Trump pleads not guilty to charges that he conspired to overturn 2020 election
“This case will benefit from normal order, including a speedy trial,” Windom told the magistrate judge overseeing Trump’s arraignment.
But John Lauro, an attorney for the former president, said Trump’s legal team might need a long time to go through the evidence that prosecutors are required to hand over to the defense.
“These are weighty issues,” he added. “Obviously, the U.S. has had three and a half years to investigate this matter, and also there’s a number of agents and lawyers that are assisting the government in this proceeding. And all I’m going to ask, Your Honor, is the opportunity to fairly defend our client. But in order to do that, we’re going to need a little time.”
Trump faces four felony charges stemming from his monthslong bid to seize a second term despite losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden. The charges, brought by the special counsel and approved by a federal grand jury earlier this week, accuse Trump of a wide-ranging plot to spread disinformation about the the election, pressure state officials to undo the results in states that Biden won, undermine the Electoral College and ultimately try to disrupt Congress’ certification of the results on Jan. 6, 2021.
Wearing a dark blue suit and a red tie, Trump was processed as a criminal defendant at the federal courthouse in Washington Thursday, and then entered his not guilty plea in a wood-paneled courtroom before U.S. Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya.
Although Upadhyaya presided over the arraignment, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan has been assigned to the case and will handle it going forward.
Chutkan’s first hearing was set for Aug. 28. Before then, prosecutors and Trump’s defense team will submit briefs proposing a schedule for the trial. Chutkan expects to set a trial date at the Aug. 28 hearing, Upadhyaya said.
Trump criticized Chutkan in a social media post a few hours before he came to court on Thursday, calling her “unfair.” Chutkan, an appointee of President Barack Obama, ruled against Trump in 2021 when she allowed the House Jan. 6 select committee to access Trump’s White House records. Much of the evidence in those records has now resurfaced in the new indictment.
The arraignment took place at the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. courthouse, located across the street from the Capitol where thousands of Trump’s supporters rioted two and a half years ago in what prosecutors say was the culmination of his effort to subvert the election.
It was Trump’s third arraignment since April — an extraordinary sequence for a nation in which no other president or former president had ever been indicted until Trump was indicted in three cases this year. As he mounts a bid to return to the White House, those three prosecutions seek to hold him criminally culpable for a variety of actions he undertook both during and after his presidency.
In addition to the newest case accusing him of seeking to overturn the 2020 election, Smith’s team has also charged him in Florida with hoarding classified documents after he left the White House. And New York City prosecutors have charged him with falsifying business records in connection with hush money payments to a porn star.
Trump may soon face yet another criminal case in Fulton County, Georgia, where District Attorney Fani Willis expects to announce charges this month in her investigation into election interference in that state.