Two Trump co-defendants in Georgia who requested speedy trials asked a judge Wednesday to formally separate their cases from the sprawling overall indictment, a move that would undercut Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willisโ attempt to hold one massive trial for all 19 defendants in the election interference case.
Former Trump campaign lawyer Sidney Powell and pro-Trump lawyer Kenneth Chesebro separately asked the judge overseeing the case to โseverโ their trials from the other defendants. If granted, this would break apart the case and allow their cases to go to trial as soon as October.
These are the first attempts in court by former President Donald Trumpโs co-defendants to break apart the case. The motions filed Wednesday are part of the increasingly convoluted pretrial wrangling among Trump, his 18 co-defendants and Willis, who wants a trial for all 19 defendants to occur in October.
Powell and Chesebro, who both deny wrongdoing in the case, already invoked their right to a speedy trial, which would need to begin before early November, per Georgia law. Fulton County Judge Scott McAfee ordered Chesebroโs trial to begin October 23. Powellโs request is pending. Trump wants to slow things down and opposes that timeline.
Trumpโs lawyers have also said they want to sever his case from the other defendants but havenโt yet filed a motion in court.
In the filing, Powellโs attorneys also argued that she โdid not represent President Trump or the Trump campaignโ related to the 2020 election because she never had an โengagement agreementโ with either.
โShe appears on no pleadings for Trump or the Campaign,โ Powellโs attorneys wrote. โShe appeared in no courtrooms or hearings for Trump or the Campaign. She had no contact with most of her purported conspirators and rarely agreed with those she knew or spoke with.โ
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