City
Epaper

US: Justice Department to revive secret documents case against Donald Trump

By ANI | Updated: August 27, 2024 03:10 IST

Washington [US], August 27 : Special counsel Jack Smith is arguing to revive his office's classified documents case against ...

Open in App

Washington [US], August 27 : Special counsel Jack Smith is arguing to revive his office's classified documents case against former President Donald Trump in the first formal filing since the criminal case was dismissed last month by Judge Aileen Cannon.

In a brief filed with the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta on Monday, Smith argued that Cannon's decision to end the Trump case because the prosecutors' office lacked constitutional authority was "novel" and "lack[ed] merit."

Cannon had ruled the Justice Department didn't have the ability to appoint or fund special counsels like Smith.

Smith's team also cast the decision from Cannon as not just affecting other special counsel prosecutions - of which there are several ongoing in other courts, against Trump and Hunter Biden, among others - but also as potentially affecting the power of leaders across the federal government, as reported by CNN.

"If the Attorney General lacks the power to appoint inferior officers, that conclusion would invalidate the appointment of every member of the Department who exercises significant authority and occupies a continuing office, other than the few that are specifically identified by statute," Smith's office wrote in the 81-page filing.

"The district court's rationale would likewise raise questions about hundreds of appointments throughout the Executive Branch, including in the Departments of Defence, State, Treasury, and Labor," the prosecutors added.

Trump was charged last summer with several counts of mishandling sensitive government documents taken from his White House at the end of the presidency. The Republican presidential nominee also faces several obstruction charges for alleged efforts to hinder the federal probe into the materials.

The former president and his two co-defendants - Trump employees also accused of obstruction - have pleaded not guilty.

The 11th Circuit is reviewing the determinations by Cannon that Smith's appointment as special counsel was unconstitutional and that his office was being unlawfully funded, as reported by CNN.

Notably, though other courts have upheld the use of special counsels, Cannon said that Congress had not given the Justice Department the authority to make such an appointment, while also concluding that the funding for Smith's office had not been properly appropriated by lawmakers.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalWhite House says US in 'armed conflict' with drug cartels

Navi MumbaiNavi Mumbai Airport Gets DGCA Clearance Ahead of PM Modi’s Grand Inauguration

NationalHM Amit Shah to inaugurate largest dairy facility, projects worth Rs 825 crore in Haryana today

InternationalEx-US official reacts to Rahul Gandhi, says leaders must prioritise Indian values

NationalAAp's Saurabh Bhardwaj praises Indian Railways for clean facilities at New Delhi Station

International Realted Stories

International"Weakness in the face of terrorism only brings more terrorism": Netanyahu on Manchester synagogue terror attack

InternationalIndia’s trade stance with US ‘good, disciplined’: Ex-US official

InternationalDays after talks, US top trade official calls India’s approach 'pragmatic'

InternationalPutin calls PM Modi a "wise leader", reaffirms India-Russia "strategic partnership"

InternationalUAE: Nature Guardians Majlis mobilises private sector for nature-positive future