Trump Names New Defense Team Ahead Of Senate Impeachment Trial

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FILE – In this Aug. 16, 2016, file photo, Bruce L. Castor Jr. speaks a day before taking the oath to become acting attorney general during a news conference in the agency's headquarters in Harrisburg, Pa. Castor, a former district attorney who declined to press sexual-assault charges against Bill Cosby in 2005 has filed the beginnings of a lawsuit against Cosby’s accuser in Philadelphia. An attorney for Castor said the personal-injury complaint will claim Andrea Constand sued Castor for defamation in 2015 so he would lose the prosecutor’s race. The winner, Kevin Steele, had criticized Castor’s handling of the Cosby case. (AP Photo/Marc Levy, File)

With just over a week before his second impeachment trial begins, former President Donald Trump’s legal defense team is in flux after at least two key departures.

Two of his lead impeachment lawyers, Butch Bowers and Deborah Barbier, have parted ways with Trump, a source familiar with the matter told NPR. The South Carolina-based lawyers’ departure was a “mutual decision,” the person said, but no explanation was given.

The Associated Press reports that two former federal prosecutors from South Carolina, Greg Harris and Johnny Gasser, have also left the team. CNN says North Carolina lawyer Josh Howard is out too, meaning all five members of Trump’s legal team have left. NPR has not independently confirmed these reports.

We have done much work, but have not made a final decision on our legal team, which will be made shortly,” Trump adviser Jason Miller said on Saturday night, just nine days after tweeting that Bowers joined the team. At that time, Miller said Bowers, a pick recommended by Sen. Lindsey Graham, “will do an excellent job defending President Trump.”

Defense team or no, a Trump impeachment conviction is unlikely, considering that last week an overwhelming majority of Republican senators voted to dismiss his trial altogether.

The trial, over Trump’s role in the Capitol attack this month, is set for Feb. 9.

The former president has until this Tuesday, Feb. 2, to respond to the article of impeachment passed by the House charging him with “incitement of insurrection.” House impeachment managers have the same deadline to file a pretrial brief, with the former president’s pretrial brief due a day before the trial.

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