Trump is asking a judge to force the special counsel’s office to turn over records from the intelligence community that he wants to use at trial for the Jan. 6 case, where he faces charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of an official proceeding, and conspiracy against rights.
What Trump wants includes reports on damage wrought by Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and threats to the 2020 election. It’s part of a series of defenses which Trump wants to raise at trial aimed at debunking a core position of Special Counsel Jack Smith: that Trump spread lies about breaches in 2020 election because he was “motivated by a desire to maintain office and undertaken with specific intent and unlawful purpose,” his attorneys wrote in the request.
By “almost never goes well” do you mean they don’t get what they want, or there are actual repercussions for trying to manipulate the system?
Because if there are no repercussions then it goes just fine
I can’t speak to the consequences, but wikipedia has this to say:
the ‘second tactic’ is what trump is doing here- demanding access to classified documents to use in his defense. wiki notes that it worked for Oliver North and Kathrine Gun.
Wiki has this to say about the graymail law:
So, from Trump’s perspective, at best, the judge is going to be forced to slog through intelligence that’s nominally related. At worst, it pisses the judge off. Either way, it’s a delay… and that’s most of trump’s legal strategy right there.
edit: ROFL. CIPA was sponsored by then-senator Biden… take that where you might.
He won’t get what he wants. The only repercussions are annoying the judge.
Sorry if I gave you extra hope.
Then again, annoying the judge can lead to other “complications” during the trial.