The trial of former United States President Donald Trump over charges of mishandling top secret documents will begin in May next year, a federal judge has said.
US District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, who oversees the Fort Pierce, Florida court, on Friday ordered the jury trial to begin on May 20.
The date is a compromise between a request from prosecutors to set the trial for December 2023 and a request from defence lawyers to schedule it after the November 2024 presidential election.
Trump, 77, is the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination and the trial will be held at the height of the primary campaign to select the party’s flag-bearer for the election.
In court filings earlier in July, Trump’s legal team had argued that a December start date was not a realistic amount of time for either side to prepare.
His lawyers also questioned whether the former president would receive a fair trial before the election, while noting campaigning “requires a tremendous amount of time and energy”.
Nevertheless, Trump hailed the new trial date in a statement on Friday, calling it a “major setback to the DOJ’s crusade to deny President Trump a fair legal process”. Trump has repeatedly claimed federal prosecutors are politically motivated and aim to derail his presidential ambitions.
The trial represents uncharted territory for US politics.
Trump is first former or current US president to face criminal charges.
No US presidential candidate, let alone a party frontrunner, has navigated the sure-to-be lengthy time demands of a single criminal trial during campaign season, let alone two.
Beyond the federal documents case, Trump has also been charged in a New York state case for allegedly falsifying business documents related to hush-money payments made to a porn star. That trial is currently set to begin in March of 2024. (AlJazeera)