The ex-president, who has already been hit with federal indictments in D.C. and Florida, as well as state indictments out of New York and Georgia, now faces new legal risks, according to former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner.
Kirschner's comments come just three days after it was widely reported that prosecutors had asked grand jurors not to indict the former president in Arizona's fake electors case.
According to Kirschner, the grand jurors "wanted to indict" Trump for violating Arizona state laws, but the prosecutors put a stop to that potential action.
Kirschner further pointed to a line in the reporting about the development suggesting that prosecutors said they weren't there "yet" regarding the evidence needed to indict Trump.
"It sounds like the prosecutors told the grand jurors, 'We hear you, that you think there's enough to indict Donald Trump, but there's a lot that goes into indicting a former president, and we're not sure we're quite there yet.'"
However, according to Kirschner, "There has been a recent development" that "might change the prosecutor's calculation on that very question."
That development, he said, is that one of Trump's former attorney's, Jenna Ellis, decided to cooperate in the case.