Current:Home > MarketsWalt Nauta, Trump aide indicted in classified documents case, pleads not guilty-DB Wealth Institute B2 Expert Reviews
Walt Nauta, Trump aide indicted in classified documents case, pleads not guilty
View Date:2024-12-24 01:13:15
Washington — Waltine "Walt" Nauta, former President Donald Trump's employee and an ex-White House aide, pleaded not guilty on Thursday to federal charges alleging he helped Trump obstruct the Justice Department's investigation into the former president's handling of classified documents.
Nauta appeared for a brief arraignment hearing in federal court in Miami on Thursday, and an attorney entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf. Nauta's defense lawyers had asked the judge to delay his arraignment twice in recent weeks so he could secure local representation. His team now includes Sasha Dadan, his newly hired Florida-based attorney.
In the indictment handed down last month by a federal grand jury in Florida that had been convened by special counsel Jack Smith, Nauta was charged with six counts related to the documents investigation, including conspiracy to obstruct justice and concealing records. Five of those counts named Trump as a co-defendant.
Nauta was charged individually with lying to investigators during an interview with the FBI in May 2022. Prosecutors alleged he lied about what he knew about dozens of boxes allegedly containing classified material that had been taken to Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort as he left the White House.
The indictment accused Nauta of working with Trump to move and conceal the boxes, which also included personal items from Trump's time in office. Prosecutors said the pair knew that some of the boxes contained sensitive material and that they were aware of the government's interest in getting those records back into federal custody, but worked to resist those efforts.
On May 11, 2022, a grand jury in Washington, D.C., issued a subpoena requiring the former president's representatives to hand over any and all documents with classified markings in his possession.
A Trump attorney arranged to travel to Mar-a-Lago to search for the documents, the indictment said. The indictment alleges that ahead of the search, Nauta helped move 64 boxes from a Mar-a-Lago storage room in which they were being held and brought them to the residential area of the resort, allegedly at Trump's direction, to conceal them from the attorney.
In the boxes that remained in the storage room, the Trump attorney found 38 sensitive documents and arranged for Justice Department officials to collect them at Mar-a-Lago on June 3, 2022, according to the indictment.
Investigators later secured access to Mar-a-Lago security camera footage and allegedly saw the boxes being moved from the storage room before the attorney's search. The indictment said federal investigators executed a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago for any remaining documents with classified markings. That August 2022 search yielded 103 documents marked classified.
According to a newly unsealed version of an affidavit that supported the August 2022 search warrant, investigators said Nauta — described in the document only as "Witness 5" — was allegedly seen in the video moving about 50 "Bankers boxes" from a room in Mar-a-Lago in the days after his FBI interview.
Trump is charged with 37 federal counts including the illegal retention of national defense information and conspiracy to obstruct justice. He pleaded not guilty to all counts and has consistently denied wrongdoing in the case, criticizing it as politically motivated.
A trial date is set for August, but prosecutors have requested that Judge Aileen Cannon push the proceedings back to at least December to allow for proper evidentiary discovery, and to make sure Trump's defense team has the necessary security clearances required to examine the classified records. The defense is set to respond to the Justice Department's request early next week.
- In:
- Walt Nauta
- Donald Trump
veryGood! (9)
Related
- How to protect your Social Security number from the Dark Web
- US forces strike Houthi sites in Yemen as Biden says allied action hasn’t yet stopped ship attacks
- Alicia Keys Drops an Activewear Collection To Reset Your 2024 State of Mind
- Usher’s Promise for His 2024 Super Bowl Halftime Performance Will Have You Saying OMG
- Fantasy football Week 11: Trade value chart and rest of season rankings
- Where to watch 2024 Grammy Awards: TV channel, streaming info for 'Music's Biggest Night'
- AI is the buzz, the big opportunity and the risk to watch among the Davos glitterati
- Israeli strike kills 16 in southern Gaza; no word on whether medicines reached hostages
- Wreck of Navy destroyer USS Edsall known as 'the dancing mouse' found 80 years after sinking
- Anti-crime bill featuring three-strikes provision wins approval from GOP-led House panel in Kentucky
Ranking
- Real Housewives of New York City Star’s Pregnancy Reveal Is Not Who We Expected
- 5 people injured in series of 'unprovoked' stabbings in NYC; man arrested, reports say
- Texas man kills self after fatally shooting four, including his 8-year-old niece
- China, Philippines agree to lower tensions on South China Sea confrontations
- Deebo Samuel explains 'out of character' sideline altercation with 49ers long snapper, kicker
- Asa Hutchinson's anti-Trump presidential campaign mocked by DNC
- Taylor Swift leads 2024 iHeartRadio Music Award Noms, followed by Jelly Roll, 21 Savage and SZA
- Columnist accusing Trump of sex assault faces cross-examination in a New York courtroom
Recommendation
-
A list of mass killings in the United States this year
-
A Minnesota boy learned his bus driver had cancer. Then he raised $1,000 to help her.
-
Mississippi legislators consider incentives for a factory that would make EV batteries
-
Bid by meatpacker JBS to join New York Stock Exchange faces opposition over Amazon deforestation
-
Darren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry
-
The 10 greatest movies of Sundance Film Festival, from 'Clerks' to 'Napoleon Dynamite'
-
Over 580,000 beds are recalled after dozens of injuries
-
Kentucky lawmaker says proposal to remove first cousins from incest law was 'inadvertent change'