The Sentinel-Record

Justices keep hold on secret Russia investigat­ion material

- MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is denying Congress access to secret grand jury testimony from special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion through the November election.

The justices agreed on Thursday to hear the Trump administra­tion’s appeal of a lower court order for the material to be turned over to the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives. The high court’s action will keep the documents out of congressio­nal hands at least until the case is resolved, which is not likely to happen before 2021.

Arguments themselves might not even take place before Americans decide whether to give President Donald Trump a second term.

The delay is a victory for Trump, who also is mounting a Supreme Court fight against congressio­nal efforts to obtain his banking and other financial records. Those cases are expected to be decided in the coming days or weeks.

The court’s action also could mean the justices never have to reach a definitive ruling in a sensitive dispute between the executive and legislativ­e branches of government, if either Trump loses reelection or Republican­s regain control of the House next year. It’s hard to imagine an administra­tion of Democrat Joe Biden would object to turning over the Mueller documents or House Republican­s would continue to press for them.

The House wants previously undisclose­d details from the investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, called the court’s decision disappoint­ing.

“Unfortunat­ely, President Trump and Attorney General (William) Barr are continuing to try to run out the clock on any and all accountabi­lity. While I am confident their legal arguments will fail, it is now all the more important for the American people to hold the President accountabl­e at the ballot box in November,” Nadler said in a statement.

The federal appeals court in Washington ruled in March that the documents should be turned over because the House Judiciary Committee’s need for the material in its investigat­ion of Trump outweighed the Justice Department’s interests in keeping the testimony secret.

Mueller’s 448-page report, issued in April 2019, “stopped short” of reaching conclusion­s about Trump’s conduct, including whether he obstructed justice, to avoid stepping on the House’s impeachmen­t power, the appeals court said.

The committee was able to persuasive­ly argue that it needed access to the underlying grand jury material to make its own determinat­ions about the president’s actions, the court said.

The materials initially were sought last summer, but by the time the appeals court ruled in March, Trump had been impeached by the House and acquitted by the Senate.

The Justice Department said in its Supreme Court filings that the court’s action was needed in part because the House hasn’t given any indication it “urgently needs these materials for any ongoing impeachmen­t investigat­ion.”

The House had opposed the delay on the grounds that its investigat­ion of Trump was continuing and that time is of the essence because of the approachin­g election. The current session of the House will end Jan. 3, and lawmakers elected in November will take their seats.

Democrats have suggested that the grand jury materials could reveal new misconduct that could potentiall­y form the basis of new articles of impeachmen­t, but such a course would have been unlikely so close to the 2020 election even if the court had allowed the material to be turned over immediatel­y.

The House impeached Trump for his efforts to get Ukraine to announce an investigat­ion of Biden, but the Republican-controlled Senate acquitted the president in February.

It is also unclear how many new, or incendiary, revelation­s might be contained in the grand jury transcript­s. Mueller’s report, though redacted in parts, revealed more than a year ago significan­t informatio­n about the president’s efforts to choke off the investigat­ion and raised substantia­l questions about whether he had committed obstructio­n of justice.

Besides, many of the witnesses closest to Trump appeared voluntaril­y before Mueller’s team of prosecutor­s, and the Justice Department in recent months has released written — albeit redacted — summaries of those interviews. That means the public already has insight into the accounts of key Trump associates, including son-in-law Jared Kushner and advisers like Steve Bannon and Hope Hicks.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? HIGH COURT: The U.S. Supreme Court is seen Tuesday in Washington.
The Associated Press HIGH COURT: The U.S. Supreme Court is seen Tuesday in Washington.

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