Prosecutors in the United States yesterday asked a judge to set a trial date of 4th, March next year for the election racketeering and conspiracy case against former President Donald Trump in the US state of Georgia.
With the 77-year-old Republican billionaire facing four criminal trials while running for re-election to the White House, the defence is likely to fight for a later start.
However, the proposal would schedule the opening only one day before ‘Super Tuesday,’ when more than a dozen states hold primary elections for the Republican party to choose its nominee for the 2024 presidential election.
Additionally, it would occur just eight days before Georgia’s election.
Africa Today News, New York recalls that Trump was indicted Monday on charges of racketeering and a string of election crimes after a sprawling, two-year probe into his efforts to overturn his 2020 defeat to Joe Biden in the Peach State.
Read Also: Trump Charged In Georgia Over Plot To Overturn 2020 Election
Prosecutors in Atlanta charged 18 co-defendants with multiple offences linked to the alleged conspiracy, including Trump’s former personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and his White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows.
‘In light of defendant Donald John Trump’s other criminal and civil matters pending in the courts of our sister sovereigns, the state of Georgia proposes certain deadlines that do not conflict with these other courts’ already-scheduled hearings and trial dates,’ District Attorney Fani Willis wrote in a court filing.
She asked for a first, procedural hearing for the defendants — known as the arraignment — for the week of 5th September.
Trump did not have any immediate reaction to the filing but amplified posts on his social media platform Truth Social making the innocuous claim that Willis, an elected Democrat, has donated money to Democratic causes.
Trump already has a packed courtroom calendar, featuring a civil fraud suit against his business in October and two further civil trials in January — one starting on 15th January, the day of Iowa’s first-in-the-nation nomination vote.
While he would almost certainly not be required to appear in the civil cases, federal prosecutors have requested that Trump’s criminal trial for allegedly conspiring to overturn the 2020 US election begin on 2nd January.
He has a state-level criminal trial scheduled for March 25 in Manhattan over hush money payments to a porn star that he is said to have fraudulently misrepresented as legal expenses in business filings.
He is due to go before a jury in Florida in May accused of multiple Espionage Act violations.
Trump’s attorneys have previously argued that he should not be put on trial until after the presidential election.