Donald Trump was indicted on Tuesday over his efforts to upend the results of the 2020 US election – the most serious legal threat yet to the former president as he campaigns to return to the White House.
It is the third criminal indictment of the 77-year-old Trump since March and charges him with three counts of conspiracy and one count of obstruction.
Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, is already scheduled to go on trial in Florida in May of next year for allegedly mishandling top secret government documents.
The new charges, two of which carry maximum sentences of 20 years in prison, raise the prospect of Trump being embroiled in more legal proceedings at the height of what is expected to be a bitter and divisive presidential campaign.
The indictment brought by special counsel Jack Smith accuses Trump of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding – the January 6, 2021 joint session of Congress held to certify Democrat Joe Biden’s election victory.
Trump is also accused in the 45-page indictment of seeking to disenfranchise American voters with his false claims that he won the November 2020 presidential election.
“Shortly after election day – which fell on November 3, 2020 – the Defendant launched his criminal scheme,” the indictment, handed down by a grand jury in Washington, said.
“The purpose of the conspiracy was to overturn the legitimate results of the 2020 presidential election by using knowingly false claims of election fraud,” it said.
Smith, a former war crimes prosecutor at the Hague, said the January 6 attack on the Capitol by Trump supporters was “an unprecedented assault on the seat of American democracy.”
Police officers stand outside the Washington courthouse where the grand jury met to discuss filing charges against former US president Donald Trump Police officers stand outside the Washington courthouse where the grand jury met to discuss filing charges against former US president Donald Trump © Anna Moneymaker / GETTY IMAGES/AFP “It was fueled by lies,” Smith told reporters in brief remarks.
“Lies by the defendant targeted at obstructing a bedrock function of the US government – the nation’s process of collecting, counting and certifying the results of the presidential election.”
Part of that plan, the indictment alleges, was to have then-vice president Mike Pence use his role as presiding officer over the January 6 joint session to throw out several states’ votes.
Pence ultimately refused, issuing a public statement saying that he did not believe the Constitution allowed him that power.
As Trump’s supporters later stormed the US Capitol, where Pence was in hiding, Trump tweeted that his vice president “didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done.”
White House silence The White House on Tuesday maintained silence on Trump’s historic indictment.
Biden, who is seeking reelection next year, continued his beach vacation in Delaware, dining out with First Lady Jill Biden before seeing the film “Oppenheimer.”
Trump’s campaign, meanwhile, issued a blistering statement, comparing his prosecution to “Nazi Germany in the 1930s” and stating that he had followed “advice from many highly accomplished attorneys” – a likely line of defense at trial.
The indictment mentions six co-conspirators but none are identified and Trump, who is to be arraigned on Thursday, is the only named defendant.
The case is expected to be heard by US District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan, an appointee of former Democratic president Barack Obama.