UPDATE (July 11, 2023, 12:25 p.m. ET): Judge Aileen Cannon on Tuesday pushed back a July 14 conference on how to handle classified material in Donald Trump’s federal criminal case to July 18.
Now that Donald Trump’s co-defendant, Walt Nauta, has finally been arraigned, the case can get moving, right?
Not so fast, if the Trump aide’s lawyers have anything to say about it.
They filed a motion Monday trying to delay what the government called a “crucial” conference set for Friday, regarding how to handle the classified material in the case.
The reasons cited in the defense motion aren’t great. So it provides an early test of how Judge Aileen Cannon will handle the all-important timing aspect in the former president’s federal prosecution, as he runs for the White House again in 2024. If Trump or another Republican wins and takes control of the government that’s prosecuting him, the case could be crushed.
Trump and Nauta have both pleaded not guilty in the case. Trump is charged with violating the Espionage Act for unlawfully keeping classified documents, while Trump and Nauta are each charged with covering up the former president’s alleged crimes.
The July 14 conference was set weeks ago, but, according to the defense motion, Nauta couldn’t object to the date until he obtained a lawyer who is admitted to practice in the Southern District of Florida, where he and Trump are charged. That happened last week, when Florida lawyer Sasha Dadan entered the case, in addition to Nauta’s existing lawyer, Stanley Woodward. Both lawyers signed Monday’s defense motion.
So much in Nauta's filing is sleight of hand; Woodward gives the impression he was unaware of the 7/14 ct date by saying he did not have access to electronic Ct filing system, but he surely WAS aware of this much-publicized date. And he can attend the conference remotely from DC. https://t.co/4tbqHJu9mo
— Andrew Weissmann (weissmann11 on Threads/Insta)🌻 (@AWeissmann_) July 10, 2023
Among other things, the motion said Woodward has another trial in Washington, D.C., and can’t make Friday’s classified conference in Florida. It also said Dadan is too new to handle the conference, “barely a week after she has been retained by Mr. Nauta.”
And though it hardly needed to be said, the motion conveyed that “Donald J. Trump does not oppose” this requested delay.
Unsurprisingly, special counsel Jack Smith’s team opposes a delay. Here’s how the Justice Department summed up its response Monday:








