On the 15th, former President Donald Trump received a significant reprieve from a federal court judge in Florida, whom he had appointed. The judge dismissed the case involving the leaking of confidential documents.
Just two days after surviving an attempted assassination on the 13th, Trump, who projected a strongman image by raising his fist even as blood ran down his face, saw his legal troubles diminish when the Florida court dismissed the case on the 15th.
This development removes significant obstacles that could have hindered his chances of winning the presidential election on November 5th.
On the 15th, Judge Eileen Cannon of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida dismissed the case of leaking confidential documents against Trump, which special counsel Jack Smith had prosecuted.
Cannon ruled that the Department of Justice appointed Smith as a special counsel violated the U.S. Constitution.
Instead of discussing whether leaking confidential documents was illegal, she ruled that the entire special counsel framework was flawed.
Cannon stated that Attorney General Merrick Garland’s 2022 appointment of Smith as a special counsel substantially usurped Congress’s power to make such decisions.
She ruled that the Attorney General’s decision to appoint Smith as a special counsel compromises the foundational principle of structural freedom known as the separation of powers, thereby violating this crucial constitutional doctrine.
The dismissal of the lawsuit brought by Smith last year has removed one of the hurdles to Trump being officially nominated as the Republican presidential candidate at the Republican National Convention (RNC) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which began on the same day.
Recently, Trump’s legal risks have significantly diminished, thanks partly to the judges he appointed during his presidency.
Earlier this month, the Supreme Court, now composed of a majority of conservative justices from Trump’s tenure, granted him comprehensive immunity.
The Supreme Court ruled that immunity extends even after leaving office for official acts performed during a presidential term.
The lower court must now determine whether Trump’s attempt to overturn the election results qualifies as an official act, reversing the lower court’s decision.
It was essentially a declaration of innocence.
Meanwhile, if Trump is officially nominated as the Republican presidential candidate today, he will appoint a vice presidential candidate.