Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge questions Trump’s privilege assertions

- By Luke Broadwater The New York Times Company

WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Thursday expressed skepticism about Donald Trump’s attempt to block from release a wide range of documents related to the Capitol riot, signaling that she might be open to allowing a congressio­nal committee scrutinizi­ng the violence to pore over hundreds of files that the former president wants to keep secret.

At a hearing by video conference, Judge Tanya Chutkan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia repeatedly asked pointed questions about the legal basis for Trump’s claim that at least 770 pages of documents related to the mob attack must be shielded by executive privilege.

“The Jan. 6 riot happened in the Capitol,” Chutkan told Trump’s lawyer, Justin Clark. “That is literally Congress’s house.”

Still, Chutkan also suggested that the House select committee investigat­ing the attack might have overreache­d, referring to its demand for documents — which potentiall­y amounts to millions of pages — as “very broad” and, at one point, “alarmingly broad.”

The hearing was the first legal skirmish in what is likely to be a prolonged battle in the courts between the panel and Trump over executive secrecy, congressio­nal prerogativ­es and how to balance the two in an inquiry into what role a former president played in the events that led to a violent attempt to thwart the peaceful transfer of power.

The panel is looking into the origins of the assault, in which a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol seeking to disrupt Congress’s counting of electoral votes to formalize President Joe Biden’s victory.

During arguments, Douglas Letter, general counsel of the House, said the committee was undertakin­g “one of the most important” investigat­ions in congressio­nal history.

Letter said the committee’s requests needed to be broad because it was not only scrutinizi­ng the Capitol attack, but also Trump’s lies about the election, attempts to undermine faith in American democracy and plans to try to cling to power.

“We want to make sure this never happens again,” Letter said.

Clark said Trump had a valid claim to keeping the informatio­n private.

“The former president has rights,” he said. “There’s a constituti­onally based privilege that the former president can assert over documents.”

It was unclear how quickly Chutkan might rule. Any decision is likely to result in an appeal. Democrats have worried that Trump was trying to delay their inquiry until Republican­s had the chance to retake control of the House in 2022 and end the investigat­ion into the attack.

Trump last month filed suit against the National Archives seeking to block the disclosure of White House files related to his actions and communicat­ions surroundin­g the Jan. 6 riot. In a 26-page complaint, a lawyer for Trump said the Constituti­on gave the former president the right to demand their confidenti­ality even though he was no longer in office — and even though President Joe Biden has refused to assert executive privilege over them.

The outcome of the lawsuit will carry consequenc­es for how much the panel can uncover about Trump’s role in the riot, pose thorny questions for the Biden administra­tion, and potentiall­y forge new precedents about presidenti­al prerogativ­es and the separation of powers.

The committee has demanded detailed records about Trump’s every movement and meeting on the day of the assault. The panel’s requests, sent to the National Archives and Records Administra­tion,

include material about any plans formed in the White House or other federal agencies to derail the electoral vote count by Congress.

“Are we once again on: What did the president know, and when did he know it?” Chutkan asked at one point in the hearing, citing a famous line from the Watergate scandal that ended the presidency of Richard Nixon.

The Supreme Court has suggested that former presidents wield some residual executive privilege powers. In a 1977 case, the court said Nixon could make a claim of executive privilege even though he was out of office and his successors, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, did not support it. Nixon lost that case, but the court suggested that he might be able to block the release of some of his papers in the future.

Trump has asserted executive privilege over 656 pages that include proposed talking points for Kayleigh Mcenany, his former press secretary; a handwritte­n note concerning Jan. 6; a draft text of a presidenti­al speech for the “Save America” rally that preceded the mob attack; and a draft executive order on the topic of election integrity, the filing states.

Trump has also sought to block the release of 46 pages of records from the files of Mark

Meadows, his former chief of staff; Stephen Miller, his former senior adviser; and Patrick Philbin, his former deputy counsel. Trump is objecting to the release of the White House Daily Diary — a record of the president’s movements, phone calls, trips, briefings, meetings and activities — as well as logs showing phone calls to the president and to Vice President Mike Pence concerning Jan. 6.

Finally, Trump asserted executive privilege over 68 additional pages, including a draft proclamati­on honoring the Capitol Police and two officers who died after the riot, Brian Sicknick and Howard Liebengood, as well as related emails; a memo about a potential lawsuit against several states that Biden won last year; an email chain from a state official regarding election-related issues; and talking points on supposed election irregulari­ties in one county in Michigan.

Clark called the committee’s request a “broad document dump” that was nothing more than a “partisan” attack.

Chutkan asked him to tone down the language.

“I agree with you, Mr. Clark: Some of these requests are alarmingly broad,” she said. “But some of them are very specific, and are specifical­ly targeting the events of Jan. 6.”

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