Prosecution dumps Twelve Million, Eight Hundred Thousand Documents (rounded) on Team Trump

Seymour Flops

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Nov 25, 2021
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In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.
 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.

I seriously doubt that the prosecution has read any of those documents.
 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.
And they want to start the trial in two hours! LMAO. They'll be lucky to get this trial off the ground by 2030 if ever.
 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.

Dayum, that's almost a mile high worth of documents.
 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.
/——/ A high speed scanner and optical reader looking for key words.
 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.
I don't know and I won't even pretend that I know. But my gut tells me that the prosecution hasn't read many if any of those 12.8 million documents and the purpose is to so overwhelm the defense that Trump will be forced to plea bargain before this goes to trial. When people for far more serious and plausible crimes are given years to prepare for trial, the fact that they are rushing this one doesn't meet the smell test in either due process or equal treatment under the law. The 14th Amendment is out the window when it comes to how they are prosecuting Trump.
 
Judge Upchuckan says jury selection in March 2024. Why? Well, Trump knows most of the material, and tough for him his attorneys don't.

Seriously, what she basically said. F'ing affirmative action Jamaican import.

 

In the federal case probing former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, prosecutors have turned over 12.8 million documents to the former president’s legal team as part of discovery, prosecutors said Monday.

Trump faces four criminal charges in Washington, D.C., tied to his actions after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a trial date of March 4 in the case — a date strongly objected to by Trump’s legal team, which argued that it would take substantially more time than that to get familiar with discovery and ensure the former president is “adequately represented.”

A quarter of the 12.8 million documents are associated with Trump’s campaign or political action committees that have supported it, according to prosecutor Molly Gaston.

Transcripts of grand jury testimony and accompanying exhibits make up 5 million of the documents, and 3 million documents originated from the Secret Service, she said.


So, each and every one of these documents has either incriminating evidence that the prosecution actually intends to introduce, or it has exculpatory evidence that the prosecution is required to hand over. There is no filler, unless the prosecution is being incredibly unethical by trying to burden Trump's defense with unnecessary work.

We know fine fellas like those in the DOJ would neeehhver do that.

So . . . how long should Team Trump be allowed to sort through those twelve million, eight hundred thousand documents? I asked one specific poster on another thread and got a nonsensical answer involving some sort of magical sorting machine with a law degree. Or something. If you also believe in the magical sorting machine, tell me how long it will take the lawyers to read the really important millions of those 12.8 millions, once the initial sort is done.

the man has an unlimited defense budget, if he needs more lawyers to read his own documents he should just hire them.
 
Well that should slow things down more than a bit.

Due diligence would mean every document would take at least a day to go over.
Not if he would hire enough legal help, after all, their pay doesn't come out of his pocket, and sometimes he won't even allow legal people to be paid, even with other people's money.
 
Not if he would hire enough legal help, after all, their pay doesn't come out of his pocket, and sometimes he won't even allow legal people to be paid, even with other people's money.
Trump knows exactly what Jack Smith has on him. He should come clean with his lawyers and decide on a defense strategy. I presume he can't argue evidence, he must argue privileges and immunities under the Constitution
 
Not if he would hire enough legal help, after all, their pay doesn't come out of his pocket, and sometimes he won't even allow legal people to be paid, even with other people's money.
I suspect the number he has now won't change, he can't be commanded to hire more lawyers to cull through them because the prosecution dropped millions of documents on the defense.

Of course that's the basis for the type of Lawfare the dems are playing with.....May they rot in a unmarked grave.
 
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I suspect the number he has now won't change, he can't be commanded to hire more lawyers to cull through them because the prosecution dropped millions of documents on the defense.

Of course that's the basis for the type of Lawfare the dems are playing with.....May they rot in unmarked grave.
Well, the government is not liable for how he conducts his defense of their charges, only responsible to turn over the evidence. Arlette made the point that Trump already knows what they have against him.
 
Well, the government is not liable for how he conducts his defense of their charges, only responsible to turn over the evidence. Arlette made the point that Trump already knows what they have against him.


Clown show, relying on a leftoid like 'Arlette' for your source.

No, not how it works. The defense attorneys need to see ALL the alleged evidence.

And no, there is no way Trump knows "what they have against him". What, he's a fucking mind reader?
 

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