The U.S. Supreme Court made it impossible to try Donald Trump on election interference charges before he faces voters in November, but one former prosecutor said it's not too late to indict his alleged co-conspirators.

District judge Tanya Chutkan had the case returned to her after eight months, and she appears to be quickly moving forward to determine which charges will stick after the conservative justices granted Trump immunity, but legal expert Randall Eliason published a column on his Sidebars blog urging special counsel Jack Smith to issue charges against additional defendants to shed new light on the case. "When Smith brought his case for the events of January 6 , he indicted Trump alone," wrote Eliason, a professor at George Washington University Law School. "By contrast, the Georgia state case based largely on the same events charged nineteen defendants, including Trump.

A case of that size, with nineteen defense attorneys all filing motions and making arguments, is inherently slow and unwieldy. Even before the case was sidetracked by allegations over the DA’s potential conflict of interest, it was destined to move at a glacial pace." ALSO READ: Why ‘vanilla’ Tim Walz is the ingredient to beat Trump: Dem lawmakers Smith charged only the former president but listed six co-conspirators he decided not to charge to streamline the prosecution, but the Supreme Court stalled the case for months before seriously weakening it with their immunity ruling, and Trump could .