Judge temporarily blocks release of special counsel report on Trump
cases as court fight simmers
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[January 08, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked the
public release of special counsel Jack Smith's report on investigations
into Donald Trump as an appeals court weighs a challenge to the
disclosure of a much-anticipated document just days before the
president-elect reclaims office.
The ruling from U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon may represent a
short-lived victory for Trump, but it's nonetheless the latest instance
of the Trump-appointed jurist taking action in the Republican's favor.
The halt followed an emergency request Monday by defense lawyers to
block the release of a report that they said would be one-sided and
prejudicial.
Trump responded to Cannon's order by complaining anew at a news
conference about Smith's investigation and saying, “It'll be a fake
report just like it was a fake investigation.”
It was unclear what the Justice Department, which has its own
regulations governing special counsels and the reports they are expected
to produce when they conclude their own, intended to do following
Cannon's order.
The two-volume report is expected to describe charging decisions made in
separate investigations by Smith into Trump's hoarding of classified
documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, and his
efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the
run-up to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.
Cannon's order did not make a distinction between the two volumes,
instead barring the release of any information from any report for three
days after the dispute is resolved by the Atlanta -based 11th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, unless the court orders otherwise. Smith’s
team said it would file a response to the appeals court.
Trump was charged alongside two co-defendants in the classified
documents case, which was dismissed in July by Cannon, who concluded
that Smith's appointment was illegal. Trump was also charged in an
election interference case that was significantly narrowed by a Supreme
Court ruling on presidential immunity. Smith's team abandoned both cases
in November after Trump's presidential victory, citing Justice
Department policy that prohibits the federal prosecutions of sitting
presidents.
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Special counsel Jack Smith speaks to the media about an indictment
of former President Donald Trump, Aug. 1, 2023, at an office of the
Department of Justice in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite,
File)
Lawyers for Trump, including Todd Blanche, who was picked by Trump
to serve as his deputy attorney general, urged Attorney General
Merrick Garland a letter that was made public late Monday to block
the release of the report and to remove Smith from his position
“promptly” — or defer the release of the report to the incoming
attorney general.
Using language mimicking Trump's own attacks on Smith and his work,
Blanche told Garland that the “release of any confidential report
prepared by this out-of-control private citizen unconstitutionally
posing as a prosecutor would be nothing more than a lawless
political stunt, designed to politically harm President Trump and
justify the huge sums of taxpayer money Smith unconstitutionally
spent on his failed and dismissed cases.”
The letter was included as part of an emergency request filed late
Monday with Cannon by lawyers for Trump's codefendants in the
documents case, Trump valet Walt Nauta and Mar-a-Lago property
manager Carlos De Oliveira.
They asked Cannon to block the report's release, noting that Smith's
appeal of her dismissal of charges against the men is pending and
that the disclosure of pejorative information about them would be
prejudicial.
In response to that request, Smith's team said in a two-page filing
earlier Tuesday that it intended to submit its report to Garland by
that afternoon and that the volume pertaining to the classified
documents investigation would not be made public before 10 a.m.
Friday.
Justice Department regulations call for special counsels appointed
by the attorney general to submit a confidential report at the
conclusion of their investigations. It's then up to the attorney
general to decide what to make public.
Garland has made public in their entirety the reports produced by
special counsels who operated under his watch, including Robert
Hur's report on President Joe Biden's handling of classified
information and John Durham's report on the FBI's Russian election
interference investigation.
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