In explaining why the prosecutors will not be held in contempt, the judge took the blame for an ambiguous order.
U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan reinforced the stay on the case special counsel Jack Smith is prosecuting against former President Donald Trump in Washington after defense attorneys filed a motion for an order to show why prosecutors should not be held in contempt for their actions during the stay.
They judge sidestepped the penalties in the Jan. 18 order while reinforcing the stay as a deadlines âheld in abeyanceâ rather than fully vacated. She explained that since the court has taken no action on the governmentâs filings, there is no need for penalties at this point.
In explaining why the prosecutors will not be held in contempt, the judge took the blame for an ambiguous order.
âThe Stay Order did not clearly and unambiguously prohibit the Government actions to which Defendant objects,â the judge wrote.
She clarified in the order that the stay âlifted the requirementsâ of filing motions by the previously agreed-upon deadlines, âbut staying the deadline for a filing is not the same thing as affirmatively prohibiting it.â She wrote that her order was also ambiguous as to whether producing discovery would violate the stay.
She also clarified that the defense âis not required to carry any meaningful burdens with respect to those productions.â
The order prohibits parties from further motions filings without the permission of the court.
âWeaponizedâ Stay
The federal criminal case, in which President Trump has pleaded not guilty to obstruction and conspiracy charges related to the events of Jan. 6, 2021, was halted on Dec. 13, 2023. President Trump is currently appealing a motion to dismiss the case based on presidential immunity, which the appeals court is deliberating on an expedited schedule.
However, just days after the judge ordered a pause, the prosecutors notified the the defendant of a new discovery production. Then on Dec. 27, 2023, the prosecutors filed a significant motion to exclude several of President Trumpâs defenses and pieces of evidence from trial.
Defense attorneys accused the prosecutors of âweaponizingâ the stay, using the period when they knew President Trump would not respond in order to file an inflammatory motion that âspread like wildfireâ in the media with headlines claiming the former president would âsow disinformationâ or spread âmisinformationâ at his trial based on the motion.
Judge Chutkan enforced no penalties in the new order, finding it not a âmajorâ burden while recognizing it was a âcognizable one.â
âThe court reaffirms that he forfeits no arguments or rights by choosing not to respond at this time,â the judge wrote, recognizing that the defense is burdened in this case to review the motion to determine whether it is involved in President Trumpâs appeal, even if he is not required to respond to it.
She cited this as rationale for preventing further court filings without the courtâs permission, but did not address the negative press coverage, timing, or any effect the motion may have had on the public.
âThis measure is an addition to the Stay Order, aimed to further advance its purposes, and does not reflect a determination that the Government has violated any of its clear and unambiguous terms or acted in bad faith,â the judge wrote.
Appeal Pending
An appeals panel of three judges heard oral arguments from both sides last week, and has not yet indicated when a decision will be issued.
Prosecutors have pointed out that even if the court dismisses the appeal quickly, the defense still has 45 days to request a rehearing with all judges from the court, and 90 days to appeal to higher court, thereby throwing off the original case schedule, which would have gone to trial on March 4. However, itâs unclear whether the district court would continue to stay proceedings of the case during the extended appeals process.
President Trump had filed a total of four motions to dismiss the case based on various defenses, and is likely to continue to appeal those motions in higher court, stalling the district court case and trial.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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