U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon on Tuesday blocked the release of a special counsel’s final report into President-elect Donald Trump, pending a decision by an appeals court.
“Pending resolution of the Emergency Motion filed in the Eleventh Circuit … Attorney General Garland, the Department of Justice, Special Counsel Smith, all of their officers, agents, and employees, and all persons acting in active concert or participation with such individuals are temporarily enjoined” from releasing or transmitting the final report, Cannon’s order stated.
This week, Trump co-defendants Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira asked Cannon to prevent the release of Smith’s report in the classified documents case, which accused Trump of illegally retaining sensitive materials after leaving office.
Smith also accused Nauta and De Oliveira of obstruction-related crimes. Trump and the two men have pleaded not guilty to the charges.
The two co-defendants noted in court papers that Smith’s appeal of Cannon’s dismissal of charges against the men is still pending and that the disclosure of pejorative information about them will be prejudicial.
Separately, Trump’s attorneys told Attorney General Merrick Garland in a letter that after they reviewed Smith’s draft final report, they believe that it would violate “fundamental norms regarding the presumption of innocence, including with respect to third parties unnecessarily impugned by Smith’s false claims.”
“Because Smith has proposed an unlawful course of action, you must countermand his plan and remove him promptly,” Trump’s lawyers said in their letter, adding that “if Smith is not removed, then the handling of his report should be deferred to President Trump’s incoming attorney general.”
“As the Government knows, the continued operation of the protective order in this case will make the one-sided impermissible Final Report even more unfairly prejudicial; Defendants are strictly precluded from refuting the Report,” they wrote.
In a filing on Monday evening, Smith’s team provided details of the timeline for releasing the report, saying the attorney general will not release the document until at the earliest, Friday morning.
After the election, Smith moved to dismiss his classified documents case and his separate election-related case against Trump, citing Department of Justice rules around not prosecuting presidents.
Before the election, Trump also had indicated in several media interviews that he would fire Smith as special counsel.
Responding to Cannon’s decision on Tuesday, Trump hailed the decision during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago in Florida.
Smith’s team and the DOJ “lost in court in front of a very strong and a very brilliant judge,” Trump said, referring to Cannon. He also accused Smith of wanting to release a “500-page report” that would be filled with what he described as “fake” information meant to denigrate him.
So far, Garland has made public in their entirety the reports produced by special counsels who operated under his watch, including Robert Hur’s report on President Joe Biden’s handling of classified information and John Durham’s report on the FBI’s Russia investigation.