Trump's Trials - What happens to Trump's criminal cases now that he's won re-election?

Episode Date: November 9, 2024

For this episode of Trump's Trials, host Scott Detrow speaks with NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson. Now that Donald Trump is headed back to the White House the three remaining criminal cases a...gainst him will most likely go away. Follow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for new episodes each Saturday.Sign up for sponsor-free episodes and support NPR's political journalism at plus.npr.org/trumpstrials.Email the show at trumpstrials@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 From NPR, this is Trump's Trials. I'm Scott Detro. We love Trump! This is a persecution. He actually just stormed out of the courtroom. We love him! Innocent to proven guilty in a court of law. We have been bringing you this podcast for more than a year now, and we have tried to track and understand the unprecedented situation of a former president and a presidential candidate
Starting point is 00:00:25 facing not one, but four serious criminal cases. That former president, Donald J. Trump, has been criminally indicted in the state of Georgia. Thirty-eight counts against the president, including the unlawful retention of defense information, which is an espionage act charge. There are also charges of obstruction and conspiracy. Former President Trump has been informed at this hour that he has been indicted by a federal grand jury regarding the special counsel's probe into Trump's efforts
Starting point is 00:00:55 to overturn the 2020 election. President Donald Trump has been indicted by a grand jury in New York. 91 indictments across four criminal cases at the state level, at the federal level. And all along, we said this would play out on two tracks, the courts and also the political realm. Because if Donald Trump won back the White House, he would have the power to end the
Starting point is 00:01:17 federal cases against him. And the state level cases would likely disappear as well. And that's what happened. Trump is returning to power. He is scheduled, as of this moment, to be sentenced to New York in a matter of weeks, but now that likely will not happen. So ahead, we will talk about all of this and what comes next for Trump and the Department of Justice with correspondent Carrie Johnson.
Starting point is 00:01:50 This message comes from Wyze, the app for doing things in other currencies. Send, spend, or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees. Download the Wyze app today or visit Wyze.com, T's and C's apply. Okay. So does this sound like you, you love NPR's podcasts, you wish you could get more of all your favorite shows, and you want to support NPR's mission to create a more informed public. If all that sounds appealing, then it is time to sign up for the NPR Plus bundle. Learn more at plus.npr.org. This message comes from Wondery and T-Boy. The Best Idea Yet is a new podcast about the untold origin stories of the products you're
Starting point is 00:02:32 obsessed with and the people who made them go viral. Listen to The Best Idea Yet wherever you get your podcasts. And we are back with NPR justice correspondent, Carrie Johnson. Hey, Carrie. Hey, Scott. Let's start with the two federal cases because Trump will again be in charge of the federal government in January. And remember these were cases centered around election interference and also a case centered
Starting point is 00:02:55 around retaining classified documents after he left the White House. Big question, what happens with these cases? You know, we just got a filing from the special counsel, Jack Smith, suggesting the process of unwinding these cases has begun. They asked the judge in Washington, D.C., Tonya Chutkin, to give them until early December to offer a status report or an update because of what they called an extraordinary circumstance. This man who's been facing four felony charges in Washington, D.C., is now the president-elect. And that runs straight into a long-standing DOJ view
Starting point is 00:03:32 that you cannot indict or prosecute a sitting president. Matthew Feeney One thing that I particularly noticed from that filing was that Jack Smith made a point to say that Trump will become president on January 20th and also pointed out he will be certified as president on January 6th and also pointed out he will be certified as president on January 6, 2025. Yeah, and that date of course plays a major role in not just the public imagination, but also in the indictment against the former president, Donald Trump. When a high profile special counsel ends an investigation, often there will be a report issued. We saw this with the Her Report, which was an early alarm bell for many people about
Starting point is 00:04:05 President Joe Biden's age and the way that he carried himself. Any sense whether something similar could come out of Jack Smith's office? That's a requirement under the special counsel regulations. So Smith will at least start writing a report. The question is whether he's going to be able to finish it in time before the inauguration. The current attorney general, Merrick Garland, has pledged to make public most, if not all, of these special counsel reports. So if that gets done in time and Merrick Garland has time to review it and publish it to all
Starting point is 00:04:35 of us, we're going to see it. It's a big question how new information is going to be in there, especially because we just got 165 pages from Jack Smith not that long ago talking about what Donald Trump was doing in the room off of the Oval Office while the January 6th riot proceeded. Right. On top of the original indictments, the refiled indictments, half the Supreme Court rulings, and of course the congressional hearing. I feel like many of the key facts were out there, which again, I think is something that Americans took into consideration and yet Donald Trump won the
Starting point is 00:05:05 popular vote. Resoundingly, not even close. Yeah. Let's talk about the state cases though. Again, New York State, Donald Trump already faced a jury, was found guilty on 34 felony counts. He was due to be sentenced in a matter of weeks. What happens next in New York?
