US court temporarily blocks release of Trumps January 6 records
National Archives had been set to give congressional panel hundreds of pages of Trump White House documents on Friday.
A US appeals court has temporarily blocked lawmakers investigating the deadly January 6 insurrection from accessing records from Donald Trumpâs White House, as the court considers an emergency request from the former president to block their release.
The administrative stay, issued on Thursday by the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, is intended to give the court time to consider Trumpâs arguments against the release of the documents.
The National Archives had been scheduled to give Congress hundreds of pages of documents on Friday, but the appeals court now has set the next arguments in the case for November 30.
The US House of Representatives committee investigating the riot at the United States Capitol is seeking Trumpâs call logs, draft speeches and other documents related to January 6.
The panel has pushed for the records as part of its effort to understand the events leading up to the attack, in which a mob of Trump supporters ransacked the building and forced into hiding lawmakers who were certifying Joe Bidenâs presidential election victory.
Trump had repeated unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud for weeks after the November 4 election, and he was later impeached in the House for âincitement of insurrectionâ after the riot.
Last month, the Biden administration rejected Trumpâs attempt to invoke âexecutive privilegeâ to block the documentsâ release to the House panel, saying such a move was ânot warrantedâ.
Trump then went to court, arguing that as a former president he still had the right to exert privilege over the records and that releasing them would damage the presidency in the future.
US District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Tuesday rejected those arguments, noting in part that âPresidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not Presidentâ. She again denied an emergency motion by Trump on Wednesday.
In their filing to the appeals court, Trumpâs lawyers wrote that without a stay, the former president would âsuffer irreparable harm through the effective denial of a constitutional and statutory right to be fully heard on a serious disagreement between the former and incumbent Presidentâ.
A mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6 as Congress was meeting to certify Joe Bidenâs election victory [File: Leah Millis/Reuters]The November 30 arguments will take place before three judges nominated by Democratic presidents: Patricia Millett and Robert Wilkins, nominated by former President Barack Obama, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, an appointee of Biden.
So far, the House panel has interviewed more than 150 people across government, social media and law enforcement as part of its investigation.
It also has subpoenaed more than two dozen Trump administration officials and allies of the ex-president, including Mark Meadows, Trumpâs former chief of staff, and Steve Bannon, a former adviser.
On Thursday, the White House notified a lawyer for Meadows that Biden would waive any executive privilege that would prevent him from cooperating with the committee.
Meadowsâs lawyer, George Terwilliger, issued a statement in response, saying his client âremains under the instructions of former President Trump to respect longstanding principles of executive privilegeâ.
âIt now appears the courts will have to resolve this conflict,â Terwilliger said.
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