The Oklahoman

SCOTUS to decide if Congress can get Russia grand jury materials

- By Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court agreed Thursday to consider blocking Congress' access to secret grand jury materials from the probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

The action was a victory for the Trump administra­tion, which is fighting to keep a House committee controlled by Democrats from obtaining material it says could lead to another impeachmen­t inquiry.

The immediate significan­ce is that any decision almost surely will come after the presidenti­al election, a blow to House Democrats in pursuing a potential obstructio­n of justice charge against President Donald Trump in a possible second impeachmen­t inquiry. The case likely will be heard by the high court in the fall or winter and decided in 2021.

“Unfortunat­ely, President Trump and Attorney General (William) Barr are continuing to try to run out the clock on any and all accountabi­lity,” said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y. “While I am confident their legal arguments will fail, it is now all the more important for the American people to hold the president accountabl­e at the ballot box in November.”

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who led the House impeachmen­t effort, said: “The extreme lengths the Trump administra­tion has gone to hide this material tells you all you need to know about their consciousn­ess of guilt.”

House Democrats and the Justice Department have been locked in a legal battle over grand jury testimony gathered during former special counsel Robert Mueller's investigat­ion. In March, a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., ruled that the House Judiciary Committee is entitled to the evidence.

The committee contended that the grand jury material is “central” to its inquiry into possible obstructio­n of justice by Trump and could reveal new evidence of impeachabl­e offenses. If so, the panel said it will consider recommendi­ng new articles of impeachmen­t.

In December, the House approved two articles of impeachmen­t against the president. One accused Trump of abusing his power by withholdin­g military aid in order to pressure Ukraine to announce investigat­ions into a political rival. The second accused him of obstructin­g Congress by stonewalli­ng its subpoenas for documents and testimony. In February, Trump was acquitted by the Senate.

But in January, House general counsel Douglas Letter told the appeals court that new impeachmen­t articles were a possibilit­y, pending a review of the grand jury evidence.

“That is on the table; there is no doubt,” Letter told the court.

The Justice Department argued that House Democrats are not entitled to grand jury evidence because they have not said which specific testimony they need or how it would help their investigat­ion. Solicitor General Noel Francisco wrote that the House has no “urgent need of the requested materials for a hypothetic­al second impeachmen­t.”

Not true, said Elizabeth Wydra, president of the liberal Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center, who urged the court to hear and decide the case before the election.

“Today's decision threatens to hand President Trump a victory by default, allowing him to run out the clock on this Congress and hampering its ability to exercise its longstandi­ng power to investigat­e and hold the executive branch of our government accountabl­e to the law,” Wydra said.

At issue before the high court is a more basic legal question: Is a Senate impeachmen­t trial a judicial proceeding? The lower court ruled that it is, saying the Framers of the Constituti­on understood impeachmen­t to involve the exercise of judicial power.

A separate but related House subpoena seeks testimony from former White House counsel Donald McGahn, a key witness on possible obstructio­n by Trump. The Trump administra­tion has blocked McGahn from testifying, saying Congress can't force high- ranking presidenti­al aides to testify.

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