USA v. TRUMP Document 82: Memorandum, Opinion

District Of Columbia District Court
Case No. 1:23-cr-00257-TSC
Filed October 6, 2023

OPINION and ORDER as to DONALD J. TRUMP granting in part and denying in part Defendant's [62] Motion for Access to CIPA § 4 Filing and An Adjournment of the CIPA § 5 Deadline; granting in part and denying in part Defendant's [63] Motion for Extension of Time to File Pretrial Motions; and amending in part the court's [39] Pretrial Order. Defense objections to ex parte nature of government's CIPA § 4 submission due October 11, 2023; government response due October 18, 2023. Defense CIPA § 5 notice due on October 26, 2023, with supplemental notices due within 20 days of receiving access to additional classified discovery materials. Dispositive motions, including motions to dismiss, due October 23, 2023; oppositions due within 14 days of motion's filing; replies due within 10 days of opposition's filing. Rule 17(c) motions and motions to compel due November 9, 2023; oppositions due November 24, 2023; replies due December 1, 2023. See Opinion & Order for details. Signed by Judge Tanya S. Chutkan on 10/6/2023. (zjd) Modified on 11/7/2023: See [146] Opinion and Order for amendments to the deadlines set in this opinion and order. (zjd). Modified on 12/13/2023 (zjd, ).

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Page 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
V.
Civil Action No. 23-cv-257 (TSC)
DONALD J. TRUMP,
Defendant.


OPINION & ORDER
Before the court are Defendant’s Motion for Access to CIPA § 4 Filing and An
Adjournment of the CIPA § 5 Deadline, ECF No. 62 (“CIPA Motion’), and Motion for
Extension of Time to File Pretrial Motions, ECF No. 63 (“Extension Motion’). For the reasons
set forth below, the court will GRANT in part and DENY in part both Motions.
A. CIPA Motion
The court turns first to the issues related to the Classified Information Procedures Act
(CIPA), which governs the access to and use of classified information in criminal proceedings.
In its CIPA Motion, the defense asks the court to:
(1) order the Special Counsel’s Office to file a redacted version of its CIPA § motion and a public brief justifying its redactions; (2) refrain from addressing the
CIPA §4 motion until President Trump has an opportunity to file procedural
objections on October 11, 2023 and make any appropriate ex parte submission
regarding his defense theories; and (3) adjourn the deadline for CIPA § 5 notice
until three weeks after the Office complies with its disclosure obligations as to the
entire defense team.
CIPA Motion at 9. The court will grant the second request, but deny the first and third.
Page 1 of 6
Page 2 First, the court will not require the government to file a redacted brief of its CIPA § submission. That submission is classified in its entirety, which justifies its sealing in full.! And
the defense cites no authority for the proposition that the court should—or even could—order the
government to declassify any portion of it. Contra Dep’t of Navy v. Egan, 484 U.S. 518, (1988) (The “authority to classify and control access to information bearing on national security
... flows primarily from [the] constitutional investment of power in the President” in Article II,
Section 2.); New York Times v. Cent. Intel. Agency, 965 F.3d 109, 123 (2d Cir. 2020) (“[T]he
suggestion that courts can declassify information raises separation of powers concerns.”); United
States v. Libby, 429 F. Supp. 2d 46, 48 (D.D.C. 2006) (“Accordingly, the Court cannot
preemptively constrain the government in any manner from making filings it deems appropriate,
necessary, and permissible under Section 4.”). The government’s entire CIPA § 4 submission
will therefore remain under seal.
Second, the court will nonetheless permit the defense to file objections to the ex parte
nature of the government’s CIPA § 4 motion. CIPA Motion at 2-3. The D.C. Circuit has
emphasized that in this context, “since the government is seeking to withhold classified
information from the defendant,” adversarial litigation over that information “would defeat the

