Story by By Andrew Goudsward •
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- A key witness in the case accusing former U.S. President Donald Trump of
mishandling classified documents after leaving office has entered into a deal
with prosecutors to provide testimony, his former attorney said in a Wednesday
court filing.
The deal was reached
after U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office threatened to prosecute the
witness, who is the head of information technology at Trump's Mar-a-Lago
Florida resort, for lying to a grand jury, the attorney, Stanley Woodward, said
in the filing.
Woodward currently
represents Walt Nauta, one of the two Trump employees also charged in the
documents case, in addition to having previously represented the IT head, who
is not named in Wednesday's filing.
Prosecutors have said
the employee is likely to testify at trial, posing a potential conflict of
interest for Woodward, who will face the prospect of a former client testifying
against a current client.
Woodward has not
opposed the request for U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who is presiding
over the case, to hold a hearing on the issue. But he suggested in Wednesday's
filing that prosecutors' handling of the IT manager's testimony was improper.
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The case is one of
four criminal prosecutions of Trump, who leads the field seeking the Republican
nomination to challenge Democratic President Joe Biden in the 2024 election.
Prosecutors
previously said that the witness, who has been identified by media outlets
Politico and CNN as Yuscil Taveras, had information about efforts by Trump’s
personal aide Nauta and others to obstruct the classified documents
investigation.
Taveras'
current attorney had no immediate comment.
Prosecutors have
charged Trump, Nauta and a third Mar-a-Lago employee, Carlos De Oliveira, with
trying to thwart government efforts to retrieve sensitive documents taken to
the Florida resort after Trump left office. All three have pleaded not guilty.
A spokesperson for
Smith’s office declined to comment. Woodward declined to comment.
Prosecutors said in
an August court filing that the witness initially denied any knowledge of
obstruction. After receiving a letter from the special counsel's office
threatening him with prosecution, he dropped Woodward as his attorney and then
detailed alleged efforts to delete security camera footage at Mar-a-Lago, they
said.
Woodward rejected
prosecutors' account in Wednesday’s filing, saying the IT employee provided new
testimony to the grand jury only after being offered a non-prosecution deal,
which was reached after he was no longer representing the employee.
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