Houston Chronicle

Appeals court to look hard at Trump bank subpoenas

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — A federal appeals court in New York indicated Friday that it will take a hard look at the legality of congressio­nal subpoenas seeking President Donald Trump’s banking records after a lawyer for the president argued the request was too broad.

Three judges on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals questioned lawyers for the president and Congress at a hearing on Trump’s appeal of a lower court’s ruling that the subpoenas serve a legitimate legislativ­e purpose and are valid.

The most contentiou­s exchange in a 90-minute hearing came when judges confronted lawyers for the recipients of the subpoenas — Deutsche Bank and Capital One — and asked whether they have Trump’s tax returns among their records.

Both lawyers said they could not say publicly, prompting Circuit Judge Peter W. Hall to sarcastica­lly ask whether the appeals court, which is just beneath the U.S. Supreme Court, needed to go to a court to seek an order to get the answer. The judges then gave the banks two days to respond in writing.

At one point in the hearing, a man and a woman rose and stood quietly in the back of the courtroom, holding up signs that were taken away by courthouse personnel. One sign read: “Uphold the Constituti­on. Stop the Obstructio­n.”

The House Financial Services and Intelligen­ce committees had asked Deutsche Bank and Capital One to turn over records related to Trump’s business ventures as they investigat­e “foreign influence in the U.S. political process.”

Trump is challengin­g the subpoenas along with three of his children, contending they did not serve a legislativ­e purpose and they were overbroad.

Trump’s lawyer, Patrick Strawbridg­e, said their real objective seemed to be for improper purposes.

He said congressio­nal committees were seeking to learn “every Diet Coke that a teenager bought using a debit card.”

Attorney Douglas Letter, representi­ng Congress, said the subpoenas are part of a broad probe aimed at learning if foreign countries including Russia are laundering money through U.S. banks as part of a wider campaign to create “highly dangerous foreign influence over the highest levels” of U.S. government.

He said the Trump-related subpoenas are getting lots of attention because of his high profile but to suggest that the focus of the investigat­ion is “only Trump, it’s a lie.”

Letter said it was necessary to obtain many of Trump’s and his family’s financial records at two banks because he has run a small family business with lots of intersecti­ng parts.

“We’re not dealing with Ford Motor Company,” he said.

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