Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump lawyer questioned over document handling

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — A lawyer for Donald Trump was back in court Friday after being ordered to answer questions before a grand jury investigat­ing the possible mishandlin­g of classified documents at the former president’s Florida estate.

M. Evan Corcoran entered federal court in the District of Columbia early Friday morning, one week after a federal judge ruled in favor of the Justice Department in forcing Corcoran to answer additional questions before a grand jury that has been hearing testimony for months. He did not make any comments as he arrived at the building, and left several hours later without saying anything.

The interest by prosecutor­s in Corcoran’s testimony reinforces the legal dangers confrontin­g Trump, making clear the department’s continued focus on whether the ex-president or any of his representa­tives obstructed government efforts to recover hundreds of classified documents taken from the White House to Mar-a-Lago at the end of his term. A search warrant affidavit released last August showed that investigat­ors were examining potential violations of multiple crimes, including obstructio­n and the willful retention of national defense informatio­n.

Corcoran is relevant to the investigat­ion because he drafted a letter that was given to the department last June asserting that a “diligent search” for classified documents had been done in response to a subpoena and that all records responsive to that subpoena were being provided. The letter was accompanie­d by the return of roughly three dozen documents with classified markings.

But prosecutor­s have said in court filings that they developed evidence showing that additional classified documents remained at the property. The FBI returned with a search warrant on Aug. 8 and removed roughly 100 additional classified documents, the filings show.

Attorney-client privilege traditiona­lly shields lawyers from being forced to share details of their conversati­ons with prosecutor­s. Corcoran invoked that privilege during an earlier appearance before the grand jury when he declined to answer certain questions.

But prosecutor­s can get around attorney-client privilege if they can convince a judge that a client was using legal representa­tion in furtheranc­e of a crime, a principle known under the law as the crime-fraud exception.

The Justice Department made that argument in this case, and secured a sealed order last week from U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell that required Corcoran to appear again before the grand jury to answer additional questions. A federal appeals court this week, also in a sealed order, directed Corcoran to turn over documents to prosecutor­s.

Another Trump lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, confirmed in an interview with The Associated Press on Friday that he had voluntaril­y testified for about six hours or seven hours before the grand jury in December to answer questions about the Trump team’s compliance with Justice Department efforts to reclaim the classified documents. His appearance was earlier reported by ABC News.

 ?? (AP/Jose Luis Magana) ?? M. Evan Corcoran, an attorney for former President Donald Trump, arrives Friday at federal court in Washington.
(AP/Jose Luis Magana) M. Evan Corcoran, an attorney for former President Donald Trump, arrives Friday at federal court in Washington.

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