Sunday, June 18, 2017

Trump administration quietly rolls back civil rights efforts across federal government

Civil rights mural
Trump administration quietly rolls back civil rights efforts across federal government
 
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Jessica Huseman and Annie Waldman, ProPublica
Jun 16, 2017 08:00 am CDT


For decades, the Department of Justice has used court-enforced agreements to protect civil rights, successfully desegregating school systems, reforming police departments, ensuring access for the disabled and defending the religious.

Now, under Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the DOJ appears to be turning away from this storied tool, called consent decrees. Top officials in the DOJ civil rights division have issued verbal instructions through the ranks to seek settlements without consent decrees — which would result in no continuing court oversight.

The move is just one part of a move by the Trump administration to limit federal civil rights enforcement. Other departments have scaled back the power of their internal divisions that monitor such abuses. In a previously unreported development, the Education Department last week reversed an Obama-era reform that broadened the agency’s approach to protecting rights of students. The Labor Department and the Environmental Protection Agency have also announced sweeping cuts to their enforcement.

"At best, this administration believes that civil rights enforcement is superfluous and can be easily cut. At worst, it really is part of a systematic agenda to roll back civil rights," said Vanita Gupta, the former acting head of the DOJ’s civil rights division under President Barack Obama.

Consent decrees have not been abandoned entirely by the DOJ, a person with knowledge of the instructions said. Instead, there is a presumption against their use — attorneys should default to using settlements without court oversight unless there is an unavoidable reason for a consent decree. The instructions came from the civil rights division’s office of acting Assistant Attorney General Tom Wheeler and Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Gore. There is no written policy guidance.

Devin O’Malley, a spokesperson for the DOJ, declined to comment for this story.

Consent decrees can be a powerful tool, and spell out specific steps that must be taken to remedy the harm. These are agreed to by both parties and signed off on by a judge, whom the parties can appear before again if the terms are not being met. Though critics say the DOJ sometimes does not enforce consent decrees well enough, they are more powerful than settlements that aren’t overseen by a judge and have no built-in enforcement mechanism.

p>Such settlements have "far fewer teeth to ensure adequate enforcement," Gupta said.

Consent decrees often require agencies or municipalities to take expensive steps toward reform. Local leaders and agency heads then can point to the binding court authority when requesting budget increases to ensure reforms. Without consent decrees, many localities or government departments would simply never make such comprehensive changes, said William Yeomans, who spent 26 years at the DOJ, mostly in the civil rights division.

"They are key to civil rights enforcement," he said. "That’s why Sessions and his ilk don’t like them."

Some, however, believe the Obama administration relied on consent decrees too often and sometimes took advantage of vulnerable cities unable to effectively defend themselves against a well-resourced DOJ.

"I think a recalibration would be welcome," said Richard Epstein, a professor at New York University School of Law and a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford, adding that consent decrees should be used in cases where clear, systemic issues of discrimination exist.

Though it’s too early to see how widespread the effect of the changes will be, the Justice Department appears to be adhering to the directive already.

On May 30, the DOJ announced Bernards Township in New Jersey had agreed to pay $3.25 million to settle an accusation it denied zoning approval for a local Islamic group to build a mosque. Staff attorneys at the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey initially sought to resolve the case with a consent decree, according to a spokesperson for Bernards Township. But because of the DOJ’s new stance, the terms were changed after the township protested, according to a person familiar with the matter. A spokesperson for the New Jersey U.S. attorney’s office declined comment.

Sessions has long been a public critic of consent decrees. As a senator, he wrote they "constitute an end run around the democratic process." He lambasted local agencies that seek them out as a way to inflate their budgets, a "particularly offensive" use of consent decrees that took decision-making power from legislatures.

On March 31, Sessions ordered a sweeping review of all consent decrees with troubled police departments nationwide to ensure they were in line with the Trump administration’s law-and-order goals. Days before, the DOJ had asked a judge to postpone a hearing on a consent decree with the Baltimore Police Department that had been arranged during the last days of the Obama administration. The judge denied that request, and the consent decree has moved forward.

The DOJ has already come under fire from critics for altering its approach to voting rights cases. After nearly six years of litigation over Texas’ voter ID law — which Obama DOJ attorneys said was written to intentionally discriminate against minority voters and had such a discriminatory effect — the Trump DOJ abruptly withdrew its intent claims in late February.

Attorneys who worked on the case for years were barely consulted about the change — many weren’t consulted at all, according to two former DOJ officials with knowledge of the matter. Gore wrote the filing changing the DOJ’s position largely by himself and asked the attorneys who’d been involved in the case for years to sign it to show continuity. Not all of the attorneys fell in line. Avner Shapiro — who has been a prosecutor in the civil rights division for more than 20 years — left his name off the filings written by Gore. Shapiro was particularly involved in developing the DOJ’s argument that Texas had intentionally discriminated against minorities in crafting its voter ID legislation.

"That’s the ultimate act of rebellion," Yeomans, the former civil rights division prosecutor, said. A rare act, removing one’s name from a legal filing is one of the few ways career attorneys can express public disagreement with an administration.

