Three more charges filed against Trump for withholding classified documents
Donald Trump continues with his legal battles. The special prosecutor Jack Smith has presented this Thursday new charges against the former president of the United States in the case in which he is accused of mishandling certain classified documents during his time in the White House.
Trump was charged with one additional count of “deliberate withholding of national defense information” and two additional counts of “obstruction” related to alleged attempts to remove surveillance video footage at his Mar-a-Lago, Florida, residence. in the summer of 2022.
Special counsel Jack Smith has also singled out a third person, Carlos De Oliveira, in the case of handling classified documents found at Trump's residence at his Mar-a-Lago residence.
According to the court brief, Oliveira, 56, was the handyman who helped Waltine Nauta, Trump's personal assistant and also a defendant, move boxes of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago after the Department of US Justice. summoned the former president for the first time in the case of the classified documents last May.
For Trump this is “electoral interference”
Trump, who already accumulates 37 criminal charges, has come out this Thursday in response to these new charges against him and has indicated that they are “ridiculous” and “electoral interference at the highest level”, according to the Fox channel.
Trump and Nauta were indicted last month and both have pleaded not guilty to all charges against them.
The formal indictment also charges De Oliveira with the crime of making false statements and representations in a voluntary interview that he had with the FBI on January 13, 2023, as reported on CNN.
A Trump spokesperson dismissed the new charges, calling them “nothing more than a continued desperate and hectic attempt” by the Biden Administration to “harass President Trump and those around him” and influence the 2024 presidential race.
Some of those crimes are punishable by up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Judge Aileen Cannon has established that the trial of former President Donald Trump for the classified documents found in his Florida home begins on May 20, 2024, that is, when there will be just over six months left for the presidential elections in this country.