' Whether evaluated under the First Amendment’s limited right of access to documents in
criminal cases, see Press-Enter. Co. v. Superior Ct. of California for Riverside Cnty., 478 U.S.
1 (1986), or the presumption of public access discussed in United States v. Hubbard, 650 F.2d
293 (D.C. Cir. 1980), classified documents by and large qualify for sealing. There is no
historical tradition of access to them, and for good reason: The well-established risks to
national security created by the disclosure of classified materials generally outweigh any
interest in making them public. See Dhiab v. Trump, 852 F.3d 1087, 1096 (D.C. Cir. 2017)
(concluding there is no “right under the First Amendment to receive properly classified
security information filed in court” in a habeas proceeding); id. at 1098 (“The law of this
circuit is that the need to ‘guard against risks to national security interests’ overcomes a
common-law claim for access.”) (quoting Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 315-16). That is the case
here.
Page 2 of 6
Page 3 very purpose of the discovery rules.” United States v. Mejia, 448 F.3d 436, 457 & n.21 (D.C.
Cir. 2006). Still, the court will allow the defense an opportunity to explain why it believes that
CIPA’s statutory text and Circuit precedent do not govern this case. The court will require any
brief articulating such objections to be filed by October 11, 2023. The government may file any
response to those objections by October 18, 2023.
Third, the court will not adjourn the initial CIPA § 5 notice deadline. During the August
28, 2023 hearing in this case, the court set that deadline for thirty days after defense counsel Mr.
Blanche received finalized clearance to review the classified discovery shared by the
government. Protective Order Hr’g Tr., ECF No. 38 at 42-51. Mr. Blanche, along with two
additional attorneys and a paralegal, received final clearance and access to those materials on
September 26, 2023. See ECF No. 65 at 4-5. That results ina CIPA § 5 notice deadline of
October 26, 2023. The court is not persuaded that an indefinite extension of that deadline, as the
defense requests, is warranted. Thirty days is sufficient time for Mr. Blanche and his team to
review the relatively limited classified discovery at issue here, which totals fewer than one
thousand pages. See id. at 5. If, as the defense posits, the government 1s later required to
produce additional classified discovery, see CIPA Motion at 8—9, the defense may file a
supplemental CIPA § 5 notice with respect to any of those additional materials within twenty
days of receiving access to them.
B. Extension Motion
In its Extension Motion, the defense asks for the pretrial motions deadline of October 9,
2023 to be extended sixty days to December 8, 2023. “At any time before trial, the court may
extend or reset the deadline for pretrial motions.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(c)(2). The court’s
discretion to do so is broad. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 12 advisory committee’s note to
amendment; Morris v. Slappy, 461 U.S. 1, 11 (1983). The defense contends that it needs
Page 3 of 6
Page 4 additional time “to finalize several of its expected motions, including, for example, motions to
dismiss relating to executive immunity, failure to state a claim, and improper conduct by the
Special Counsel during the grand jury process and in charging decisions, motions for 17(c)
subpoenas, potential motions to compel discovery, etc.” Extension Motion at 3. The court will
not grant the full sixty-day extension sought but will adjust the pretrial schedule to grant the
defense some additional time to file certain motions.
Lengthy deadline extensions for the defense’s anticipated dispositive motions—like
motions to dismiss—are not warranted. If the court were to extend the briefing schedule for
these motions by the requested sixty days, they would not be fully briefed until January 2024. In
other words, what the defense anticipates will be “numerous novel and complex legal issues . . .
of first impression,” id. at 1, would not be fully presented to the court until fewer than three
months before the scheduled trial date of March 4, 2023— the same three months in which the
parties may dispute motions in limine, voir dire questions, jury instructions, and other pretrial
matters. See Pretrial Order, ECF No. 39. Backloading the pretrial schedule to that degree will
not serve the interests of justice. Moreover, such dispositive motions will by their nature turn on
legal issues—such as the sufficiency of the government’s pleadings—that the defense has had
months to anticipate, research, and brief. See United States v. Mosquera-Murillo, F. Supp. 3d 130, 154 (D.D.C. 2015) (quoting Moore’s Federal Practice § 612.02). The defense
confirmed at the August 28, 2023 hearing that it had already begun work on those motions.
Protective Order Hr’g Tr., ECF No. 38 at 33-36, 51-52. In fact, the defense filed its Motion to
Dismiss Indictment Based on Presidential Immunity on October 5, 2023, well ahead of the
October 9 deadline. ECF No. 74. Consequently, the court will grant a two-week extension of
the dispositive motions deadline.
Page 4 of 6
Page 5 The court will grant additional time for the filing of Rule 17(c) motions and motions to
compel. Unlike the dispositive motions discussed above, these motions will deal primarily with
evidentiary rather than legal issues. As such, some of these motions—and the defense’s
arguments 1n support of them—may arise from the defense’s ongoing review of the discovery
materials. The court has recognized that the discovery materials in this case are well-organized
but significant, and additional time to review them may be useful to the defense as it considers
motions related to the acquisition of evidence. Protective Order Hr’g Tr., ECF No. 38 at 17-18,
53. But, in the interests of justice, the court must weigh that utility against the disadvantages of
backloading the pretrial schedule. Accordingly, the court will grant a one-month extension of
the deadline to file Rule 17(c) motions and motions to compel.
C. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, Defendant’s Motion for Access to CIPA § 4 Filing and An
Adjournment of the CIPA § 5 Deadline, ECF No. 62, is hereby GRANTED in part and DENIED
in part. The court will not require the government to publicly docket a partially redacted version
of its CIPA § 4 submission. The defense may file a brief objecting to the ex parte nature of the
government’s CIPA § 4 submission by October 11, 2023, and the government may file a
response to that brief by October 18, 2023. The deadline for the defense’s CIPA § 5 notice
remains October 26, 2023, but the defense may file supplemental notices with respect to any
additional classified discovery it recetves within twenty days of receiving access to it.
Likewise, Defendant’s Motion for Extension of Time to File Pretrial Motions, ECF No.
63, is hereby GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. The court’s Pretrial Order, ECF No. 39,
is AMENDED as follows with respect to the pre-trial motions deadlines set forth in its second
paragraph. Rule 17(c) motions and motions to compel shall be filed by November 9, 2023; any
oppositions to those motions shall be filed by November 24, 2023; and any replies in support of
Page 5 of 6
Page 6 those motions shall be filed by December 1, 2023. If there are multiple such motions, then to the
extent possible, the motions, oppositions, and replies shall be filed in omnibus. All other pretrial
motions, including motions to dismiss and other dispositive motions (but excluding motions in
limine and suppression motions as set forth in paragraph five of the Pretrial Order), shall be filed
by October 23, 2023; any opposition shall be filed within fourteen days of the motion’s filing;
and any reply shall be filed within ten days of the opposition’s filing.
Date: October 6,
TANYA S. CHUTKAN
United States District Judge
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