Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Congress can get tax records, federal appeals court rules

- By Jessica Gresko

A federal appeals court sided Tuesday with a House committee seeking access to former President Donald Trump’s tax returns, rejecting Trump’s contention that Congress was oversteppi­ng.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit agreed with a lower court judge’s decision in favor of Congress. U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden — a former Justice Department official and Trump appointee — ruled in December that the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee has broad authority to request the records, and the Treasury Department should provide the tax returns to the committee.

The three appeals court judges agreed.

“The Trump Parties contend that the Chairman’s Request exceeds Congress’s investigat­ive powers. It does not,” the judges wrote. Two of the judges, David Sentelle and Karen Henderson, were appointed by President Ronald Reagan and one, Robert Wilkins, was appointed by President Barack Obama.

In their ruling, the judges also rejected Trump’s argument that the request was problemati­c in part because it did not include a promise to keep the records confidenti­al.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether Trump would appeal or whether there’d be a resolution of the case before a new Congress takes office in January. If Republican­s recapture control of the House in the fall election, they could drop the request for records next year.

The judges’ decision came as the former president continues to be embroiled in legal fights. On Monday, the FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida as part of an investigat­ion into whether he took classified records from the White House.

The House Ways and Means panel and its chairman, Democrat Richard Neal of Massachuse­tts, first requested Trump’s tax returns in 2019 as part of an investigat­ion into the Internal Revenue Service’s audit program and tax law compliance by the former president. A federal law says the Internal Revenue Service “shall furnish” the returns of any taxpayer to a handful of top lawmakers.

“With great patience, we followed the judicial process, and yet again, our position has been affirmed by the Courts,” Neal said in a statement. “I’m pleased that this long-anticipate­d opinion makes clear the law is on our side. When we receive the returns, we will begin our oversight of the IRS’s mandatory presidenti­al audit program.”

The committee said on Twitter that it expected to receive the requested documents “immediatel­y.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States