In a federal case concerning former U.S. President Donald Trump, Judge Aileen Cannon has granted an apparent indefinite delay. The case, which involves allegations of Trump retaining classified documents post-presidency, saw a May 9 deadline for court filings stayed. This pertains to Section 5(a) of the Classified Information Procedures Act.
Trump, who faces 40 charges, has denied all allegations, claiming no wrongdoing in retaining classified materials. Despite the slated trial date of May 20, Judge Cannon has yet to assign a new deadline for the submission of classified documents, leading to speculation that the trial may be delayed until after the 2024 election.
NEW: Judge Cannon officially vacates May 20 trial date, says setting a new date with so many outstanding matters would be “imprudent.” pic.twitter.com/A8QwNmuQ6o
— Julie Kelly 🇺🇸 (@julie_kelly2) May 7, 2024
This delay comes following the admission by Special Counsel Jack Smith that some classified materials retrieved from Trump’s property may be out of sequence. However, Smith’s office contends that this should not affect the case or the CIPA process.
Once Trump’s legal team has submitted the CIPA documents, a potentially lengthy review of which sensitive materials can be used in the trial is anticipated. Judge Cannon has not yet set a new trial start date or CIPA filing deadline.



