Judge in Trump election case orders prosecutors to look for, produce
info from Pence documents probe
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[October 17, 2024]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal judge overseeing the election interference
case against Donald Trump directed prosecutors Wednesday to search for
and provide to the former president's lawyers any Justice Department
information related to a separate investigation into Mike Pence's
handling of classified documents.
Trump's lawyers had argued that that information could be relevant to
their defense to the extent it shows that Pence, Trump's vice president,
had “an incentive to curry favor with authorities” and implicate Trump
while facing his own investigation into the retention of classified
documents in his Indiana home.
Special counsel Jack Smith's team has said it had no involvement in the
Pence investigation and has “no discoverable information” on the case
"beyond what has been publicly reported.”
But U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan ordered Smith's team to look for
and produce any additional records on the investigation, noting that
defense lawyers are entitled to cite evidence of a witness's uncharged
conduct as a way to undermine that witness's credibility.
“Defendant is correct that information suggesting a potential witness’s
motives for implicating him may be material,” Chutkan wrote.
The judge's order, though, mostly rejected the categories of information
that Trump had sought from prosecutors, saying his lawyers failed to
make the case that it was relevant to his defense against charges that
he illegally schemed to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential
election.
That includes a wide swath of documents related to that election and the
Jan. 6, 2021, riot including information related to security at the
Capitol and any details about undercover government agents who may have
been there.
Trump also unsuccessfully sought a complete version of the U.S.
intelligence community's assessment that Russia had interfered in the
2016 presidential election, as well as information regarding foreign
actors’ efforts to influence the 2020 election to support the defense’s
argument that “Trump and others acted in good faith even if certain
reports were ultimately determined to be inaccurate.”
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But the judge said details about foreign entities working to
influence the American public in 2020 had no bearing on the current
case.
“Whether Defendant sought to undermine public confidence in the
election to legitimize or otherwise further his criminal
conspiracies does not depend on whether other nations also tried to
achieve similar results for their own purposes,” the judge wrote.
Pence appeared before a grand jury investigating Trump in April 2023
after a federal appeals court rejected an effort by Trump's lawyers
to block his testimony on executive privilege grounds. That June,
Justice Department officials informed his lawyers that he would not
face any criminal charges following the discovery months earlier of
about a dozen documents with classified markings at his home.
No evidence ever emerged to suggest that Pence intentionally hid
documents from the government or even knew they were in his home, so
there was never an expectation that he would face charges.
The two other buckets of information that Chutkan directed
prosecutors to produce relate to any details Trump was given during
a meeting with military officials about security measures that would
be in place at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and information
that a former director of national intelligence reviewed before he
was interviewed by prosecutors.
It's unclear when or even if the election interference case will
reach trial in light of a Supreme Court opinion from July that
conferred broad immunity on former presidents and narrowed the scope
of allegations against Trump.
Chutkan is now tasked with determining which of the prosecution's
claims against Trump can remain part of the case and which must be
discarded, a process that will almost certainly result in further
appeals.
If Trump is elected, his new attorney general will presumably seek
the dismissal of the case.
___
Associated Press reporter Alanna Durkin Richer contributed from
Washington.
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