FORT PIERCE, Fla. — Special counsel Jack Smith revealed new photos in a court filing Monday evening that depict how haphazardly Donald Trump stored classified materials at his Florida property post-presidency, with golf shirts stuffed into boxes alongside the sensitive materials, newspaper clippings and other mementos.
The images — a grab-bag of national security secrets, souvenirs and various odds-and-ends — are part of prosecutorsâ€
The Justice Department has released photos of the classified documents before, but the new filing offers the largest number of such images. In one, a sensitive document with redactions sits in a box atop of an edition of The Washington Post with a front-page story describing Trumpâ€
Smith filed the photos in response to an argument from Trump that the criminal charges against him should be dismissed because investigators messed up the precise order of the boxesâ€
Trump, the former president and presumptive Republican nominee in this yearâ€
His trial, originally set for May, has been postponed indefinitely as U.S. District Court Judge Aileen M. Cannon hears a slew of dismissal and other motions from Trumpâ€
In one of those motions, filed June 10, lawyers for Trump wrote that by not precisely preserving an exact copy of the contents as they were found, investigators essentially destroyed evidence and therefore made it difficult for Trump to employ some defenses at trial.
Trumpâ€
Their argument, known as a “spoliation of evidence� motion, typically carries a high legal threshold. Defense lawyers would have to show that prosecutors intentionally destroyed evidence to convince a judge to dismiss the case.
In his response to the motion, the special counsel said Trumpâ€
One employee told a prosecutor that they used the phrase “A Beautiful Mind� to describe the boxes — a reference to the Russell Crowe movie about a math genius — because Trump knew everything about their contents.
Still, prosecutors said that if Trump wanted to mount the defense that he didnâ€
“Against this backdrop of the haphazard manner in which Trump chose to maintain his boxes, he now claims that the precise order of the items within the boxes when they left the White House was critical to his defense, and, whatâ€
Judges typically rule on long-shot motions without holding hearings. Cannonâ€
She has not scheduled a hearing on Trumpâ€
If Trump — who was convicted last month on separate state charges of falsifying records in New York — wins the presidency in November, he could appoint an attorney general who would seek to drop the federal charges against him. It is also against Justice Department policy to prosecute a sitting president.
Cannon held a hearing Monday morning on Trumpâ€