Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis speaks to the media after a grand jury brought back indictments against former President Donald Trump and his allies of their try to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results, in Atlanta, Aug. 14, 2023.
Elijah Nouvelage | Reuters
Former President Donald Trump on Thursday opposed a request by an Atlanta prosecutor that he stand trial starting Oct. 23 in his Georgia election interference criminal case.
Trump attorney Steve Sadow, in a court filing, also notified a judge that Trump soon will file one other motion to sever his case from co-defendant Kenneth Chesebro, who on Wednesday demanded a speedy trial in Fulton County Superior Court.
Sadow said Trump will seek to sever his case from “another co-defendant who makes an identical request” for a fast trial.
“President Trump further respectfully puts the Court on notice that he requests the Court set a scheduling conference at its earliest convenience so he will be heard on the State’s motions for entry of pretrial scheduling order and to specially set trial,” Sadow wrote.
Later Thursday, Judge Scott McAfee scheduled Chesebro’s trial to start Oct. 23. No other Trump case defendant will start trial that day.
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis earlier Thursday asked McAfee to schedule the trial of Trump, Chesebro and the 17 co-defendants to start that day.
Willis directly cited Chesebro’s demand for a speedy trial in her filing.
Chesebro’s lawyers, Scott Grubman and Manny Arora, said in a press release to NBC News that their client “can be prepared to maneuver forward with trial for whatever date the Court ultimately sets.”
Trump is as a result of give up later Thursday to be booked within the case.
Trump and the opposite defendants were indicted last week on charges related to an alleged criminal enterprise that sought to overturn his loss in Georgia’s 2020 election to President Joe Biden.
The DA’s request for a trial in the subsequent two months, at the very least for Trump and a lot of the other defendants besides Chesebro, is unlikely to be granted as a result of the complexity of the case and the big amount of evidence Willis collected over an investigation that began early 2021.
That evidence has yet to be turned over to the defendants, only half of whom have surrendered to be booked.
Follow our live coverage of Donald Trump’s arrest within the Georgia election case.