Trump should not face trial in Georgia if he wins 2024 election, lawyer
says
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[December 02, 2023]
By Andrew Goudsward
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A lawyer for Donald Trump said on Friday that the
former U.S. president should not face trial on charges that he sought to
overturn the 2020 election results in the state of Georgia if he wins
the election next year.
The remarks by the lawyer, Steven Sadow, came as the judge overseeing
the case wrestled with how to set a trial date given Trump’s other legal
entanglements and the looming campaign next year. Trump is the
frontrunner for the Republican nomination to challenge Democratic
President Joe Biden in the 2024 election.
Sadow said that if Trump wins the election, he would seek to postpone
the trial until after he left office, arguing that it would interfere
with his responsibilities as president.
Trump, who faces four simultaneous state and federal criminal
prosecutions, has repeatedly sought to delay the cases against him until
after the Nov. 5, 2024, election. Sadow’s remarks show how Trump could
use his campaign and a possible second four-year term in office to delay
those cases, even in state courts where he would be unable to pardon
himself and would not have control over the prosecutions.
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis last week requested the
Georgia trial begin in August 2024, a timeline that would likely extend
the proceedings through Election Day and into early 2025.
“What would be the state's response that having this trial on Election
Day is election interference?” Judge Scott McAfee asked prosecutors.
“The district attorney has made it clear that she has no interest in
interfering or getting involved with this presidential election,”
prosecutor Nathan Wade said during the hearing. “Her sole focus is to
move this case forward.”
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Steve Sadow, attorney for former U.S. President Donald Trump, speaks
in Superior Court of Fulton County before Judge Scott McAfee in
Courtroom 5A in the case of State of Georgia v. Donald John Trump,
in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., December 1, 2023. John David Mercer/Pool
via REUTER
Trump has objected to the proposed August trial.
“Can you imagine that notion of the Republican nominee for president
not being able to campaign for the presidency because he is in some
form or fashion in a courtroom defending himself?” Sadow asked
during the hearing.
Trump and 14 co-defendants have pleaded not guilty to racketeering
and other charges as part of what prosecutors allege was a
coordinated scheme to reverse Trump’s narrow defeat in Georgia
following the 2020 election.
Four of the original 19 defendants have pleaded guilty to lesser
charges in return for agreeing and to cooperate with the
prosecution.
McAfee did not set a trial date on Friday, but expressed skepticism
that all 15 remaining defendants could be tried together.
(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan
Oatis)
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