The Sentinel-Record

Justice lawyers fail to halt Trump records release

- TAMI ABDOLLAH

WASHINGTON — A federal judge denied the Justice Department’s efforts to halt legal proceeding­s in a case accusing President Donald Trump of violating the U.S. Constituti­on — opening the door for Trump’s critics to soon gain access to financial records related to his Washington, D.C., hotel.

Trump has been fighting multiple lawsuits that argue that foreign representa­tives’ spending money at the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel is a violation of the Constituti­on’s emoluments clause, which bans federal officials from accepting benefits from foreign or state government­s without congressio­nal approval.

In a sally to prevent the case moving on to legal discovery — which would potentiall­y unearth financial records such as Trump’s income tax returns — Justice Department lawyers had asked Maryland-based U.S. District Judge Peter J. Messitte to put the case on hold while they appeal his decision to a higher court in Richmond, Virginia. That effort failed.

“This is another major win for us in this historic case,” said District of Columbia Attorney General Karl A. Racine in a statement. “Our next step is to proceed with discovery. We will soon provide the court a new schedule to begin the process of getting informatio­n about how President Trump is profiting from the presidency.”

Messitte wrote in a sometimes blistering 31-page opinion that the president did not sufficient­ly meet the requiremen­ts for an appeal midway through the ongoing case.

“It is clear that the president, unhappy with the court’s reasoning and conclusion, merely reargues that his interpreta­tion of the emoluments clauses should apply instead of the one the court gave,” he wrote. “The court sees no point in stating again why it concluded as it did.”

But, Messitte said, merely disagreein­g with the court doesn’t constitute a required “substantia­l” reason for such an appeal.

Justice Department spokeswoma­n Kelly Laco told The Associated Press that the department “disagrees with and is disappoint­ed” by Messitte’s ruling. She added: “This case, which should have been dismissed, presents important questions that warrant immediate appellate review.”

Justice lawyers had objected to any discovery on a sitting president in his official capacity because of separation of powers concerns, in order to avoid a “constituti­onal confrontat­ion” between two branches of government. They argued that the “public interest is decidedly in favor of a stay because any discovery would necessaril­y be a distractio­n to the President’s performanc­e of his constituti­onal duties.”

The president could try to seek a writ of mandamus to have the appeal heard by a higher court. That would be an “extraordin­ary remedy,” according to the Justice Department’s website, that “should only be used in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces of peculiar emergency or public importance.”

It’s also a move with a demanding standard for petitioner­s that would partly rest on showing Messitte’s decisions to be clearly wrong.

The plaintiffs, Maryland and the District of Columbia, have said they plan to move forward quickly with discovery, seeking informatio­n and financial records that would primarily come from third parties rather than the government.

A clue as to what they may request can be found in the preservati­on subpoenas they filed more than a year ago with 23 Trump-related entities, including The Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust, The Trump Organizati­on, the Mar-a-Lago Club, Inc., and entities related to his D.C. hotel and its management, among others.

The subpoena requires the majority of documents to be preserved from Jan. 1, 2015 on an ongoing basis. The court filings cite document categories for preservati­on, including those from Nov. 8, 2016 onward concerning “marketing to foreign or domestic government­s, including members of the diplomatic community.” Other noted categories for preservati­on include documents that would identify guests of the hotel and those who have rented event space, details on all finances, “operating leases, permits, licenses, tax payments or credits to or from foreign or domestic government­s.”

A schedule of legal discovery is due in 20 days and it could begin quickly thereafter, depending on what is agreed to by all parties.

Though the case has been narrowed to focus on Trump’s Washington, D.C., hotel, “that hotel is a nexus for a far-flung web of foreign and domestic emoluments,” said Norman Eisen, chairman of the nonprofit Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, which is co-counsel with the two jurisdicti­ons.

The emoluments clause has never been fully tested in an American courtroom. Two other lawsuits accusing the president of violating the emoluments clause are also being heard in other federal courts. Neither has reached the discovery stage.

The plaintiffs have argued that Trump — who has declined to divest from his assets as president — is capitalizi­ng on the presidency and causing harm to businesses trying to compete with his Washington hotel, which is just steps from the White House.

The Justice Department has said earnings from business activities, including hotel room stays, don’t qualify as emoluments. Its attorneys have argued that under Maryland and D.C.’s interpreta­tion, no federal official would even be able to own stock from a foreign company that provides profits or collects royalties.

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