Santa Fe New Mexican

President sued over deleted messages

- By Andrew Harris

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and his staff are using messaging applicatio­ns that automatica­lly delete the contents as soon as they’re read, according to a Washington-based watchdog group’s lawsuit seeking courtorder­ed compliance with federal records retention laws.

Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington also asserts Trump has deleted postings made on his personal Twitter account, which it says is also subject to the Presidenti­al Records Act.

“From early on in this Administra­tion, White House staff have used and, on informatio­n and belief, continue to use certain email messaging applicatio­ns that destroy the contents of messages as soon as they are read, without regard to whether the messages are presidenti­al records,” according to the lawsuit.

The suit is the most recent legal salvo challengin­g Trump’s administra­tion on issues ranging from a travel ban for certain people from Muslim-majority nations to his regulatory policies.

CREW, congressio­nal Democrats and other individual­s have gone to court over the president’s maintenanc­e of ties to his worldwide business interests — real estate, hotels, resorts and golf clubs — and their potential to be conduits through which foreign and domestic government­s could unduly influence him.

White House spokeswome­n Kelly Love and Natalie Strom didn’t reply to emailed messages seeking comment on the CREW complaint.

The complaint filed Thursday in federal court in the nation’s capital cites a February Washington Post report that White House staffers are using an app called Confide, which deletes messages as soon as they’re read.

“This destructio­n occurs with no independen­t assessment by the message sender or recipient of whether the message constitute­s a presidenti­al record,” according to the complaint. An earlier Wall Street Journal report asserted some aides also use a comparable applicatio­n called Signal.

Trump has used his private Twitter feed as a means of bypassing the media and communicat­ing directly with the public.

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