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Trump charged with new crimes

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Former US president Donald Trump is facing fresh criminal charges.

It’s alleged Mr Trump attempted to obstruct the investigation into the mishandling of top-secret documents by conspiring to delete surveillance footage at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property in Florida.

Federal prosecutors on Thursday unsealed the new indictment targeting the frontrunner in the 2024 Republican presidential primary, who is set to go on trial as the election heats up in May of next year.

The new charges came the same day Mr Trump said his lawyers met with Justice Department officials ahead of a separate expected indictment over his alleged efforts to overturn the result of the 2020 election.

The twice-impeached former president was first indicted in the classified documents case last month, accused of endangering national security by holding on to top secret nuclear and defence information after leaving the White House.

Trump kept the files — which included records from the Pentagon, CIA and National Security Agency — unsecured at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida and thwarted official efforts to retrieve them, according to the indictment.

Thursday’s superseding indictment accuses the billionaire of acting with his co-defendant in the case, personal aide Waltine “Walt” Nauta, and a new defendant, property manager Carlos de Oliveira, to delete security camera footage at Mar-a-Lago.

The fresh charges add to the existing counts of “wilful retention of national defence information” and charges of conspiracy to obstruct justice, making false statements and other offences to which Trump pleaded not guilty last month.

The new indictment recounts a conversation between de Oliveira and a fourth, unnamed employee in which de Oliveira says “the boss” wants the server deleted.

It also adds an extra count under the Espionage Act related to Mr Trump allegedly retaining a classified document “concerning military activity in a foreign country”. According to the indictment, citing an audio recording of the interaction, Mr Trump in 2021 allegedly told visitors of his New Jersey golf club of the defence document, “’As president I could have declassified it,’ and ‘Now I can’t, you know, but this is still a secret.’”

‘Ridiculous’

Mr Trump has dismissed the new accusations as “ridiculous” during an interview with Fox News Digital.

“It’s election interference at the highest level,” he said, blaming his potential campaign opponent President Joe Biden and the Justice Department for “prosecutorial misconduct”.

And in a terse statement, his campaign called the special counsel appointed to the case, Jack Smith, “deranged” and said he “knows that they have no case.”

Earlier, US media reported Mr Trump’s lawyers met with Mr Smith and were informed an indictment in the separate January 6 case was looming.

Mr Trump had said his team was not told when any indictment over that case, centred on the 2021 attack on the US Capitol by his supporters, would be issued.

“My attorneys had a productive meeting with the DOJ this morning, explaining in detail that I did nothing wrong, was advised by many lawyers, and that an indictment of me would only further destroy our country,” Mr Trump said on social media.

“No indication of notice was given during the meeting — do not trust the Fake News on anything!”

His campaign team said in a statement after the new indictment was revealed, “This is nothing more than a continued desperate and flailing attempt by the Biden Crime Family and their Department of Justice to harass President Trump and those around him.

“Deranged Jack Smith knows that they have no case and is casting about for any way to salvage their illegal witch hunt and to get someone other than Donald Trump to run against Crooked Joe Biden.”

Legal woes mount

Mr Trump said on July 18 he had received a letter from Mr Smith saying he was a target of the January 6 probe, focused on the efforts to prevent certification of Democrat Biden’s 2020 election victory.

The letter reportedly cited three federal criminal statutes: conspiracy to defraud the United States, obstruction of an official proceeding and deprivation of rights.

Those could relate to schemes to pressure several states to change their vote counts so Mr Trump would be named the winner, and to create “fake electors” that would lead to Congress naming Trump as the overall election victor over Mr Biden.

Mr Trump has repeatedly attacked the investigation as a political “witch hunt”. He claims without evidence that he lost the election due to widespread voting fraud.

A judge last week ordered Mr Trump’s trial over the secret documents to begin in May of next year, at the height of what is expected to be a bitter and divisive presidential election campaign.

Mr Trump’s defence attorneys had requested it be held after the November 2024 election.

The campaign season calendar is even further crowded by court proceedings in New York, where Mr Trump is facing state charges accusing him of making 2016 election-eve hush money payments to a porn star.

Read related topics:Donald Trump

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