Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Trump counting on justices to help block probes, suits

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump won at least a temporary reprieve from the Supreme Court last week in keeping secret grand jury materials from the Russia investigat­ion away from Democratic lawmakers. The president and his administra­tion are counting on the justices for more help to stymie other investigat­ions and lawsuits.

The high court is weighing Trump’s bid to block subpoenas for his tax, banking and financial records. It will soon be asked by the administra­tion to kill a lawsuit alleging that Trump is illegally profiting from his luxury hotel near the White House. And a dispute over Congress’ demand for the testimony of former White House counsel Don McGahn also could find its way to the justices before long.

Trump has predicted that the court with a conservati­ve majority that includes two of his appointees, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, would be more sympatheti­c than lower courts that have repeatedly ruled against him. And his administra­tion has sought the court’s emergency interventi­on at early stages of court cases far more often than both Democratic and Republican predecesso­rs, according to data compiled by University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck.

The administra­tion says Democrats are obsessed with embarrassi­ng Trump.

In arguing for the invalidati­on of congressio­nal subpoenas for Trump’s private financial records, the Justice Department told the Supreme Court that the subpoenas pose “a serious risk of harassing the president and distractin­g him from his constituti­onal duties.”

McGahn should forced to appear not be before

Congress, the administra­tion argues, because he is among a band of presidenti­al advisers who have “absolute immunity” from testifying about their interactio­ns with the president. The full federal appeals court in Washington recently heard arguments in the case and could rule at any time.

The president’s critics argue that Trump has embraced a dangerous view of the presidency as being above the law.

“In case after case, the position taken by Trump and his lawyers is that nothing and no one — not courts, not Congress, not federal or state law enforcemen­t, not inspectors general — can hold him accountabl­e or act as a check on his power,” said Ben Berwick, a lawyer with the anti-Trump group Protect Democracy.

In the dispute over grand jury materials from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell called out the Justice Department and the administra­tion.

“The reality is that DOJ and the White House have been openly stonewalli­ng the House’s efforts to get informatio­n by subpoena and by agreement, and the White House has flatly stated that the Administra­tion will not cooperate with congressio­nal requests for informatio­n,” Howell wrote in ordering that the materials be turned over.

Her ruling is on hold. The Supreme Court has refrained from definitive rulings in these clashes. But Trump has been the chief beneficiar­y of the court’s actions because they have prevented investigat­ors from obtaining what they are seeking.

“We’ve already lost nine months of time in this investigat­ion due to this lawsuit,“New York prosecutor Carey Dunne said in his arguments in support of enforcing a subpoena for Trump’s tax returns. Trump’s lawyers said local prosecutor­s should not be allowed even to investigat­e Trump while he is president.

Each passing day without a court decision, Dunne said, amounts to “the same kind of temporary absolute immunity that the president is seeking here.”

It’s possible that the decisions in the subpoena cases, expected by early summer, could leave legal issues unresolved and lead to additional considerat­ion by lower courts, further delaying a final order on the subpoenas.

That would suit Trump and his supporters, who would like to run out the clock at least until after Election Day.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? President Trump believes Justices Neil Gorsuch, above, and Brett Kavanaugh will be sympatheti­c toward him.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP President Trump believes Justices Neil Gorsuch, above, and Brett Kavanaugh will be sympatheti­c toward him.

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