Los Angeles Times

JAN. 6 PANEL CAN HAVE PHONE RECORDS

Supreme Court rejects an effort by Arizona GOP chair Kelli Ward to avoid a subpoena from the committee.

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — Turning away a plea from Arizona GOP chair Kelli Ward to keep her phone records private, the Supreme Court on Monday let stand a subpoena from the House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

The decision came in a one-line order, with dissents by Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr.

Ward was not at the Capitol when a mob tried to stop the certificat­ion of President Biden’s victory, but the House committee alleged she “played a significan­t role in attempting to overturn the 2020 election.”

The committee said she refused to accept President Trump’s loss in Arizona, and instead created a slate of “fake” state electors for Trump, which was transmitte­d to Washington. Trump allies hoped to stall Congress from certifying Biden’s victory by arguing the outcome was in doubt because there were now competing slates of electors.

In March, Ward invoked her 5th Amendment right to remain silent. In response, the committee sought records from her mobile phone provider detailing incoming and outgoing calls between November 2020 and early January 2021.

Ward went to court to block the subpoena, arguing it violated her free-speech rights.

She lost before a federal judge and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. They ruled that the targets of a lawful investigat­ion do not have a 1st Amendment right to refuse to participat­e.

Then Ward lodged an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court .

Her lawyers characteri­zed the investigat­ion as a political attack.

“In a first-of-its-kind situation, a select committee of the United States Congress, dominated by one political party, has subpoenaed the personal telephone and text message records of a state chair of the rival political party relating to one of the most contentiou­s political events in American history — the 2020 election and the Capitol riot of January 6, 2021,” they said.

As precedent, they cited a decision last year in which the high court blocked California from obtaining the names of big donors who sponsored tax-exempt charities. The 6-3 conservati­ve majority ruled that the forced disclosure of private informatio­n violated the donor’s rights to the freedom of associatio­n.

In that decision, however, the court said the state could issue a subpoena to obtain the names of donors if a fraud was suspected.

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