Lyle Denniston

May 20 2017

Trump lawyers miss key court deadline in immigration case

Lawyers for the Trump Administration missed a court-ordered deadline for turning over a document that gave President Trump a way to justify his immigration restrictions without aiming them specifically at Muslims.  The document is said to be a paper prepared by former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani at Donald Trump’s request.

Friday was the deadline that U.S. District Judge Victoria A. Roberts of Detroit had set for government lawyers to meet the demand of civil rights lawyers for the document.   But a check on Saturday of the court’s docket showed no entry for such a response.

Later in the day Saturday, lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union’s Michigan affiliate issued a statement saying that “the memo was to be produced on Friday, but the Trump Administration objected late Friday night, claiming, among other things, that a federal court cannot require the President to release documents.”  (The full statement, as copied from the group’s website, can be read here.)

There was no word from the government lawyers, but last week they had signaled to the judge that they expected to raise objections to the challengers’ demands for documents related to the immigration order – even documents that were generated before Trump actually took office in January. The lawyers implied that they would seek to protect the documents under a claim of “executive privilege.”

It has been public knowledge that, when Trump as a candidate vowed to issue a presidential order to ban all Muslims from entering the U.S., he asked Giuliani in his role as a campaign adviser to get together a group and devise a way to make such an order legal.   The response from Giuliani and whatever group he consulted was, according to public statements by Giuliani, to base the presidential order on people coming from specific nations, rather than on their religion.   That is what the president ultimately did in the original order and in a revised order after the first one was blocked by the courts.  The pre-inauguration statements have played a role in those court rulings so far.

In the absence of a publicly available copy of whatever filing the government lawyers made Friday with the Detroit court, it is not clear whether they made an objection only to the turnover of a single Giuliani document – the one for which Friday was the deadline to produce – or whether they made a broader claim of a non-disclosure privilege.  The challengers have other document requests pending.

The government’s legal position may become clear when the court opens on Monday morning and the docket is updated/

Judge Roberts has already given a preliminary indication that she would not accept a claim of “executive privilege” to protect documents that were prepared before Trump actually became president and formed a government.

If, in fact, the judge reaches that conclusion, the administration is expected to try to challenge it in some forum, although trial judges usually have very wide discretion on how to control the document-sharing process as it unfolds in a federal court case.

Lyle Denniston continues to write about the U.S. Supreme Court, although he “retired” at the end of 2019 following more than six decades on that news beat. He was there for three revolutions – civil rights, women’s rights, and gay rights – and the start of a fourth, on transgender rights. His career of following the law began at the Otoe County Courthouse in his hometown, Nebraska City, Nebraska, in the fall of 1948. His online, eight-week, college-level course – “The Supreme Court and American Politics” – is available from the University of Baltimore Law School, and it is free.

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