How Classified Evidence Could Complicate the Trump Documents Case

Lawyers for former President Donald J. Trump have told the judge overseeing his documents case that they have started the process of obtaining security clearances, the first step of what is likely to be a major fight over classified evidence before his trial.

Mr. Trump is facing 31 counts of unauthorized retention of national security secrets under the Espionage Act, along with accusations that he obstructed the government’s efforts to retrieve sensitive files — including by defying a subpoena.

Here is a closer look at the tricky legal issues raised by the role of classified evidence in the case.

The Espionage Act is a World War I-era law that makes it a crime to mishandle national security secrets. To prove that Mr. Trump violated the charged provision of the act, prosecutors must show that he possessed, without authorization, closely held information “relating to the national defense” that could harm the United States or aid a foreign adversary, and that he failed to return it to the government.

Each of the 31 counts is based on a different sensitive document the F.B.I. found in its court-authorized search of Mr. Trump’s club and estate, Mar-a-Lago. As described in the indictment, they include 21 marked “top secret,” nine marked “secret” and one without a classification stamp that contained restricted information about “military contingency planning.”

It is a threat by a defendant to reveal classified information during a trial in the hope of forcing the government to drop a criminal charge. While the government could choose to declassify such information so that it could be freely discussed in open court, security officials may see that as too risky. But the Constitution gives defendants a right to a public trial and the public a right to see trials.

Joshua L. Dratel, a defense lawyer with a security clearance who has handled terrorism cases involving classified evidence, said defense and intelligence officials often did not want to give up information for prosecutors to use in pursuing a case.

“It’s routine, if not invariable, that you’ll get a plea offer in a case in which the government says, ‘If we have to provide classified discovery to you, this offer is no longer on the table,’ and those can be very attractive plea offers,” Mr. Dratel said. “That’s because there is a tremendous tension between intelligence agencies and prosecutors that defense lawyers can exploit.”

Mr. Trump, however, is not expected to accept any plea deal.

The jury presumably needs to see at least parts of each of the 31 files singled out in the indictment to evaluate whether they meet the standards of the Espionage Act. But the issue is not likely to be limited to just those records. Defense lawyers may also ask the government to turn over related classified evidence in the discovery phase, and then seek to use some of it at the trial.

If defense lawyers can find things in the public domain that are similar to what is in any of the 31 documents, they may want to bring it up at the trial to argue that the information was not closely held or that its disclosure would not harm the United States — which would itself reveal the contents of the documents.

Congress enacted the Classified Information Procedures Act, or CIPA, in 1980 in an effort to reduce the chances that graymail would derail prosecutions of people in cases involving national security secrets. (Coincidentally, the bill was introduced in 1979 by Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., who was the chairman of the Judiciary Committee.)

CIPA established ways for prosecutors, defense lawyers and judges to frame classified information so that it could be used in public without compromising protected information like sources and methods. Before a trial even begins, litigation involving the statute typically plays out behind closed doors.

In the documents case, the trial judge, Aileen M. Cannon of the Southern District of Florida, must agree beforehand that any proposed use of CIPA would not infringe on Mr. Trump’s right to a fair trial. Mr. Trump will also need representation by one or more lawyers with a security clearance to participate.

“It is a very complicated lengthy process,” said Barry Pollack, a defense lawyer who also has a security clearance. “Often, there are hearings not open to the public where the attorneys and the judge will literally go through documents line by line deciding which sentences and which individual words can be used in open court and which ones cannot.”

It allows a court to block, censor or create substitutions for classified evidence under certain circumstances.

Prosecutors can seek to use the law to limit evidence they turn over to the defense in the discovery phase. And defense lawyers must tell the judge and prosecutors before the trial what classified evidence they intend to introduce, making the case that it would be material and explaining how they plan to use it.

Judge Cannon could block such evidence, allow the government to redact portions of it or permit a substitution that provides the gist — so long as she decided that doing so would not impede Mr. Trump’s right to a fair trial.

For example, during a 2013 case when Mr. Dratel represented a San Diego man accused of sending money to a Somali terrorist group, prosecutors gave him a summary of the government’s intelligence about the group’s fund-raising. Both sides then agreed on a statement to show the jury at trial reciting certain facts without revealing how they were learned.

As in other such cases, defense lawyers could object to proposed redactions or substitutions, arguing that the full details are necessary. The prosecution can appeal Judge Cannon’s decisions before the trial, but the defense would have to wait until after any conviction.

It is a judicially created process that is similar to CIPA substitutions with one key difference: The jury sees the classified evidence, while members of the public in the gallery get less information. By contrast, under CIPA, both the jury and the public see the same thing.

Under the silent witness rule, for example, a witness and the jurors could be handed a document that is still classified, but it would not be made available to the public. During testimony, the witness might refer to “the matter in the document’s third paragraph.” By looking at the document and following along, the jurors would know what the witness was specifically discussing but onlookers would not.

Some appeals court rulings have validated CIPA in various contexts, such as rejecting arguments that it deprived the defense of information to which it should be entitled or that it violated a defendant’s right to confront his accuser. The Supreme Court has never addressed the law, which could give Mr. Trump a basis to appeal any conviction if the trial used redacted or substituted evidence under that law.

There is even less precedent about the silent witness rule. The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in Richmond, Va., last year approved its limited use in a case accusing a former intelligence official of violating the Espionage Act by giving restricted information to China. But Judge Cannon is not bound by that precedent because she is overseen by the appeals court in Atlanta.

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