With all eyes on the Capitol since Friday when the various celebratory balls began, five significant court cases slipped by the public’s notice. That number excludes the Supreme Court’s unanimous decision in TikTok v. Garland, which upheld The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act’s mandate that China divest from the popular social media platform.
The Supreme Court’s TikTok decision quickly launched extensive debate and, after TikTok went dark, reportedly some private crises. Many Americans and the Chinese communist government perceived Trump’s impending inauguration as providing a reprieve from the law, even though a President cannot amend a statute (or the Constitution — more on Biden’s claim about the purported 28th Amendment tomorrow) by Executive Order or otherwise.
However, the change in administration proves significant for five other important cases which all saw developments late last week.
Classified Documents Case:
First came arguments before Judge Aileen Cannon on the Department of Justice’s push to provide a copy of Volume II of now-former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report to the chair and ranking members of the House and Senate Judiciary Committee. Last week, Judge Cannon rejected efforts by Trump and former Department of Justice Attorney Jeff Clark to prevent the release of the first volume of Smith’s report; that volume addressed the special counsel’s investigation into Trump’s challenges to the 2020 election.
Because Volume I did not involve the classified documents case that Judge Cannon presided over, the Florida district court judge held she lacked the authority to prevent Attorney General Garland from releasing the report publicly. As to Volume II, after Trump’s co-defendants in the classified document case, Waltine Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, filed a motion to prevent the release of the report, AG Garland agreed not to release it publicly. Rather, AG Garland maintained he intended to provide access to the report solely to the top Democrat and Republican members of the judiciary committees and in doing so would require them to commit to not discussing the contents of the report. […]
— Read More: thefederalist.com
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