Jack Smith versus Donald Trump
The latest developments tied to Jack Smith and Donald Trump are not a new criminal filing against Trump, but continuing fallout from Smith’s earlier special counsel work and Trump’s efforts to limit what remains public. Smith was appointed in 2022 to investigate Trump’s handling of classified documents and efforts to overturn the 2020 election, later secured indictments, and then issued his final report and resigned in January 2025 after Trump returned to office[2]. One current flashpoint is the fight over release of Smith’s classified-documents report. A recent update says the Eleventh Circuit has set a briefing schedule on efforts to intervene and argue for releasing the report, with briefs due over a short timetable and the process expected to wrap by July[4]. That means the issue is still active in court, even though the underlying criminal case was dismissed after Trump won the presidency[4]. Another item drawing attention is political commentary from Trump’s team. According to reporting cited in the search results, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said Trump would “absolutely” have gone to prison if he had lost the 2024 election, pointing to the legal pressure created by Smith’s cases and Trump’s other criminal matters during the campaign[3]. That statement is an opinion from a Trump official, not a court ruling[3]. A separate, less authoritative item from a YouTube commentary claims Trump’s BBC defamation case has led to 47 subpoenas, including records connected to Jack Smith[1]. Because this is presented as a commentary video rather than a primary court record or mainstream news report, it should be treated cautiously[1]. Still, it suggests that Trump-related legal fights are continuing to generate discovery demands that could pull in material connected to Smith’s investigations[1]. What listeners should take away is simple: Jack Smith is no longer actively prosecuting Trump, but his work continues to shape legal disputes, public debate, and court battles over records, reports, and political accountability[2][4]. Trump, for his part, remains entangled in legal and political controversy stemming from those cases, even after the federal prosecutions ended when he returned to power[2][3].
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