Gore has no history of bringing civil rights cases. A former partner at the law firm Jones Day, he has instead defended states against claims of racial gerrymandering and represented North Carolina when the state was sued over its controversial "bathroom bill," which requires transgender people to use the facility that matched their birth gender.

All of the internal changes at the DOJ have left attorneys and staff with "a great deal of fear and uncertainty," said Yeomans. While he says the lawyers there would like to stay at the department, they fear Sessions’ priorities will have devastating impact on their work.

The DOJ’s civil rights office is not alone in fearing rollbacks in enforcement. Across federal departments, the Trump administration has made moves to diminish the power of civil rights divisions.

The Department of Education has laid out plans to loosen requirements on investigations into civil rights complaints, according to an internal memo sent to staff on June 8 and obtained by ProPublica.

Under the Obama administration, the department’s office for civil rights applied an expansive approach to investigations. Individual complaints related to complex issues such as school discipline, sexual violence and harassment, equal access to educational resources, or racism at a single school might have prompted broader probes to determine whether the allegations were part of a pattern of discrimination or harassment.

The new memo, sent by Candice Jackson, the acting assistant secretary for civil rights, to regional directors at the department’s civil rights office, trims this approach. Jackson was appointed deputy assistant secretary for the office in April and will remain as the acting head of the office until the Senate confirms a full-time assistant secretary. Trump has not publicly nominated anyone for the role yet.

The office will apply the broader approach "only" if the original allegations raise systemic concerns or the investigative team argues for it, Jackson wrote in the memo.

As part of the new approach, the Education Department will no longer require civil rights investigators to obtain three years of complaint data from a specific school or district to assess compliance with civil rights law.

Critics contend the Obama administration’s probes were onerous. The office "did such a thorough review of everything that the investigations were demanding and very expensive" for schools, said Boston College American politics professor R. Shep Melnick, adding that the new approach could take some regulatory pressure off schools and districts.

But some civil rights leaders believe the change could undermine the office’s mission. This narrowing of the department’s investigations "is stunning to me and dangerous," said Catherine Lhamon, who led the Education Department’s civil rights office from August 2013 until January 2017 and currently chairs the United States Commission on Civil Rights. "It’s important to take an expansive view of the potential for harm because if you look only at the most recent year, you won’t necessarily see the pattern," said Lhamon.

The department’s new directive also gives more autonomy to regional offices, no longer requiring oversight or review of some cases by department headquarters, according to the memo.

The Education Department did not respond to ProPublica’s request for comment.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has also proposed cutting over 40 positions from the civil rights office. With reduced staff, the office will have to "make difficult choices, including cutting back on initiating proactive investigations," according to the department’s proposed budget.

Elsewhere, Trump administration appointees have launched similar initiatives. In its 2018 fiscal plan, the Labor Department has proposed dissolving the office that handles discrimination complaints. Similarly, new leadership at the Environmental Protection Agency has proposed entirely eliminating the environmental justice program, which addresses concerns that almost exclusively impact minority communities. The Washington Post reports the plan transfers all environmental justice work to the Office of Policy, which provides policy and regulatory guidance across the agency.

Mustafa Ali, a former EPA senior adviser and assistant associate administrator for environmental justice who served more than 20 years, quit the agency in protest days before the plan was announced. In his resignation letter, widely circulated in the media, Ali suggested the new leadership was abandoning "those who need our help most." Read more

Ryan Gabrielson contributed to this report.

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Will Rosenstein recuse himself from overseeing special counsel probe? Not at this point, DOJ says

Rod Rosenstein
Will Rosenstein recuse himself from overseeing special counsel probe? Not at this point, DOJ says
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 16, 2017 02:47 pm CDT


The U.S. Justice Department says Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein has no immediate plans to recuse himself from overseeing the special counsel’s investigation into Russian influence, though he reportedly told colleagues he may need to take that step.

Anonymous sources tell ABC News and the Washington Post that Rosenstein has acknowledged in private conversations that he may have to step away from supervising the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller. ABC was the first to report the news.

But Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior issued a statement on Friday saying Rosenstein remains in a supervisory role, at this point. "As the deputy attorney general has said numerous times, if there comes a point when he needs to recuse, he will," Prior said. "However, nothing has changed."

Rosenstein could be a witness in the investigation he is overseeing if Mueller has expanded his probe of Russian influence to investigate whether Trump obstructed justice by firing FBI director James Comey. Mueller may want to learn about Trump’s conversations with Rosenstein, the Justice Department official who wrote the memo criticizing Comey’s performance before his firing on May 9.

Trump appeared to confirm he was being investigated for obstruction in a tweet on Friday that read: "I am being investigated for firing the FBI Director by the man who told me to fire the FBI Director! Witch Hunt."

Harvard law professor Noah Feldman argues in a Bloomberg View article that Trump’s tweet could force Rosenstein’s recusal because of his suggestion that Comey’s firing was Rosenstein’s idea. That would leave supervision of the Mueller probe to Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand, a a Harvard law graduate who clerked for Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and ran the Office of Legal Policy at the Justice Department.

