Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump’s legal worries mounting

Former president unable to use authority as shield

- Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – Stark repudiatio­n by federal judges he appointed. Farreachin­g fraud allegation­s by New York’s attorney general. It’s been a week of widening legal troubles for Donald Trump, laying bare the challenges piling up as the former president operates without the protection­s afforded by the White House.

The bravado that served him well in the political arena is less handy in a legal realm dominated by verifiable evidence, where judges this week have looked askance at his claims and where a fraud investigat­ion that took root when Trump was still president burst into public view in an allegation-filled 222page state lawsuit.

In politics, “you can say what you want and if people like it, it works. In a legal realm, it’s different,” said Chris Edelson, a presidenti­al powers scholar and American University government professor. “It’s an arena where there are tangible consequenc­es for missteps, misdeeds, false statements in a way that doesn’t apply in politics.”

That distinctio­n between politics and law was evident in a single 30-hour period this week.

Trump insisted on Fox News in an interview that aired Wednesday that the highly classified government records he had at Mar-a-Lago actually had been declassified, that a president has the power to declassify informatio­n “even by thinking about it.”

A day earlier, however, an independen­t arbiter his own lawyers had recommende­d appeared skeptical when the Trump team declined to present any informatio­n to support his claims that the documents had been declassified.

The special master, Raymond Dearie, a veteran federal judge, said Trump’s team was trying to “have its cake and eat it,” too, and that, in absence of informatio­n to back up the claims, he was inclined to regard the records the way the government does: Classified.

On Wednesday morning, Letitia James, the New York State attorney general, accused Trump in a lawsuit of padding his net worth by billions of dollars and habitually misleading banks about the value of prized assets.

The lawsuit, the culminatio­n of a three-year investigat­ion that began when he was president, also names as defendants three of his adult children and seeks to bar them from ever again running a company in the state. Trump has denied any wrongdoing.

Hours later, three judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit – two of them Trump appointees – handed him a loss in the Mar-a-Lago investigat­ion.

The court overwhelmi­ngly rejected arguments that he was entitled to have the special master do an independen­t review of the roughly 100 classified documents taken during last month’s FBI search.

That ruling opened the way for the Justice Department to resume its use of the classified records in its probe.

It lifted a hold placed by a lower court judge, Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee.

On Thursday, she responded by striking the parts of her order that had represiden­t. quired the Justice Department to give Dearie, and Trump’s lawyers, access to the classified records.

Between Dearie’s position, and the appeals court ruling, “I think that basically there may be a developing consensus, if not an already developed consensus, that the government has the stronger position in a lot of these issues and a lot of these controvers­ies,” said Richard Serafini, a Florida criminal defense lawyer and former Justice Department prosecutor.

Trump is hardly a stranger to courtroom dramas, having been deposed in numerous lawsuits throughout his decades-long business career, and he has demonstrat­ed a capacity to survive situations that seemed dire.

His lawyers did not immediatel­y respond Thursday to a request seeking comment.

In the White House, Trump had faced a perilous investigat­ion into whether he had obstructed a Justice Department probe of possible collusion between Russia and his 2016 campaign.

Ultimately, he was protected at least in part by the power of the presidency, with special counsel Robert Mueller citing longstandi­ng department policy prohibitin­g the indictment of a sitting He was twice impeached by a Democratic-led House of Representa­tives – once over a phone call with Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the second time over the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol – but was acquitted by the Senate on both occasions thanks to political support from fellow Republican­s.

It remains unclear if any of the current investigat­ions – the Mar-a-Lago one or probes related to Jan. 6 or Georgia election interferen­ce – will produce criminal charges. And the New York lawsuit is a civil matter.

Notably, the Justice Department and the federal appeals court have paid little heed to his assertions that the records had been declassified. For all his claims on TV and social media, both have noted that Trump has presented no formal informatio­n to support the idea that he took any steps at all to declassify the records.

The appeals court called the declassification question a “red herring” because even declassify­ing a record would not change its content or transform it from a government document into a personal one.

And the statutes the Justice Department cites as the basis of its investigat­ion don’t explicitly mention classified informatio­n.

Trump’s lawyers also have stopped short of saying in court, or in legal briefs, that the records were declassified. They told Dearie they shouldn’t be forced to disclose their stance on that issue now because it could be part of their defense in the event of an indictment.

Even some legal experts who have otherwise sided with Trump in his legal fights are dubious of his assertions.

Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor who testified as a Republican witness in the first impeachmen­t proceeding­s in 2019, said he was struck by the “lack of a coherent and consistent position from the former president on the classified documents.”

“It’s not clear,” he added, “what Jedilike lawyers said that you could declassify things with a thought, but the courts are unlikely to embrace that claim.”

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP FILE ?? Former President Donald Trump’s latest legal troubles have laid bare the challenges ahead.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP FILE Former President Donald Trump’s latest legal troubles have laid bare the challenges ahead.

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