Trump’s Using Court Filings to Get Around His Gag Order

Trump’s Using Court Filings to Get Around His Gag Order

With his first criminal trial set to start in 10 days, Donald Trump on Friday launched a fresh attack on the judge presiding over the case, one that also tests the boundaries of a gag order issued by the judge against him.

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Trump’s presidential campaign publicized a motion filed earlier this week demanding Judge Juan Merchan recuse himself from the New York hush money case “in light of appearances of impropriety” stemming from his daughter’s work with a company that does political marketing for Democratic campaigns.

Trump’s 35-page motion—and its 119 pages of exhibits—comes four days after Merchan expanded the existing gag order on Trump to include banning him from making public comments about Merchan’s family or that of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, after the former President had repeatedly made comments arguing that the work of Merchan’s daughter meant he couldn’t preside over the jury trial impartially. The order does not prevent Trump from criticizing the judge and the district attorney directly.

Trump seems to be testing a way around the gag order by putting his public criticism of the daughter of the judge into the public court filings themselves.

The filing says that Loren Merchan has held leadership positions at a political marketing company called Authentic that was paid to develop ads in 2019 for Kamala Harris’s presidential primary campaign and has since produced ads for the campaigns of Democratic members of congress, including Rep. Adam Schiff and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

In demanding that Merchan recuse himself, Trump’s legal team argues that the work of Merchan’s daughter for Democratic political campaigns creates “appearances of impropriety” and should be grounds for the judge’s recusal. Trump’s filing also said Merchan’s gag order “improperly restricts” Trump’s “constitutionally protected campaign speech”. 

Bragg’s office called Trump’s claims a “daisy chain of innuendos” that are a “far cry from evidence.” Anticipating Trump’s motion, prosecutors in the case told Merchan in a letter on Tuesday that the court and an advisory committee on judicial ethics have already determined that the political activities of a relative are not a basis to question a judge’s impartiality. There is a longstanding practice in American courts that a person’s views are not defined by those of their family members.

Bragg is bringing Trump to trial to face charges he faked business records to cover up a sex scandal involving adult film actress Stormy Daniels weeks before the 2016 election. The trial is set to start on April 15, but would be delayed if Mercan were to agree to Trump’s request to recuse himself.

Trump is facing charges in three other criminal cases, including felony charges for trying to reverse his 2020 election loss in Georgia, engineering a violent effort to overturn the election results on Jan. 6, 2021, and refusing to return classified documents after leaving office.

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