U.S. Supreme Court's Kagan blocks Jan. 6 panel from getting Arizona
Republican's records
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[October 27, 2022]
By Nate Raymond and Andrew Chung
(Reuters) -U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena
Kagan on Wednesday temporarily blocked the congressional committee
investigating last year's U.S. Capitol attack by then-President Donald
Trump's supporters from obtaining Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli
Ward's phone records while the court further assesses the dispute.
Ward, a Trump ally, had asked the Supreme Court to intervene after lower
courts declined to bar telephone carrier T-Mobile from complying with a
subpoena issued by the Democratic-led House of Representatives committee
seeking three months of her call records. Kagan issued an order
effectively putting the litigation on hold and preventing enforcement of
the subpoena pending a further order by her or the full court.
Kagan is the justice designated to handle emergency appeals from a group
of states including Arizona. Kagan's order directs the committee to
respond to Ward's request by Friday.
The panel sought the records as part of its investigation into events
surrounding the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by Trump
supporters who sought to block Congress from certifying his election
loss to Democrat Joe Biden.
The committee last week sent Trump himself a subpoena, which he is
expected to contest. Trump, who is considering another run for the
presidency in 2024, has accused the panel of waging unfair political
attacks on him.
The panel had already been in the process of seeking records concerning
Ward, who the panel said participated in multiple aspects of the
attempts to interfere with the electoral count.
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Associate Justice Elena Kagan poses
during a group photo of the Justices at the Supreme Court in
Washington, U.S., April 23, 2021. Erin Schaff/Pool via REUTERS/File
Photo
The records of calls and text exchanges it sought spanned from Nov.
1, 2020, to Jan. 30, 2021, and covered a period when Ward was part
of a group of Republicans who falsely presented themselves as
Arizona's presidential electors.
Her lawyers argued that providing the panel access to her telephone
and text message records would violate Republicans' constitutional
rights to free association by giving the committee access to names
of party members who spoke with her.
U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa in Arizona on Sept. 22 said Ward
provided no evidence to support her claims that producing the
records would chill Republicans' rights or result in harassment of
those who interacted with her.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Oct. 22
declined to put the subpoena on hold while Ward appealed.
The committee also has subpoenaed Ward herself as one in a group of
people who it said had knowledge of or participated in efforts to
send false "alternate electors" to Washington for Trump as Congress
prepared to certify the election results.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston and Andrew Chung in New York;
Editing by Will Dunham)
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