected their motion in September and said their arguments lacked merit.
So far, the former president has faced charges in four separate cases brought in four separate jurisdictions, which has resulted in one conviction in Manhattan. He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.
But the future of the two other cases remain murky. His classified documents case, also brought by Smith, in Florida was dismissed by a federal judge last month, and an election case brought in Fulton County, Georgia, is currently on hiatus amid a push by Trump and several co-defendants to get the prosecutor, Fani Willis, removed due to a relationship with her former special prosecutor.