Starting point is 00:05:20 Sure, there's a proceeding scheduled for November 12th for Justice Juan Marchand, the judge who heard that case, to determine whether some or all of that case is impaired because of testimony from people like Hope Hicks, who worked in the Trump White House. That calls into question, you know, what the Supreme Court said in its immunity decision this past summer. So that's one issue. And then the second issue is the sentencing had been scheduled for Thanksgiving week. Most people think that
Starting point is 00:05:49 Donald Trump's lawyers are going to ask to vacate that sentencing and basically ask for the whole case to go away. You know, it's really hard to imagine a former president getting a sentence in custody anyway and now it's extra hard to imagine a president-elect getting a sentence of some kind of custodial time. Even being forced to report to probation, his lawyers would say, is too much because he's got to think about the transition period and launching the new government. And as the Supreme Court told us this summer, the executive branch is the president. And so it's different when it's the president.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Let's talk about the fourth case, Georgia, the case that topic wise, overlapped a lot with the federal case having to do with Trump and his allies alleged efforts to overturn that 2020 election. What happens there, especially given the fact that it was a Rico case, it was Trump and several other co-defendants. Well, you know, that case is already bollocksed up in part because of allegations against the district attorney Fonny Willis. She's basically fighting allegations that she should be disqualified from the case because she had a personal relationship with the prosecutor she hired and because of statements she made at a Martin Luther King Jr. event at a church
Starting point is 00:07:05 in the Atlanta area this year. And so an appeals court in Georgia was planning to hear all of those arguments in early December. It's not clear to me that's going to happen either. There are other defendants in the Rico case in Georgia and there are other defendants in the Mar-a-Lago prosecution over the alleged hoarding of classified documents and alleged obstruction when the FBI came to get them. And I think the evaluation in the federal case involves, of course, not just Trump, but his valet, Walt Notta. We've talked about him a lot. And Carlos de Oliveira, the property manager at Mar-a-Lago. The federal government may
Starting point is 00:07:39 well decide to walk away from those two men. It's not clear to me that the prosecutors in Georgia will want to walk away from these other defendants and the huge RICO case. But it's also not clear to me how much the Supreme Court ruling on immunity will impact some of the evidence the prosecutors wanted to use in that Georgia RICO case. There's a complicating factor there as well. And it's so complicated, Scott, that it may be that beyond all imagination, Donald Trump's strategy of delay and deflection has succeeded at every turn in these criminal cases. Scott Benner 32 given the fact that Donald Trump is returning to the White House after
Starting point is 00:08:15 a clear cut victory, I have to imagine, Kerry, that there are a lot of conversations in the Department of Justice and legal worlds about how this could have gone differently. There were always going to be headwinds like the big Federal case regarding the election in January 6th was paused this spring made its way to the Supreme Court The Supreme Court issues this broad ruling granting wide swaths of immunity to presidents Even given those dynamics that probably would have been in place no matter what. What are the conversations like especially when it comes to timing? How much conversation is there about whether the Department of Justice could have begun this process faster, could have brought charges against Trump faster and reached a conclusion in a courtroom before this election?
