New York Daily News

Book already boltin’: judge

Sorry, Don, tough to nix it now

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John Bolton’s book is already off to the races, so what’s the point in trying to stop it?

Washington Federal Court Judge Royce Lamberth grappled with that question Friday as he considered the Trump administra­tion’s bid to block Bolton’s bombshell of a book from being published over claims that it’s jampacked with classified informatio­n.

“It certainly looks difficult to me as to what I can do about those books all over the country,” Lamberth said in a virtual emergency hearing. “The horse, as we used to say in Texas, seems to be out of the barn.”

The ex-national security adviser’s book, “The Room Where It Happened,” has made explosive headlines all week, as the Daily News and other outlets obtained copies and reported the tell-all’s juiciest chapters ahead of its expected Tuesday publicatio­n, including damning allegation­s of President Trump pressing China to help him win reelection and giving “personal favors to dictators” like Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Moreover, Simon & Schuster, Bolton’s publisher, says it has already shipped hundreds of thousands of copies to bookstores and distributo­rs across the country in advance of the drop date, rendering it even more difficult to claw back the memoir.

Still, Lamberth gave Bolton a talking-to for apparently bailing on a White House classifica­tion review of his book.

“Once he invoked that process, he can’t just walk away, and he didn’t tell the government he was walking away,” Lamberth said.

With Trump fuming over the book, the Justice Department alleges Bolton cut the classifica­tion review short and gave Simon & Schuster the green light to publish, exposing classified secrets in the process.

That would make Bolton guilty of violating federal laws against unauthoriz­ed disclosure­s of classified material, an infraction that could warrant criminal charges, Justice Department lawyers argued in Friday’s hearing.

The lawyers said some damage control was still possible and asked Lamberth to order Bolton and his publisher to suspend Tuesday’s release.

“He has flung the barnyard doors open. He has let the horses out, and now he looks at us collective­ly and says, ‘What are you going to do about it?’ ” Justice Department attorney David Morrell said. As to figuring out how to stop a book already in wide circulatio­n, Morrell said the “onus” is on Bolton. “This is a problem of his own making,” he said. Charles Cooper, Bolton’s attorney, countered that the former national security adviser actually concluded the classifica­tion scrub.

Ellen Knight, a career official with whom Bolton worked on the review, even notified him in late April that the book had the all-clear, Cooper said.

A few days after Knight’s notice, another White House official stepped in and said not so fast, claiming another review was in order because additional classified material had been identified.

Cooper suggested the latestage interventi­on from the White House was a nakedly political attempt by Trump to prevent publicatio­n of an unflatteri­ng portrait of his presidency.

Among other damning claims, Bolton writes that Trump is “erratic,” “stunningly uninformed” and fundamenta­lly “unfit for office.” Trump has fired back by calling Bolton a “whacko” and “a sick puppy” while lamenting that he should’ve fired him sooner.

Lamberth didn’t immediatel­y rule on the administra­tion’s request, saying he needed more time to mull it over.

The judge did, however, note that he won’t give the White House “blind deference” as to what material can be deemed classified, suggesting the matter may have to be hashed out in additional court hearings, even as the Tuesday publicatio­n date looms.

The Bolton case raises significan­t First Amendment and national security issues, with potential for precedent in how to handle the publicatio­n of books by government officials with access to some of the nation’s most closely kept secrets.

 ?? AP ?? Trump lawyers demand scathing book by John Bolton (r.) be blocked, saying it wasn’t vetted for classified info. Not so, say Bolton’s team about tome in wide circulatio­n. Judge’s decision is pending.
AP Trump lawyers demand scathing book by John Bolton (r.) be blocked, saying it wasn’t vetted for classified info. Not so, say Bolton’s team about tome in wide circulatio­n. Judge’s decision is pending.
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