U.S. Supreme Court to hear Trump bid to keep his finances secret
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[May 12, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court on Tuesday hears arguments in a major showdown over presidential
powers arising from President Donald Trump's attempts to prevent
Democratic-led congressional committees and a New York City prosecutor
from getting his financial records.
Three months after Trump avoided removal from office in a Senate
impeachment trial, Trump's lawyers want the Supreme Court to endorse
their expansive view of presidential powers that would severely limit
the ability of Congress to conduct oversight of presidents and of
prosecutors to investigate them.
The Supreme Court has a 5-4 majority including two justices appointed by
Trump. He has won key victories at the high court including over his
hardline immigration policies but lost a big case a year ago regarding
the U.S. census when conservative Chief Justice John Roberts joined the
court's four liberals.
In the three cases being argued on Tuesday, Trump has sought to prevent
enforcement of subpoenas issued to his long-time accounting firm Mazars
LLP and two banks, Deutsche Bank<DBKGn.DE> and Capital One<COF.N>, for
financial records including tax returns. Lower courts in Washington and
New York ruled against Trump in all three cases.
Trump, unlike other recent presidents, has declined to release his tax
returns and other financial records that could shed light on his net
worth and the activities of his family real-estate company, the Trump
Organization.
Rulings are likely within weeks, with Trump seeking re-election on Nov.
3 amid the coronavirus pandemic. The cases will be heard in two separate
arguments by teleconference, a format adopted during the pandemic.
The cases are among the most consequential in years on the parameters of
presidential powers. The high court in some past landmark cases has
ruled against presidents.
In 1997, it unanimously decided that sitting presidents could be sued
for conduct outside of official duties, ruling against President Bill
Clinton's bid to delay a sexual harassment lawsuit. In 1974, it
unanimously ruled that President Richard Nixon must comply with a
court's subpoena for tape recordings in the Watergate scandal.
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President Donald Trump gestures to reporters as he departs for
travel to Scranton, Pennsylvania from the South Lawn of the White
House in Washington, U.S., March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Two of the Trump cases - to be heard together - concern his effort
to block enforcement of subpoenas by House of Representatives
committees seeking his financial records from Mazars and the two
banks.
The House committees have said they are seeking the material as part
of investigations into potential money laundering by banks and into
whether Trump inflated and deflated certain assets on financial
statements - as his former personal lawyer has said - in part to
reduce his real estate taxes.
The other case concerns a subpoena issued to Mazars for similar
information, including tax returns, as part of a grand jury
investigation into Trump being conducted by the office of Manhattan
District Attorney Cyrus Vance, a Democrat.
The New York criminal investigation was spurred by disclosures of
hush-money payments by Trump to two women - pornographic film
actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal - who
said they had past sexual relationships with him.
Trump's lawyers have argued that Congress had no authority to issue
the subpoenas and that the House Democrats had no valid legislative
reason for seeking the records.
In the New York case, Trump's lawyers argued that his records cannot
be handed over because of his authority as president under the
Constitution, contending he is immune from any criminal proceeding
while in office. Even if Trump shot someone on New York's Fifth
Avenue, prosecutors would be powerless to act while he was still in
office, his lawyers argued before losing at a lower court.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Additional reporting
by Jan Wolfe)
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