Another disturbing article from SALON.com regarding U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon (So. Dist. of FL) and her Mar-a-Lago classified documents case pending against Trump, and also related coverage here from NEWSWEEK:
“Awful and unethical: Legal experts say Judge Cannon could
face removal for disturbing order”
Legal experts sounded the alarm after the judge overseeing Donald
Trump’s classified documents case rejected special counsel Jack Smith’s bid to
keep government witnesses secret.
Smith’s team opposed making information public that could reveal
the identity or any personal identifying information of any potential witnesses
in the case or any transcripts or other documents they may have provided,
citing concerns about witness intimidation.
Cannon ruled in Trump’s favor on the subject matter, writing: “Following an independent review of the Motion and
the full record, the Court determines, with limited exceptions as detailed
below, that the Special Counsel has not set forth a sufficient factual or legal
basis warranting deviation from the strong presumption in favor of public access
to the records at issue. The Special Counsel’s sparse and undifferentiated
Response fails to provide the Court with the necessary factual basis to justify
sealing.”
FYI: The Press Coalition,
which is comprised of major media companies, also asked the court to unseal
Trump’s redacted motion in unclassified form, citing public interest.
Jeremy Foley, a Berkeley College law professor specializing in judicial ethics, told Newsweek: “It is unusual for a judge to make classified documents public. Before doing so, Judge Cannon was required to weigh the factors favoring disclosure: potential aid to the defense and the public interest argument asserted by the media groups against those identified by the government: release of the documents could harm national security, impair an ongoing investigation, or compromise potential witnesses in the case. If the government is concerned that the judge's order will cause harm, it can seek emergency relief from the 11th Circuit, which could stay the order pending review. We should know very soon if that happens.”
Cannon’s order also raised
concerns among legal experts who have long worried that Cannon may be tilting
the case in favor of Trump, for example:
Former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance wrote on Substack: “Judge Aileen Cannon continues to make rulings that are disturbing. Perhaps we’d view any one of them, on their own, as a judicial aberration. But the pattern of ruling upon ruling that is out of the legal mainstream and results in delay well past the point where this case should have been ready for trial is something that shouldn’t be ignored. Judges should not put their fingers on the scales of justice either for or against a defendant or any other party. Here, it’s impossible to avoid the conclusion that the scales are being tipped. Smith’s best option may be to ask Cannon to reconsider, but the judge’s dismissive tone towards the government suggests that there is little they can do to persuade her.”
Vance further wrote: “A big test will come next week when Cannon
holds a hearing under Section 4 of the Classified Information Procedures Act
(CIPA), where she will make rulings on what classified material in discovery
can be used at trial. Trump is expected to seek additional delays in the case,
asking Cannon to postpone the deadline for some pre-trial motions and
revisiting his presidential immunity and Presidential Records Act claims that border
on being frivolous at this point, and using them to further delay this case
would be a travesty. The time for Smith to decide whether to actively seek
Cannon’s recusal, or at least hint to the Circuit that it’s merited, will be
after the Section 4 hearing rulings are issued. Forced recusals are rare. But
at this late date, even if the 11th Circuit were to move quickly, as it has in
the past, and force Cannon to step aside, it would take a new judge some time
to get up to speed. There are no quick fixes for the damage Judge Cannon has
done.”
Longtime Harvard Law
Prof. Laurence Tribe said he hopes Cannon’s order: “Will trigger a motion
to remove her” then he tweeted:
“The 11th Circuit might well agree this was the last straw. Compromising national
security is a bridge too far.”
Norman Ornstein, emeritus
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) added: “It is impossible to overstate how awful and
unethical is Aileen Cannon. Clearly she has no business being a judge at any
level.”
My 2 Cents: The above renowned former prosecutors and legal experts
said it all above and I totally agree and in short: Judge Cannon as to go… and the sooner
the better.
Thanks for stopping by.
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