Jack Smith Has 'Compelling Example' Against Donald Trump: Attorney

Special Counsel Jack Smith is set to present "compelling" evidence in Donald Trump's federal election trial that will suggest the former president and his allies were well aware the Republican had lost the 2020 election, but still tried to overturn the results, according to a legal expert.

Joyce Vance, a former federal prosecutor and legal analyst, was reacting to court filings submitted by Smith's office on Tuesday that detailed the evidence the Department of Justice is planning on introducing for Trump's trial, in which he has pleaded not guilty to four counts relating to allegations he obstructed the 2020 presidential election.

One of the sections in the filings includes claims that Smith's team has evidence that Trump and his co-conspirators had "knowledge of the unfavorable election results" in the race against Joe Biden and showed "motive and intent to subvert them."

An unindicted co-conspirator, who is only identified as a "campaign employee," is alleged to have taken steps to obstruct the vote count at the TCF Center in Detroit in the key swing state of Michigan in November 2020. It is unclear if the campaign employee is one of the six unnamed co-conspirators who were mentioned in the federal indictment against Trump unsealed in August, or if there's a new person linked to Trump's alleged criminal attempts to overturn the election results.

Jack Smith in DC
Jack Smith speaks to members of the media at the US Department of Justice building in Washington, D.C., on August 1, 2023. Smith has shown in filings what his team will submit as evidence in... Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Writing in her blog, Vance said that even though some of the details in the court filings are redacted, the allegations against the campaign worker are a "compelling example" showing that Trump was apparently well aware he had lost the election, but he carried on pushing false election fraud claims that led to the January 6 riot regardless.

The redacted part of the filings arrives after the court filings state that the campaign employee exchanged a series of text messages with an attorney supporting the Trump campaign team's election day operations at the TCF Center in Detroit, where they allegedly "encouraged rioting and other methods of obstruction" when learning that the vote count was favoring Biden.

After several redacted lines, the filings add that several people "flooded" the TCF Center and began making "illegitimate and aggressive challenges" to the vote count.

"Thereafter, Trump made repeated false claims regarding election activities at the TCF Center, when in truth his agent was seeking to cause a riot to disrupt the count. This evidence is admissible to demonstrate that the defendant, his co-conspirators, and agents had knowledge that the defendant had lost the election, as well as their intent and motive to obstruct and overturn the legitimate results," federal prosecutors said.

Discussing the filings and the allegations around the campaign worker, Vance wrote: "Something about this witness, perhaps their identity or status as a cooperating witness, or something in the substance of their testimony, is being protected from public disclosure for the moment.

"Even without knowing what comes in between those two bookend sentences, we know enough now to see that Smith has a compelling example that connects Trump's knowledge he was losing to a willingness to unleash violence to interfere with finalizing the count," Vance added.

Trump's legal team has been contacted for comment via email.

Vance added that the allegations from the TCF Center are part of a plan to show a pattern of behavior. She suggests Smith and his team are doing this to get round Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, legislation which prevents prosecutors from offering evidence to suggest a defendant has committed crimes beyond what they are accused of in their indictment, as the evidence shows motive from the former president.

"404(b) evidence is important in part because it gives jurors confidence that what happened when a crime was committed wasn't a mistake because the defendant manifested a similar intent on another occasion when something similar took place," Vance said.

Trump's federal trial is scheduled to begin on March 4. The frontrunner in the 2024 GOP presidential primary has long denied all wrongdoing in connection to the case, and has accused Smith of "election interference" with his investigation.

In a statement regarding the latest court filings, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung, said: "Crooked Joe Biden, Deranged Jack Smith, and the rest of the Hacks and Thugs attempting to interfere in the 2024 election are getting so desperate to attack President Trump that they are perverting justice by trying to include claims that weren't anywhere to be found in their dreamt up, fake indictment. President Trump will not be deterred."

Uncommon Knowledge

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About the writer


Ewan Palmer is a Newsweek News Reporter based in London, U.K. His focus is reporting on US politics, domestic policy ... Read more

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