The speed and intensity with which special counsel Jack Smith and his team have been moving shows they can sprint, and we’ll soon learn if they can go the distance. Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Smith on Nov. 18 to lead two delayed, seemingly sclerotic, investigations of former President Donald Trump. He has obtained indictments in the classified documents case, and based on Trump’s reported receipt of a target letter regarding Smith’s investigation into the aftermath of the 2020 election, charges are most likely imminent in that case.
Based on Trump’s receipt of a target letter regarding Smith’s investigation into the aftermath of the 2020 election, charges are most likely imminent.
If you’ve become numb to the notion of a former U.S. president under investigation and multiple indictments, you would have good reason. In addition to the federal indictment accusing Trump of 37 counts on seven charges, including false statements, conspiracy to obstruct and willful retention of national defense information, Trump has also been indicted by the Manhattan district attorney on charges of falsifying business records in making hush money payments. He’s also facing potential election-related charges in Fulton County, Georgia, been found liable in a sexual assault and defamation case, and faces a civil trial against his organization by the New York attorney general.
But the federal case involving the 2020 election is different. A target letter to a former president indicating he’s facing indictment — possibly for trying to interfere with the peaceful transition of power — is not only unprecedented, but also suggests we had a president who posed an existential threat to our democracy.
We shouldn’t take news of this target letter lightly, and neither should Trump and his nascent, disorganized legal team. While Trump, Fox News, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., (who responded to news of the target letter by calling Jack Smith a “weak little b—-”) are claiming Smith’s election case is frivolous, weak and a desperate attempt to interfere with Trump’s 2024 campaign, the reality and gravity of federal prosecutions are quite different.
The U.S. government wins an overwhelming percentage of its cases. An analysis by Pew Research of available 2022 data shows a remarkable track record of success for federal prosecutors and a miserable outcome for defendants. In fiscal year 2022, only 0.4% of federal defendants chose to go to trial and were acquitted. In that year, 71,954 people were criminally charged by the feds, and only 290 of those went to trial and won. Another 1,379 defendants decided to give a trial a shot and were convicted. That means almost everyone else essentially gave up. They pleaded guilty.








