The Jerusalem Post

What’s at stake in Supreme Court fight over Trump financial records

- • By LAWRENCE HURLEY and MATT SCUFFHAM

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US Supreme Court on Tuesday considers three blockbuste­r cases concerning efforts by the Democratic-led House of Representa­tives and a grand jury working with a prosecutor in New York City to obtain copies of President Donald Trump’s financial records.

Unlike recent presidents, Trump has refused to disclose his tax returns and other materials that would shed light on the scope of his wealth and his family-run real estate business. The cases test the limits of presidenti­al power in relation to Congress and state prosecutor­s.

Here is a look at what is at stake in the cases.

Two of the three cases concern attempts by House committees to enforce subpoenas seeking Trump’s financial records from three businesses: Trump’s longtime accounting firm Mazars LLP and two banks, Deutsche Bank and Capital One.

The Supreme Court has consolidat­ed these two cases and will hear them together in a scheduled onehour argument.

The other case concerns another subpoena issued to Mazars for similar informatio­n, including tax returns, but this one was issued as part of a grand jury investigat­ion into Trump being carried out in New York City. The justices will hear a second one-hour oral argument in this case.

Rulings are due by the end of June. In all three cases, lower courts in Washington and New York ruled against Trump.

The House Oversight Committee in April 2019 issued a subpoena to Mazars seeking eight years of accounting and other financial informatio­n in response to the testimony before Congress of Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer. Cohen said that Trump had inflated and deflated certain assets on financial statements between 2011 and 2013 in part to reduce his real estate taxes. The committee said it wanted to find out whether illegal actions had taken place. Cohen was sentenced to prison after pleading guilty to charges including violating campaign finance law, bank fraud, tax evasion and lying to Congress.

The House Financial Services Committee has been examining possible money laundering in US property deals involving Trump. In a separate investigat­ion, the House Intelligen­ce Committee is investigat­ing whether Trump’s dealings left him subject to the influence of foreign individual­s or government­s.

The two committees issued 12-page subpoenas in April 2019 requiring Deutsche Bank to hand over the banking records of Trump, his children and his businesses. Lawmakers requested documents that identify “any financial relationsh­ip, transactio­n or ties” between Trump, his family members and “any foreign individual, entity or government,” according to the subpoena.

Investigat­ors hope the records will reveal whether there are any financial links between Trump and Russia’s government, sources familiar with the probe said. That would include whether any loans to Trump by Deutsche Bank were back-stopped by Russian entities – a financial arrangemen­t that can be considered a form of insurance, the sources said.

Senior sources within Deutsche Bank have denied any Russian connection­s to loans it made to Trump.

Deutsche Bank was the only major lender to conduct business with Trump in recent years – doing so despite the fact that he defaulted on loans worth hundreds of millions of dollars the German bank made to him between 2004 and 2008.

At the time of his January 2017 inaugurati­on, Trump owed Deutsche Bank around $350 million, according to sources. Many of the loans were granted through Deutsche Bank’s New York-based private banking division, which also lent to Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner.

The Financial Services Committee also issued a subpoena to Capital One, which also had maintained a long-term relationsh­ip with Trump and has come under scrutiny for some of its business practices.

If Trump loses, the material would need to be handed over to Democratic lawmakers, most likely before the November 3 election in which Trump is seeking a second four-year term. The ruling would make clear that a president – at least when it comes to informatio­n held by third parties – cannot block House subpoenas.

Trump’s lawyers have advanced several arguments, including that Congress had no authority to issue the subpoenas, a broad assertion of presidenti­al power. No sitting president has ever had his personal records subpoenaed, they said. They also said that even if Congress could issue the subpoenas, it lacked a valid legislativ­e reason for doing so and had not stated with sufficient detail why it needed the documents.

If the court were to embrace Trump’s broadest arguments, it would severely weaken the ability of Congress to conduct oversight of a president.

The office of Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, a Democrat, in September 2019 sought nearly a decade of tax returns. It is part of a criminal investigat­ion that began in 2018 into Trump and the Trump Organizati­on, the president’s family real estate business, spurred by disclosure­s of hush payments made to two women who said they had past sexual relationsh­ips with him. Those women are pornograph­ic film actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal. Trump and his aides have denied the relationsh­ips.

Trump’s lawyers argue that his records cannot be handed over because of his authority as president under the Constituti­on, contending he is immune from any criminal proceeding when in office. They have downplayed prior Supreme Court rulings regarding limits on the reach of presidenti­al authority and point instead to Justice Department guidance that asserts that a sitting president cannot be indicted or prosecuted. In a lower court hearing, Trump’s lawyers went so far as to argue that law enforcemen­t officials would not have the power to investigat­e Trump even if he shot someone on New York’s Fifth Avenue.

Vance has countered that his investigat­ion is at an early stage and that there is a risk that documents would be lost if prosecutor­s cannot access them now.

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