Special counsel prosecutors sharply objected on Monday to Donald Trump’s request for an April 2026 trial date in the case involving his efforts to subvert the 2020 election results, arguing his lawyers’ reasons were disingenuous and denied the American public’s right to a speedy trial.

The six-page court filing took particular issue with how the former US president’s legal team used flawed statistics to apparently settle on having a trial take place three years after he was charged with four felony counts in August for conspiring to return himself to office.

Trump has made clear that his overarching legal strategy for each of his criminal cases is to seek delay – preferably until after the 2024 presidential election, in which he is the frontrunner to clinch the Republican nomination – in an effort to insulate himself from the charges.

The consequences of an extended delay could be far-reaching. If the case is not adjudicated until after the 2024 election and Trump is re-elected, he could try to pardon himself or direct the attorney general to have the justice department drop the case.

When Trump’s lawyers last week asked the presiding US district court judge, Tanya Chutkan, for a trial in 2026, they cited the “median time” of 29.2 months that it took to convict defendants in cases that involved the charge of conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, which Trump also faces.

But prosecutors in the office of special counsel Jack Smith argued using median time as a benchmark was misleading because it includes the time it takes for jury selection, trial, verdict and several months of sentencing deliberation, rather than just the duration of pre-trial proceedings.

“The question here is when it is appropriate to start trial in this case, and statistics regarding the length of time from indictment to sentencing in other Section 371 cases have no bearing on that decision,” prosecutors wrote.

The court filing added that the median time statistic from Trump’s lawyers omitted the fact that the timeframe they used to generate the number, from October 2021 to September 2022, covered the period when the federal courts were dealing with a backlog stemming from Covid-19 closures.

“During that period, only 22 cases went to trial nationwide. This small and skewed sample provides no help to the Court in deciding an appropriate trial date,” prosecutors wrote, adding that all of those cases also involved multiple co-defendants – which is not the case for Trump.

The prosecutors also argued that Trump’s lawyers were being disingenuous about the volume of evidence that the government intended to turn over in discovery so that they could construct their defense arguments.

The Trump legal team had argued that the more than 11m pages of discovery meant it would take an especially long time for them to comb through the material given they only had four lawyers, compared with the dozens of prosecutors detailed to the special counsel’s office.

The prosecutors argued that Trump’s lawyers were not obliged to look at each page and could use filters, “all of which services, and more, are offered by the defendant’s e-discovery vendor, according to its own website, and are tools that courts appropriately expect legal professionals to use”.

The prosecutors added that the judge should not be swayed by the graphic that the Trump legal team included in their filing that showed printing and stacking the millions of pages of discovery would result in a tower taller than the Washington monument.

“In cases such as this one, the burden of reviewing discovery cannot be measured by page count alone, and comparisons to the height of the Washington Monument and the length of a Tolstoy novel are neither helpful nor insightful; in fact, comparisons such as those are a distraction,” they wrote.

  • nkat2112OP
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    3210 months ago

    The prosecutors argued that Trump’s lawyers were not obliged to look at each page and could use filters, “all of which services, and more, are offered by the defendant’s e-discovery vendor, according to its own website, and are tools that courts appropriately expect legal professionals to use”.

    Smith and team schooling Trump lawyers.

      • SanguinePar
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        110 months ago

        Trump leans heavily into his Scottish heritage to refute that particular claim…

    • paper_clip
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      510 months ago

      To be fair, given the bottom of the barrel scraping that must be going on to find lawyers willing to work with him, some of those lawyers might be graduates of Hollywood Upstairs Legal College.

    • auth
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      210 months ago

      Either way you look at it, the justice system is always slow

  • Max-P
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    10 months ago

    Basically buying time to attempt to win the election and abuse power to pardon himself or block prosecution, and if that fails, he’s still gonna have plenty of time to flee the country before his court date is due. Or drag it on until after statute of limitation.

    • @[email protected]
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      1410 months ago

      The statute of limitations is to bring charges, once they’re already in motion, the SoL is irrelevant

    • Alto
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      1010 months ago

      I’m 95% sure that’s not how statue of limitation works

      • paper_clip
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        510 months ago

        I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s how Trump thinks it works.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    310 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The six-page court filing took particular issue with how the former US president’s legal team used flawed statistics to apparently settle on having a trial take place three years after he was charged with four felony counts in August for conspiring to return himself to office.

    Trump has made clear that his overarching legal strategy for each of his criminal cases is to seek delay – preferably until after the 2024 presidential election, in which he is the frontrunner to clinch the Republican nomination – in an effort to insulate himself from the charges.

    The prosecutors also argued that Trump’s lawyers were being disingenuous about the volume of evidence that the government intended to turn over in discovery so that they could construct their defense arguments.

    The Trump legal team had argued that the more than 11m pages of discovery meant it would take an especially long time for them to comb through the material given they only had four lawyers, compared with the dozens of prosecutors detailed to the special counsel’s office.

    The prosecutors argued that Trump’s lawyers were not obliged to look at each page and could use filters, “all of which services, and more, are offered by the defendant’s e-discovery vendor, according to its own website, and are tools that courts appropriately expect legal professionals to use”.

    The prosecutors added that the judge should not be swayed by the graphic that the Trump legal team included in their filing that showed printing and stacking the millions of pages of discovery would result in a tower taller than the Washington monument.


    The original article contains 627 words, the summary contains 263 words. Saved 58%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • auth
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    -1010 months ago

    The lawyers don’t have to look at all pages of evidence? What kind of argument is that?

    • @[email protected]
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      1010 months ago

      Do you think lawyers physically look at all 11 million pages generated? Surely not everything is relevant. If you would study 11 million pages for a case would you read everything or maybe would you use computer-techniques like “keywords filtering”? (This is mentioned in the article)

      • Nougat
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        59 months ago

        Also, if you want human eyes to look at every single bit of discovery … you get more eyes.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          And even then, with more human eyes comes more human errors. Potentially relevant material may be missed where a filter would have caught it.

      • auth
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        -29 months ago

        If you want the best defense possible, you need to read all of it, probably