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Rajoni dhe Bota2024-02-03 07:45:00

Tried to overturn the election result, the trial against former president Donald Trump is postponed

Shkruar nga Pamfleti

Tried to overturn the election result, the trial against former president Donald

A federal judge formally postponed the March trial of former President Donald Trump on charges that he tried to overturn the outcome of the 2020 election.

Judge Tanya Chutkan canceled the trial scheduled for March 4 in the lawsuit brought by special prosecutor Jack Smith, but did not mention setting a new date.

The adjournment opens the possibility for another trial in New York to continue over allegations of payments made to win the silence of a pornographic actress. This is the trial that has been perceived as having the least legal risk, of the four court cases that Trump is facing, where he is accused of, among other things, the illegal possession and use of classified documents or the conspiracy to overturn the result of the presidential election.

The delay in Washington was announced as a federal appeals court has yet to rule on Trump's request that he enjoy immunity from investigation for actions he took while president. It is not clear when the three-judge panel might rule, but if the ruling is in favor of continuing the prosecutor's investigation, then another appeal from Trump's legal team is expected, bringing further delays.

For both parties, timing is very important. Former President Trump, who faces four lawsuits and 91 criminal charges, is seeking to delay the court cases while enjoying the status of the front-runner for president in the race within the Republican Party. Meanwhile, the Smith prosecutor's team hopes to complete a process before the November elections. If Mr. Trump is re-elected while the court case continues, he could theoretically direct the Justice Department to drop the charges and could pardon himself.

The Washington court case was expected to be the first to be heard, but was delayed for weeks due to Mr Trump's appeal based on his claim of immunity from investigation, an idea strongly opposed by Mr Smith's prosecution team. The appeals court heard arguments on January 9 and appeared skeptical of the position taken by Mr Trump's lawyer. However, the court has not made a decision, although it stated that it would work quickly.

The judge in the New York case, the first of four indictments brought against Trump last year, has long resisted defense requests to push back the March 25 trial date because of a conflict with the Washington trial date. , suggesting that the former president's legal calendar may change as the trial date approaches.

Trump is due back in court in Manhattan on February 15 for a preliminary hearing where the final details are expected to be worked out. All signs point to the New York case starting on time. Lawyers and prosecutors discussed jury selection procedures with the judge, and several witnesses said they were asked to be ready to testify.

The New York case involves steps Mr. Trump allegedly took to hide payments made on his behalf to avoid damaging stories against him before his 2016 election victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton, thus registering them as legal expenses. A guilty verdict would give Mr Trump another historic designation as the first former president to be convicted of a felony, possibly complicating his campaign to return to the White House. The decision, however, would not make a prison sentence certain.

Critics of Mr. Trump and campaign officials of rival candidates have long criticized the fact that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's indictment came first, believing it helped soften the political fallout of the more serious charges that followed. voters lost interest or were confused by countless cases.

Prosecutor Bragg has avoided calling it a "money to buy silence" case, preferring in recent weeks to describe it as another case of Trump's "election meddling" — albeit one involving behind-the-scenes maneuvering during the first campaign. Trump to the White House in 2016.

Meanwhile, former President Trump faces dozens of felony charges in Florida for illegally keeping classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate. This case is scheduled for trial on May 20, but may be postponed again. Another lawsuit in Georgia, filed by Fulton County District Attorney Fannie Willis, accuses her of conspiring to overturn the outcome of that state's 2020 election. A trial date for the case has not yet been set./VOA

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