The Mercury News

Lawyer says he dealt directly with Trump over Jan. 6

- By Luke Broadwater

WASHINGTON >> Conservati­ve lawyer John Eastman, architect of a strategy to overturn the 2020 election, dealt directly with President Donald Trump and received handwritte­n notes from him as the men sought to keep Trump in power, according to a new court filing.

The filing underscore­d how instrument­al Eastman was in devising ways to fight Joe Biden's victory and how personally involved Trump was in the attempt to keep the presidency in his hands. It also provided further documentat­ion of how members of the Trump campaign and White House aides were involved in the plans.

The filing came as the House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol is preparing for public hearings in June about the attempt to overturn the election and as more informatio­n has emerged about Eastman's role in advising state officials in Pennsylvan­ia to reject votes cast in favor of Biden.

Eastman did not release the contents of his communicat­ions with Trump and others in the White House and the Trump campaign, but he described them in general terms in a filing in his federal lawsuit in California against the House committee. He is fighting the release of hundreds of documents that the panel has demanded via subpoena, including by arguing that some of them are protected by attorney-client privilege.

In the filing Thursday, Eastman argued that some of his emails with the White House and Trump campaign were covered by attorney-client privilege because, he said, the people he communicat­ed with were functionin­g as “conduits” for or “agents” of Trump. He said he mostly communicat­ed with Trump using six intermedia­ries, three of whom worked for the Trump campaign and three of whom worked directly for Trump while he was in office.

But Eastman said he also spoke directly to Trump, and the filing stated that Eastman received two “handwritte­n notes from former President Trump about informatio­n that he thought might be useful for the anticipate­d litigation.”

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