The DOJ’s indictment includes photos of classified documents found at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-A-Lago residence.
Source: DOJ
Federal prosecutors on Monday said former President Donald Trump is seeking “special treatment that no other defendant would receive” in the criminal case accusing him of retaining classified documents at his Florida club after leaving the White House.
Prosecutors told a judge that Trump is not entitled to review or discuss any classified information in the case in a newly constructed sensitive compartmented information facility in one of his homes, as he has requested.
“Creating a secure location in Trump’s residence — which is also a social club — so he can discuss classified information would be an unnecessary and unjustified accommodation that deviates from the normal course of cases involving classified discovery,” prosecutors wrote in a filing in U.S. District Court in Southern Florida.
The filing said that the proposed protective order that prosecutors are seeking “reflects standard procedures for handling classified information in criminal cases and is consistent with the law.”
Trump, “one the other hand, seeks special treatment that no other criminal defendant would receive and that is unsupported by law or precedent,” prosecutors wrote.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in the case, where he also is accused of trying to hide from government officials the boxes of records he was keeping at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach.
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