Starting point is 00:08:56 There's a lot of second guessing. There's a lot of Monday morning quarterbacking, particularly as it relates to the House Select Committee that investigated a lot of this January 6th activity, right? I mean, even members of that committee and some of the senior staff have been quite critical of the Justice Department for moving too slowly. Another thing that's going on here, I think, is that the Attorney General Merrick Garland has become the personification of the justice system for people. And so, like, every time people on the political left were unhappy about things in Georgia or New York getting off track, they'd complain about Merrick Garland. In fact, the attorney general of the United States doesn't have anything to do with the prosecutions in New York or Georgia.
Starting point is 00:09:37 Something President-elect Trump frequently mistook as well. Exactly. Exactly. That all being said, Scott, even if Garland had appointed a special counsel earlier and charges against Trump related to January 6 were brought, it's not at all clear to me that this Supreme Court would have allowed the core of that case to proceed. In fact, the Supreme Court decision in the Trump immunity case was so sweeping as it relates to executive power that it touched not just the DC case we've been talking about, but all four of these cases in some respect. And so coulda, woulda, shoulda.
Starting point is 00:10:16 I think when people look back 20, 30 years from now, Merrick Garland's legacy is in large part going to be shaped by what happened at this case against Trump and the other January 6 cases. I want to end on a broad question looking forward, Carrie. You are one of the best people in the country at covering the Department of Justice. You're a really well-sourced reporter there. You covered Trump's first time in office. You covered these criminal charges brought against a former president. You covered all of the things that Trump has promised to do if he returned to office, especially
Starting point is 00:10:48 when it comes to using the Department of Justice in a political way, going after political opponents. Now he's coming back into office, and I'm wondering what the big storylines you'll be looking for are, what the biggest questions you'll have about how far Trump goes in taking those promises that he made into microphones of the campaign trail and turning them into reality. Yeah, there are some things that Trump can do almost on day one. The huge things include pardons and clemency. A president has almost absolute power to issue pardons and commutations of sentences, letting people out of prison earlier. And how many of the January 6 defendants
Starting point is 00:11:24 apply and whether the leaders of the O 6th defendants apply, and whether the leaders of the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys who have been convicted of seditious conspiracy get those pardons and clemencies is a big question. And then with respect to investigations, the Supreme Court has now blessed and okayed any kind of conversation the president wants to have about investigations or indictments. So in the old days there was kind of a wall or a series of locked doors so the president and people in the White House couldn't just call up any old prosecutor at the Justice Department or any old FBI agent and ask questions about investigations which are extremely sensitive. That wall I think is gone now
Starting point is 00:12:01 and so it's going to be dependent on the character and integrity of the people inside the DOJ and the FBI as to how much meddling or conversations the president, the White House chief of staff, the White House counsel, and others get to have with people doing investigations. And we're going to see pretty soon because Trump has avowed retribution. He's talked about wanting to investigate a lot of his perceived political enemies and we may see action in those areas, you know, depending on who the attorney general is and how quickly that person is confirmed.
Starting point is 00:12:37 That's it for you, Carrie Johnson. Carrie, thanks so much. Thank you. Thanks to our supporters who hear the show sponsor free. If that is not you, still could be. You could sign up at plus.npr.org or subscribe on our show page and Apple podcasts. This show is produced by Tyler Bartleman and edited by Adam Rainey, Krishnadev Kalamore, and Steve Drummond. Our executive producers are Beth Donovan and Sammy Yenigan.
Starting point is 00:13:02 Eric Marapotti is NPR's vice president of news programming. I'm Scott Detro. Thanks for listening to Trump's Trials from NPR. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies. Send, spend, or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees. Download the WISE app today or visit wise.com, T's and C's apply. Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial. When your celebration of life is prepaid today, your family is protected tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:13:51 Planning ahead is truly one of the best gifts you can give your family. For additional information, visit DignityMemorial.com. This message comes from Grammarly. Back and forth communication at work is costly. That's why over 70,000 teams and 30 million people use Grammarly's AI to make their points clear the first time. Better writing, better results. Learn more at grammarly.com slash enterprise.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.