Smith is No Longer in a Hurry: Special Counsel Moves To Slow Down District Court Judge

For over a year, Special Counsel Jack Smith has made one element the overriding priority in his prosecution of former president Donald Trump: speed. Smith repeatedly moved to curtail Trump’s appellate rights and demand expedited appeals to try to secure a conviction before the election. In that effort, he found an equally motivated judge in U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan, who virtually turned her court into a rocket docket to try Trump. Now, in a neck-breaking change of direction, Smith is trying to slow down Chutkan who appears again ready to pull out the stops in this case.

After the mandate in the case was returned to her, Judge Chutkan immediately resumed her high-speed scheduling to look at the pre-trial issues after the Court reversed her earlier rulings on the basis of presidential immunity.

The past problem with a court making speed the priority is that it does not allow much time to create a record. The remand will now require Judge Chutkan to do so on the question of what charges and evidence may be barred under the ruling in Trump v. United States.

As it has in the past, the Court adopted a three-tiered approach to presidential powers based on the source of a presidential action. Chief Justice John Roberts cited Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. v. Sawyer, in which the court ruled against President Harry Truman’s takeover of steel mills.

In his famous concurrence to Youngstown, Justice Robert Jackson broke down the balance of executive and legislative authority between three types of actions. In the first, a president acts with express or implied authority from Congress. In the second, he acts where Congress is silent (“the zone of twilight” area). In the third, the president acts in defiance of Congress.

In this decision, the Court adopted a similar sliding scale. It held that presidents enjoy absolute immunity for actions that fall within their “exclusive sphere of constitutional authority” while they enjoy presumptive immunity for other official acts. They do not enjoy immunity for unofficial or private actions.

Only hours after receiving the mandate, Judge Chutkin scheduled an Aug. 16 conference to lay out the schedule and issues going forward. The former version of Jack Smith would have been delighted. He did not even see the need for the right for an en banc appeal in previously pushing for a pre-election trial.

Now, however, Smith is telling Judge Chutkin to slow down already.

Smith told the court that “The Government continues to assess the new precedent set forth last month in the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States. Although those consultations are well underway, the Government has not finalized its position on the most appropriate schedule for the parties to brief issues related to the decision.”

He has asked for a three-week delay to further consider what he wants to do. It is not clear if the press and pundits will now charge Smith with “slow walking” the case.

The question is whether Smith is considering a drastic move in light of the calendar and the ruling. There is, of course, always the possibility that he either throws in the towel or opts for a post-election trial. That would certainly go against the grain of Smith, who has always pushed both the law and the calendar to the breaking point. However, as some of us have been arguing for months, he may no longer view a trial as a plausible objective.

There is also the possibility that Smith will do something that some of us have discussed over the last year: pare down his case. Smith has always been undone by his appetite. As shown in his 8-0 reversal in his conviction of former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, Smith has rarely shown moderation as a prosecutor.

His overloaded criminal complaints created this disaster for his team. In Florida, Smith unwisely loaded up the prosecution with controversial charges on the retention of classified material. It not only triggered difficult challenges but slowed the case to a crawl as the parties dealt with classification laws. Had he proceeded solely on obstruction charges, he might have secured his trial before the election (and before the recent ruling on immunity). Even if the reduced case was heard by the Court on immunity, an obstruction case would have been far stronger for Smith.

The same is true with the D.C. case. Smith loaded up the case to raise the January 6th speech and other issues. Most were unnecessary, but Smith used his press conference to denounce the January 6th riot.

A three-week delay will give Smith ample time (in addition to the weeks following the Supreme Court decision) to deliberate. However, it will take roughly a month off the calendar for just internal debate with the election only three months away.

So, even with a judge who appears chomping at the bit to resume the fast track to trial, Smith now wants more time. Even before this request, it was hard to see how a trial could be held before the election. Now it seems a virtual certainty that any trial will have to await the results of the election. As I wrote in 2023, the odds were against a federal trial before the election, which would convert the voters into the largest jury in history.

 

380 thoughts on “Smith is No Longer in a Hurry: Special Counsel Moves To Slow Down District Court Judge”

  1. SCOTUS has ruled that a separate proceeding must take place before trial to decide if the Presidential action being indicted was official governing or private activity. An important principle is left dangling….who decides?

    Under our legal system, competing versions of facts are decided by jury. Judges only get to decide procedural questions and make interpretations of the law. The question of whether the Presidential action was official vs. private must be based on an examination of evidence and facts, and this must then fall to a Jury presented with adversarial presentations who then acts as deciders-of-facts.

    Therefore, Judge Chutkin should immediately schedule a Phase I of the trial, to have a Jury decide the fact base and determine of which actions charged of the former President were official and which were personal.

    I suspect judicial elitists would prefer this decision be made by Judges, but that’s not how conflicting facts are sorted out under our system.

    1. It depends in if the facts in question pertain to interpretation of the law. This was a glaring error in Merchan’s “court”

      “Phase 1”

      What a spastic idiot.

  2. A senior official at Smartmatic was just arrested in connection with a bribery scheme.

    While this is not proof that Smartmatic rigged the 2020 election – it is evidence that Smartmatic has no difficulty committing crimes involving elections.

    All of Smartmatics defamation claims should be immediately dismissed. It is reasonable to believe that those who would bribe election officials, would committ other crimes.

    It is not defamation to accuse a criminal of the wrong crime/

    1. You’re not up to speed on defamation law. If you bend the facts (fabricate) to make someone look bad whom you don’t like (malice), that’s the definition of defamation.

    2. It is not defamation to accuse a criminal of the wrong crime

      Yes, it is. The fact that someone wouldn’t have any moral qualms about doing something isn’t evidence that he did that thing. And if you make the accusation without any reason to believe that it’s true, that’s “actual malice”, which overcome Sullivan.

  3. Plop his corrupt butt in prison, and throw the book at chutkan she can sit in a cell in solitary in the same dark roach infested diseased cell block.
    In ten or fifteen years we can check if life still exists and increase the punishment if it does.
    In the mean time we’ll put a sign on their foreheads “palestinain”, and send in the likud guards.

  4. My guess is he hopes to morph into a “month #1” impeachment.
    Or he is looking to distance himself from an Iranian hut team he DoJ is ignoring.

  5. These cases have been almost entirely void of legal justification and even when they had a scintilla of such, the political motivation showed by the unequal prosecution of the law (especially documents case). These cases have been entirely an effort of election interference. Sad and sick behavior by the Democrats. They destroy our democracy and operate as fascist socialists.

  6. Joe Biden greeted the World series Champion Texas Rangers at the White House.

    He kept asking “where is Chick Norris?”.

  7. News from today:

    The Iraqi parliament is considering lowering the legal age for girls to marry to 9 years old.

    In unrelated news, Joe Biden revealed today where he has been for the last week. He was condo hunting in Baghdad.

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