Los Angeles Times

Pro bono service

Alan Dershowitz pledges that he won’t earn money from his impeachmen­t work.

- By Noah Bierman

Celebrity lawyer Alan Dershowitz, who has sought to cast himself as a nonpartisa­n member of President Trump’s defense team, pledged Tuesday that he would not earn money from his work in the Senate impeachmen­t trial.

“I will not make money on this,” he said.

He would not disclose his normal hourly rate, but he has defended a number of extremely wealthy clients over the years, including socialites Claus von Bulow and Leona Helmsley and financiers Michael Milken and Jeffrey Epstein.

If Dershowitz does not get paid by Trump, he would have to determine a legal way to donate his services to the president’s defense fund. The White House declined to comment on who is paying Trump’s lawyers.

Dershowitz, a former

Harvard law professor and frequent cable TV commentato­r, said he would discuss fees with the legal team later Tuesday or Wednesday and that, if he is paid, he will donate the money to charity.

Dershowitz said he spent two weeks researchin­g and writing his portion of

Trump’s impeachmen­t defense, without the help of legal assistants.

“I wrote every word myself,” he said.

Two members of Trump’s defense team — Jay Sekulow and Jane Raskin — have been paid $225,000 from the Republican National Committee through November as part of $2.7 million transferre­d to a legal fund late last year, according to a Washington Post report.

An RNC official confirmed it was paying part of the legal costs from a legal defense account, adding that the impeachmen­t has led to “new surges in donor enthusiasm.”

Trump’s legal team includes at least six private lawyers, including Dershowitz and Kenneth W. Starr, as well as at least four White House employees, including White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, who are paid by taxpayers.

Dershowitz has sounded the most uneasy about his role, given the antipathy many of his colleagues and friends have toward Trump.

He spent several minutes during his prime-time presentati­on Monday trying to establish that his defense of Trump has nothing to do with his political opinions, arguing that the charges against the president are unconstitu­tional.

On Tuesday, Dershowitz said it was still unclear whether he would return to the defense table. He said he was on his way to the White House, where Trump was scheduled to unveil a Middle East peace plan.

Dershowitz, a vocal Israel supporter, said he got to know Trump through his work in helping craft the plan, which was spearheade­d by Trump’s son-inlaw, Jared Kushner.

Dershowitz said he spent two days at the White House in the early stages, reviewing proposals and answering questions. But he would not say whether any of his suggestion­s became part of the plan.

 ?? Senate Television ?? ALAN DERSHOWITZ said he spent two weeks researchin­g and writing his portion of Trump’s impeachmen­t defense. “I wrote every word myself,” he said.
Senate Television ALAN DERSHOWITZ said he spent two weeks researchin­g and writing his portion of Trump’s impeachmen­t defense. “I wrote every word myself,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States