Los Angeles Times

Chasing Trump’s tax returns

The Supreme Court says the president can be subpoenaed. But his documents may stay hidden.

- He Supreme Court

Ttook two cautious, balanced steps Thursday to clarify something that was obvious to everyone but President Trump and his lawyers: The president can’t dodge investigat­ions into his conduct, even while in office.

But the rulings were so cautious and so balanced that the justices didn’t resolve the battles Congress and prosecutor­s are waging with the White House over access to Trump’s tax returns and other financial records. That all but guarantees Trump’s ability to keep his records secret until after the November election, if not longer.

The issues raised transcend Trump, speaking more fundamenta­lly to the questions of who can oversee a president, when and how. In the hyperparti­san environmen­t we live in, Trump will hardly be the last president whose personal papers are targeted by lawmakers and prosecutor­s of the opposite party. A strong majority of the justices offered some important guidance for how to resolve those fights, even if they can’t possibly avert them.

The two cases revolved around efforts by Manhattan Dist. Atty. Cyrus R. Vance Jr. and three congressio­nal committees to obtain overlappin­g sets of financial records from lenders that did business with Trump or his accounting firm. The president’s lawyers argued that as long as Trump was in office, his personal papers were absolutely immune from subpoenas by state and local prosecutor­s. They also argued that congressio­nal subpoenas were invalid because the committees hadn’t shown that Trump’s private papers were critically needed to serve a legitimate legislativ­e purpose.

Both of these issues were novel ones for the court, and had the justices accepted Trump’s reasoning, they could have pushed Trump and future presidents well beyond the reach of the law and the legislatur­e. Similarly, there was a real risk that placing too few restrictio­ns on subpoenas would embolden prosecutor­s and lawmakers to engage in even more frivolous, partisan attacks than they already do (as hard as that might be to imagine in Congress’ case).

The justices steered clear of both traps. In the Vance case, they held that state and local investigat­ions into a sitting president can continue even though he or she cannot be prosecuted while in office. That’s a win for justice; as Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. observed for the majority, the passage of time could make it harder to obtain leads and indict third parties, and even deprive grand juries of evidence that could protect the innocent. And as for Congress, the justices set guidelines that aim to protect presidents from partisan fishing expedition­s while still giving lawmakers the ability to obtain informatio­n that’s not available elsewhere and that serves a valid legislativ­e purpose.

Trump will now fight the subpoenas in lower courts, following the rules the justices laid out. That means his records won’t emerge anytime soon, if ever. But all the parties involved have a better idea now what the limits are, as well as the reassuranc­e that no president is completely out of reach.

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