Special counsel investigations that culminate in lengthy factual reports have become common in American political life. Special counsel reports have provided public documentation about the 2016 Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, the FBI’s bumbling in the early stages of that investigation and President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents.
When Jack Smith, the special counsel scrutinizing former President Donald Trump’s attempt to subvert the 2020 election, found sufficient evidence to indict him last summer, it looked as if that inquiry would come to a head differently — with a full airing of evidence against his main investigative target in front of a jury.
That path, however, was significantly diverted this summer when the Supreme Court ruled that Trump enjoyed a broad form of immunity from criminal prosecution over official acts, raising doubts about whether the election case would ever go to trial. Should Trump be elected again, he would also most likely have the Justice Department shut down the prosecution.
Still, in an odd legal twist, the Supreme Court ruling has opened the possibility that a significant amount of the previously undisclosed evidence Smith has gathered could be revealed in public court filings — maybe even before Election Day.
On Thursday, Smith is scheduled to submit under seal a massive brief outlining his case against Trump, including what the special counsel’s office has described as about 90 pages of facts and more than 30 pages of footnotes to an exhibit appendix.
The brief is intended to persuade the trial judge in U.S. District Court in Washington, Tanya S. Chutkan, that enough of the specific accusations supporting Trump’s indictment for illegally plotting to overturn his electoral defeat are not immune under the new standard, permitting the case to go forward.
The Supreme Court has directed Chutkan to conduct a “close” and “fact-specific” analysis, and sort through what evidence is now off-limits as immune and what prosecutors could still use — either because Trump’s alleged actions were unofficial ones that he took in his role as a candidate rather than as the president, or because they met an exception the court left open for certain peripheral official conduct.
Since it will be under seal, the special counsel’s lengthy filing would only be seen at this point by Chutkan and Trump’s defense team. But Smith was also expected to submit a separate version with proposed redactions that Chutkan may decide at some point to place on the public docket. A consortium of news organizations, including the New York Times, is expected to ask her to unseal the material.