Trump's Criminal Trials 2024: Election, Classified Docs & E. Jean Carroll Cases Explained Podcast Por  arte de portada

Trump's Criminal Trials 2024: Election, Classified Docs & E. Jean Carroll Cases Explained

Trump's Criminal Trials 2024: Election, Classified Docs & E. Jean Carroll Cases Explained

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Former President Donald Trump faces several ongoing court trials stemming from his actions after the 2020 election, classified documents handling, and other matters. According to Courthouse News Service, in the federal election subversion case in Washington, D.C., overseen by Judge Tanya Chutkan, prosecutors led by special counsel Jack Smith are pushing back against Trump's request for an April 2026 trial start, arguing it violates the public's right to a speedy trial. They note that of the 11.6 million documents provided, 65% were duplicates or publicly available, like National Archives materials and Truth Social posts, with key evidence front-loaded early on. A second batch of over 615,000 pages arrived recently, and the judge has warned Trump against inflammatory public comments that could speed up the timeline.

The Brennan Center for Justice reports three active criminal prosecutions remain: this D.C. case for trying to reverse the 2020 election, a state case in Fulton County, Georgia, with 41 counts against Trump for election interference involving allies like Rudy Giuliani and Mark Meadows—where DA Fani Willis sought a March 2024 trial—and the federal Florida case over mishandled classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, set that for May 2024 after rejecting earlier delays. Trump was convicted in New York in May 2024 on felony charges for falsifying business records tied to hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, as detailed by the Brennan Center.

Civilly, SCOTUSblog indicates the Supreme Court may review a $5 million verdict from 2023 upheld in 2024, where a jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming E. Jean Carroll, allowing evidence like the Access Hollywood tape and other accusers' testimony. Trump calls it politically motivated.

Just Security's master calendar tracks ongoing deadlines, including appeals in Georgia over DA Willis's disqualification and New York removal attempts to federal court. These cases continue amid Trump's political activities, with delays debated over evidence volume and immunity claims.

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