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Home High profile Some lawyers were very surprised by the latest decision made by the judge in the Mar-a-Lago case, and a few are suggesting Jack Smith to seek a special solution because of it

Some lawyers were very surprised by the latest decision made by the judge in the Mar-a-Lago case, and a few are suggesting Jack Smith to seek a special solution because of it

Unsurprisingly, the response to Judge Cannon’s order was rapid and clear, with some noting that she could make an acquittal more likely.

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Donald Trump, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, special counsel Jack Smith

Donald Trump (AP Photo/Mike Stewart), File), U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, special counsel Jack Smith (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

Lawyers were puzzled by the judge's order to propose jury instructions assuming that the Presidential Records Act allowed former Donald Trump to decide that classified documents were personal.

The response to the judge's order was quick and clear, with some saying that the chance of acquittal has increased.

George Conway, a conservative lawyer, called the order the 'most bizarre' he's seen from a federal judge, bypassing two other orders she issued in the same case.

In all my years as a lawyer, this is the most bizarre order I've seen from a federal judge, said. What's even more incredible is that the second and third most bizarre orders I've seen in federal court were also from Judge Cannon in this case.

Conway's criticism was in response to a post by former Obama administration 'Ethics Czar' Norm Eisen, who said the order was 'clumsy & amateurish' and ignored the 'different body of law' governing classified documents, including EO 13526.

Since a motion hearing last week, Cannon has rejected Trump's motion to dismiss on the grounds of Espionage Act 'unconstitutional vagueness' — without prejudice, meaning the defense can raise it again later and 'as appropriate in connection with jury-instruction briefing and/or other appropriate motions.' But the judge has not yet ruled on the other argued motion to dismiss under the Presidential Records Act.

When special counsel Jack Smith submitted his arguments, he, like Eisen, emphasized that executive order 13526 — 'in force throughout Trump's Presidency and through the allegations in the Superseding Indictment' — states that classified materials 'can be accessed only by a person who an appropriate United States official determines is eligible for such access; who has signed an approved non-disclosure agreement; and who has a 'need to know' the classified information.'

Under the provisions of EO 13526, the Superseding Indictment alleges, once Trump left office, he no longer had authorization to possess classified information, he never received a waiver entitling him, as a former President, to possess it, and he stored documents at a location that was not an authorized location for the storage, possession, review, display, or discussion of classified documents,

Now, Cannon has ordered the defense and the prosecution to file, by April 2, 'proposed jury instructions limited to the essential elements' of the 32 willful retention of national defense information counts Trump faces — but in light of the PRA. She ordered the two sides to 'engage with' two 'competing scenarios and offer alternative draft text that assumes each scenario to be a correct formulation of the law to be issued to the jury [.]' The latter scenario would plainly prepare a way for a verdict of not guilty:

(a) In a prosecution of a former president for allegedly retaining documents in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 793(e), a jury is permitted to examine a record retained by a former president in his/her personal possession at the end of his/her presidency and make a factual finding as to whether the government has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that it is personal or presidential using the definitions set forth in the Presidential Records Act (PRA).

(b) A president has sole authority under the PRA to categorize records as personal or presidential during his/her presidency. Neither a court nor a jury is permitted to make or review such a categorization decision. Although there is no formal means in the PRA by which a president is to make that categorization, an outgoing president’s decision to exclude what he/she considers to be personal records from presidential records transmitted to the National Archives and Records Administration constitutes a president’s categorization of those records as personal under the PRA.

The reactions from the lawyers intensified, with some suggesting that Smith may have enough reason to ask for the “extraordinary remedy” of a writ of mandamus from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, a court that has had to overturn Cannon’s decisions before.

Former special counsel Robert Mueller’s former top deputy, Andrew Weissmann, said that mandamus should be considered for Jack Smith after Cannon’s latest instance of “legal craziness.”

“This is the kind of legal craziness that could lead Jack Smith to request that Judge Cannon’s decision be reviewed by the 11th Circuit appeals court for the third time, which could also be the third strike and result in a negative outcome,” Weissmann stated.

Weissmann reiterated this on MSNBC.

“There’s a reason you’ve never seen anything like it,” Weissmann said, before mentioning two M-words: the first was “meshuggenah,” describing the order, and the second was mandamus.

“Please draft a jury instruction assuming that the earth is flat. And the second one is please draft a jury instruction that the earth is square,” Weissmann described the order. “And so, the second M-word is mandamus. Mandamus is the ability — it’s not an appeal. It’s for extraordinary actions by a district court that so clearly violate the law that you can appeal it right then and there.”

“What she did today is so nutty,” he added.

National security lawyer Bradley Moss, also appearing on MSNBC alongside Weissmann, advised against immediately seeking mandamus.

“So, Jack Smith, if he doesn’t take Andrew up on his idea of seeking mandamus, and I actually don’t think they’re going to do that yet, I think they’re going to try to fashion a response to this to basically say ‘Alright, judge, I’m not sure where you were going with that, but um, no, that’s not how this works. If you think that’s the state of the law is what you put in that second line item, that’s fine. Issue a ruling, grant Trump’s motion to dismiss, as he outlined it under the Presidential Records Act, and will take it to the 11th Circuit,'” Moss said. “But that’s an issue of law for the judge, that’s not an issue for the jury.”

“There’s nothing for then jury to do with that instruction. If that is what they went to trial with, I was Trump’s lawyers I’d sit there and take a nap through trial, play Candy Crush, and then the moment the government rested, ‘I move for a directed verdict for acquittal’ because you can’t lose,” he continued. “Because the jury instruction automatically grants you a win.”

Moss suggested Smith will push back on this before seeking mandamus. He separately called the second scenario posed by Cannon “legally insane.”

Attorney Robert Kelner viewed the mandamus route as “unlikely” at this stage, but he still regarded the order as “sufficiently bonkers” to make Smith think about it.

George Conway scathingly chimed in again by saying it’s clear to him that Cannon has no idea what she’s doing as a lawyer, let alone a judge.

Smith has already threatened to appeal if Cannon separately refuses to reconsider a “clear error” that could out government witnesses through discovery. The special counsel previously caused a stir by requesting a rarely given writ of certiorari before judgment from the U.S. Supreme Court regarding Trump’s claims of “absolute immunity” from prosecution in his Jan. 6 case, so maybe the Special Counsel’s Office wouldn’t hesitate to seek similarly exceptional relief.

Read the order here.

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