WASHINGTON – Donald Trump’s lawyers Todd Blanche and John Lauro met Thursday with Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith’s team to discuss what made the former president a target of the investigation of potential election fraud in the 2020 election, according to a source familiar with the meeting.

Legal experts described this type of meeting as a curtesy before a grand jury hands up a potential indictment. Trump lawyers met with Smith’s team before his June indictment charging him with mishandling classified documents at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago. Trump announced that earlier indictment three days after the meeting.

"All indications are that this is the final courtesy meeting being extended to Trump’s legal team to explain why Smith should not seek an indictment," said Bradley Moss, an attorney who specializes in national security matters.

"A similar courtesy meeting was extended to Trump before the documents case was indicted,” Moss added. “Absent some unforeseen circumstances, Smith will not be persuaded by whatever Trump’s team presents."

Barb McQuade, a former federal prosecutor and law professor at the University of Michigan, said prosecutors rarely change their minds at this stage in an investigation but find it valuable to listen for important facts or legal issues.

"It most likely means that Trump’s legal team is making a pitch to decline to file charges," McQuade said. "They may discuss legal or factual weakness in the case, defenses DOJ may have failed to adequately consider or best interests of justice."

Trump revealed July 18 he is a target of the inquiry into offenses including conspiracy to defraud the United States, deprivation of rights and witness tampering. But that doesn’t necessarily mean he will be indicted. Trump has denied wrongdoing and said he is the victim of a political prosecution.

Trump said he was given four days to testify if he wanted. He has not reported that he testified.

The inquiry focuses on Trump refusing to acknowledge losing the 2020 election, recruiting GOP electors to replace Democrats in states President Joe Biden won, pressuring then-Vice President Mike Pence to recognize the electors when Congress counted Electoral College votes and urging a crowd outside the White House to "fight" for him on Jan. 6, 2021, before a mob of his supporters ransacked the Capitol.

Trump faces several criminal investigations



Another federal indictment would become the third set of criminal charges Trump faces. He was charged federally in June with conspiracy to obstruct justice and retention of national defense documents in the classified records case. He was charged in April in New York with falsifying business records to pay hush money to a woman who claimed to have had sex with him before the 2016 election.

Trump has pleaded not guilty in both cases. The New York trial is scheduled for March and the federal trial for May, both within the primary season when he is campaigning for the Republican nomination for president.