Dayton Daily News

Monday deadline set for Trump's tax fight

- By Larry Neumeister

— A judge delayed NEW YORK enforcemen­t of a subpoena seeking President Donald Trump’s tax returns Wednesday until at least next week.

The delay came as the Justice Department was told to decide by Monday whether it will join Trump’s fight to block the state grand jury subpoena for tax records that was served on his longtime accountant.

The fight is playing out the day after U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi launched a formal impeachmen­t inquiry against Trump over allega-

tions that he tried to coerce the government of Ukraine

into launching an investi- gation of one of his possi

ble election foes, Democrat Joe Biden.

Late Tuesday, Manhattan federal prosecutor­s cited “weighty constituti­onal issues” as they told U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero that they’d like until mid-October to submit written argu- ments. Marrero gave them until next Wednesday.

the extent that enforce- ment of the subpoena may adversely affect federal inter- ests of constituti­onal dimension, those effects could not be redressed after the fact,” the prosecutor­s said.

Lawyers for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. said any delay is damaging, particular­ly because statute of limita

tions regarding potential charges are in play.

Carey Dunne, Vance’s general counsel, said the grand jury is looking at conduct engaged in by a wide variety of parties and businesses.

Attorney William Conso- voy, representi­ng Trump , said the president is immune from any criminal investiga- tion as long as he is in the White House.

“The idea that any state, New York or any other, could decide that they would indict a sitting president, there is no support for that while he is president,” he said.

The subpoena seeking returns issued as part of Vance’s investigat­ion into the Trump Organizati­on’s involvemen­t in buying the silence of two women who could have embarrasse­d the president with stories of extramarit­al affairs during his 2016 campaign.

Trump’s lawyers have assailed the investigat­ion as politicall­y motivated, saying Vance, a Democrat, is “charging down this bla- tantly unconstitu­tional path”

purely to harass the pres- ident.

Attorneys for Vance say that the investigat­ion is valid, and that if the court fully accepts Trump’s argument, it would mean that pres- idents would not have to comply with grand jury subpoenas regarding their conduct out of office, and could also extend that immunity to associates and employees.

“The law provides no such sweeping immunity,” they wrote.

The U.S. Constituti­on gives Congress the power to investigat­e presidents and remove them from office, but the law over whether a sitting president can be indicted

and prosecuted in a state or federal court is unsettled. Vance launched his inves

tigation after federal prosecutor­s ended their investigat­ion into payments that Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, arranged for the porn actress Stormy Daniels and model Karen McDougal to keep them quiet during the presidenti­al race. The Trump Organizati­on later reimbursed Cohen for his work.

Vance’s inquiry is said to be examining whether the payments or reimbursem­ents broke any state laws.

The Trump Organizati­on complied with an earlier round of subpoenas seeking records related to its dealings

with Cohen, who pleaded guilty to separate federal campaign law violations, but Trump balked when the prosecutor­s subpoenaed his accounting firm, Mazars USA, for his tax returns.

University of Richmond law professor Carl Tobias said the White House strategy was likely aimed at delaying litigation.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES ?? Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, is examining whether President Trump’s payments to a porn star and a model violated state laws.
NEW YORK TIMES Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, is examining whether President Trump’s payments to a porn star and a model violated state laws.

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