Mar-a-Lago judge orders Trump to present his defense theory in documents case during special hearing

Donald Trump, on the left; Judge Aileen Cannon, inset center, special counsel Jack Smith, on the right.

Left: FILE — Former President Donald Trump speaks at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., June 13, 2023, after pleading not guilty in a Miami courtroom earlier in the day to mishandling classified documents. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File). Right: Special counsel Jack Smith speaks about an indictment of former President Donald Trump on Aug. 1, 2023, at a Department of Justice office in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin). Inset: In this image from a video provided by the U.S. Senate, Aileen M. Cannon speaks remotely during a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight nomination hearing to be U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida on July 29, 2020, in Washington.

The prosecutor appointed to oversee the federal government’s prosecution of Donald Trump over the former president’s allegedly wrongful retention of documents inside his resort home in Florida is once again imploring the presiding judge to stop Trump’s legal team from releasing unredacted discovery material which appears to be aimed at exposing the identities of potential government witnesses.

As previously reported by Law&Crime, Judge Aileen Cannon — whom Trump appointed to the bench — earlier this month rejected a request from special counsel Jack Smith to keep the government’s redactions in place on certain filings. Cannon reasoned that Smith failed to set forth a sufficient “factual or legal basis” that would warrant deviating from “the strongest presumption in favor of public access” to such documents.

The majority of Smith’s proposed redactions concerned “sealing the identity of potential Government witnesses and their statements,” and in support of that, Smith “refers in general terms to witness safety and intimidation,” Cannon wrote in the Feb. 6 order denying the special prosecutor’s request.

“Although substantiated witness safety and intimidation concerns can form a valid basis for overriding the strong presumption in favor of public access, the Special Counsel’s sparse and undifferentiated Response fails to provide the Court with the necessary factual basis to justify sealing,” the judge wrote.

In his latest filing, Smith argues that Trump’s legal team on Thursday filed documents with the court that were “inconsistent” with the process they proposed and to which the court agreed and asked that Cannon deny Trump’s request to disclose certain discovery material, claiming that “doing so would unnecessarily expose potential witnesses to very real dangers of harassment, intimidation, and reprisal.”

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