The timeline is unclear, with both parties disputing how the pretrial process should continue.
Former President Donald Trump’s election interference case is expected to resume with a status conference on Sept. 5 after months of delay related to his appeal based on presidential immunity.
Despite the Supreme Court issuing a landmark precedent in Trump v. United States in July, it’s likely the case will proceed with further debate about the scope of Trump’s immunity for acts taken roughly four years ago. A majority of the Supreme Court held that presidents enjoy certain levels of immunity for official acts.
The status conference will help determine how the parties will continue pretrial proceedings, which started around the same time last year, and wrestle with how to proceed with special counsel Jack Smith’s superseding indictment, which he filed in August.
A joint status report by both parties was filed on Aug. 30 and showed the two sides disagreeing over the timeline for presenting legal objections and evidence.The report also indicated that Trump would file additional motions to dismiss. That included one based on the idea that the grand jury that returned the superseding indictment was wrongly exposed to immune conduct. Trump has requested that he