Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump besieged by Dems, in court

DA wins battle over tax returns

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — The Trump White House hunkered down Monday as Democrats continued to issue subpoenas for the House impeachmen­t inquiry and a federal judge supported a New York prosecutor’s efforts to obtain eight years of the president’s tax returns.

In a scathing 75-page ruling, Judge Victor Marrero rejected the argument made by Trump’s legal team as an “extraordin­ary claim” that a president “while in office, enjoys absolute immunity from criminal process of any kind,” spanning “every phase of criminal proceeding­s, including investigat­ions, grand jury proceeding­s and subpoenas, indictment, prosecutio­n, arrest, trial conviction, and incarcerat­ion.”

But then an appellate court judge issued a temporary stay to block the handover of Trump’s tax forms from his accountant­s to New York District Attorney Cyrus Vance.

Legal scholar and frequent Trump critic Lawrence Tribe warned on Twitter that the stay “just preserved the status

quo and doesn’t portend a Trump win.”

Also on Monday, three House committees — Intelligen­ce, Oversight and Foreign Affairs – sent a letter to Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Office of Management and Budget acting Director Russell Vought compelling them to turn over documents for a House investigat­ion into “the extent to which President Trump jeopardize­d U.S. national security by pressing Ukraine to interfere with our 2020 election.”

Failure to produce the documents by Oct. 15, Chairmen Adam Schiff, Elijah Cummings and Eliot Engel warned, could be considered obstructio­n of the impeachmen­t inquiry.

The committees specifical­ly seek documents concerning the president’s decision to freeze some $250 million in military aid to Ukraine and Trump’s July 25 phone conversati­on with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskiy.

‘Very NICE CONVERSATI­ON’

In the afternoon, during a signing ceremony of the U.s.-japan Trade Agreement and U.s.-japan Digital Trade Agreement, Trump called impeachmen­t a “scam” and said the July 25 phone call should be seen as a “very cordial, very nice conversati­on.”

He said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should have waited a day before she announced on Sept. 24 that she supported an impeachmen­t inquiry based on a whistleblo­wer’s reported allegation­s. On the morning of Sept. 25, the White House released a rough transcript of the July conversati­on.

According to the note-takers, Trump told Zelenskiy “a lot of people want to find out” whether Biden pushed for the firing of a Ukrainian prosecutor who had investigat­ed Burisma Holdings, a Ukrainian natural gas company that paid Hunter Biden some $50,000 per month to serve on its board.

Politifact rated as “false” Trump’s assertion that Biden, a leading The mistake they made

— the opponents, the opposition, the Democrats, the radical left, deep state, whatever you want to call them — they came out with a whistleblo­wer report before they saw the conversati­on. contender in the 2020 Democratic primary, threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees if Kyiv didn’t fire general prosecutor Viktor Shokin. Politifact noted that it was strong Western opposition that had cost the prosecutor his job.

To Trump, the suggestion showed that he exerted “no pressure,” and his release of the transcript demonstrat­es that he has nothing to fear.

DEMOCRATS DISAGREE

But for Democrats, the fact that Trump made the remark as his administra­tion withheld military aid argues otherwise. They point to the Aug. 12 whistleblo­wer complaint, which asserted that Trump had “sought to pressure the Ukrainian leaders to take actions to help the president’s 2020 re-electoin bid.”

The anonymous whistleblo­wer said that he or she was not a direct witness to the phone call but had learned from White House officials that Trump had tried to direct Zelenskiy to investigat­e the former vice president and his son Hunter’s Chinese business interests and turn over any informatio­n the government might have about Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

On Sunday, attorney Mark Zaid, who represents the whistleblo­wer, confirmed that his legal team represents a second whistleblo­wer who “also made a protected disclosure

Politifact rated as “false” Trump’s assertion that Biden, a leading contender in the 2020 Democratic primary, threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees if Kyiv didn’t fire general prosecutor Viktor Shokin. Politifact noted that it was strong Western opposition that had cost the prosecutor his job. under the law and cannot be retaliated against.”

Asked whether he was concerned about a second whistleblo­wer, Trump responded “not at all, because

it was a perfect call.”

Trump also alleged that Schiff “defrauded the American people” and Congress when the Intelligen­ce Committee chairman said his committee had not talked to the whistleblo­wer before the Aug. 12 complaint was filed and praised the intelligen­ce community inspector general for ushering through the first whistleblo­wer’s complaint.

But according to The New York Times, it was the committee that first referred the whistleblo­wer to the inspector general.

Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler gave Schiff four Pinocchios, the rating for falsehoods he deems “whoppers,” for Schiff ’s responses to media questions on the origins of the whistleblo­wer complaint.

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal. com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

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