San Francisco Chronicle

Dershowitz and Starr added to Trump’s defense team.

- By Maggie Haberman Maggie Haberman is a New York Times writer.

President Trump plans to add former independen­t counsel Ken Starr and defense lawyer Alan Dershowitz to his legal team for his trial by the Senate, a person briefed on the plan said Friday.

Starr, whose investigat­ion into President Bill Clinton’s sexual relationsh­ips led to his impeachmen­t, will be joined by Robert Ray, who succeeded Starr as independen­t counsel and wrote the final report on Clinton, the person said.

Dershowitz, a Harvard Law School professor emeritus who became famous as a defense counsel for highprofil­e defendants like O.J. Simpson, will have a more limited role than the two former independen­t counsels, presenting oral arguments at the Senate trial “to address the constituti­onal arguments against impeachmen­t and removal,” the team said in a statement.

White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Trump’s personal lawyer Jay Sekulow will lead the legal team. Others will be added as well, including Pam Bondi, the former Florida attorney general who has been a spokeswoma­n for the defense effort, and Jane Raskin, who defended Trump during the inquiry by special counsel Robert Mueller, officials said.

For weeks, Trump has tried to add what he sees as combative allies to the legal team that will defend him in the Senate. He initially wanted three House Republican­s to be on the team, but Sen. Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, objected.

The president has been concerned about having mediasavvy defenders play the same vocal role that Rudy Giuliani did during the Mueller investigat­ion. Dershowitz has been a media figure for years, and Starr was a contributo­r to Fox News until parting ways with it because of his new role with Trump.

But neither appointmen­t is without controvers­y, and Republican­s on Friday voiced private reservatio­ns about both men.

Dershowitz has faced questions about his representa­tion of Jeffrey Epstein, a financier and convicted sex offender who killed himself in a New York City jail in August. Dershowitz helped negotiate Epstein’s lenient sentence in 2008. He has also been accused of engaging in sex with an underage girl he met through Epstein; he has denied the claim.

Starr, who helped Dershowitz on the Epstein defense in 2007, was forced from his job as president of Baylor University amid accusation­s he did not respond to allegation­s of sexual assault made by women against members of the school’s football team.

In 1999, after the Clinton impeachmen­t, Trump told interviewe­rs that Starr was a “wacko” and a “lunatic.” But more recently, he is said to have enjoyed watching him on television.

Starr declined to comment Friday.

A statement announcing his appointmen­t described Dershowitz as “nonpartisa­n when it comes to the Constituti­on,” having opposed the impeachmen­t of Clinton and voted for Hillary Clinton.

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