Brand is "a horse of a different color from career prosecutors such as Rosenstein, Comey and Mueller," Feldman says. He speculates that her attitude may be "more informed by the structure of presidential authority and less by unwritten norms of prosecutorial independence."

According to the ABC report, Rosenstein discussed his potential recusal with Brand and told her she would have to take over his role if he did so. Read more

Officer is acquitted in shooting death of black driver whose girlfriend livestreamed the aftermath

Philando Castile
Officer is acquitted in shooting death of black driver whose girlfriend livestreamed the aftermath
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 16, 2017 03:29 pm CDT


Updated: A Minnesota police officer has been acquitted in the shooting death last summer of a cafeteria supervisor, an incident that received widespread attention because victim Philando Castile’s girlfriend livestreamed the aftermath on Facebook. Shortly after the verdict was announced, the town of St. Anthony said Jeronimo Yanez is no longer employed there.

Yanez was acquitted on charges of second-degree manslaughter and endangering safety by discharging a firearm, report the StarTribune, the New York Times and the Washington Post. Jurors had deliberated for 27 hours over five days.

St. Anthony, located northwest of St. Paul, said in a statement on its website that "the public will best be served" if Yanez is no longer employed by the police department there.

Yanez had testified he shot Castile after he pulled him over because he saw him reach for a gun, according to StarTribune coverage. "I thought I was going to die," said Yanez, who had pulled Castile over on July 6 because of a broken brake light.

The 32-year-old Castile was black and Yanez, 29, is Mexican-American.

Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, said on the video that Castile had warned the officer that he was carrying a pistol and he was licensed to carry it. According to Reynolds, the officer shot Castile as he was trying to produce his driver’s license. On the video, the officer says, "I told him not to reach for it. I told him to get his hand out."

A lawyer for Yanez, Earl Gray, had argued that his client believed Castile matched the description of a robbery suspect and he perceived an imminent threat when he fired his gun. Defense lawyers also said Yanez smelled marijuana in the car.

Castile’s mother, Valerie Castile, addressed reporters after the verdict. "There has always been a systemic problem in the state of Minnesota, and me thinking, common sense that we would get justice," she said. "But nevertheless the system continues to fail black people." Read online

Updated at 4:40 p.m. with Yanez’s employment status and additional details; updated at 4:51 p.m. to rework lead and move up information on Yanez’s employment status


Pence hires BigLaw lawyer in Russia probe with personal Comey connection

Pence hires BigLaw lawyer in Russia probe with personal Comey connection
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 16, 2017 08:37 am CDT


Vice President Mike Pence has hired McGuireWoods chairman Richard Cullen to represent him in the congressional and special counsel’s investigations into Russian influence.

Cullen has connections to fired FBI director James Comey, a lawyer who once worked at McGuireWoods, report the New York Times, the Am Law Daily (sub. req.) and the Washington Post in stories here and here.

The relationship is personal: Cullen is godfather to one of Comey’s daughters, according to the Post. And they both worked at one time in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Richmond, Virginia, though not at the same time. Cullen was U.S. attorney for the office from 1991 to 1993, before Comey joined the office in 1996.

Cullen also has prosecution experience on the state level, serving as Virginia attorney general from 1997 to 1998.

Cullen began his career as a staffer for a Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee who voted to impeach Richard Nixon in the Watergate scandal. Later, he was special counsel to a Republican senator investigating the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages sales.

The Times says Pence is probably a peripheral figure in the Russia investigation who could be questioned as a witness. Read more

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Gun control debate revived in wake of congressman being shot

Gun control debate revived in wake of congressman being shot
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Terry Carter
Posted Jun 15, 2017 01:48 pm CDT


In the wake of Wednesday morning’s shooting of Louisiana Republican Congressman Steve Scalise, fellow GOP members argue that if victims had carried firearms then they could have defended themselves.

Gun control initiatives at the federal level have been so stymied by special interests in recent years that Democrats in Congress remained largely mute, the New York Times reports.

"Had there not been a member of House leadership present, there would have been no police present, and it would have become the largest act of political terrorism in years, if not ever," said Rep. Tom Garrett, R-Va., who has introduced legislation that would permit citizens to carry firearms in Washington, D.C., noting that it "would allow the most law-abiding among us to defend themselves."

That response, and others like it, indicate how the gun debate has changed. Republican Congressional members have become more conservative and from outside urban areas, and few of them dare support gun-control measures.

Republicans in right-wing districts have greater fear of primary challengers who are ultra-conservative more than they do of Democrats in general elections, and the power of special interest groups is strong, says Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn.

"They have an N.R.A. rating they want to keep," Cohen said.

The Times notes a "striking departure from recent political history," as gun-control battles have become more partisan than regional-based. Republican majorities in Congress have turned back significant gun-control efforts, including recent attempts to bar gun sales to people on the federal terrorism watch list and to close background-check loopholes.

Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., reiterated his strong views against gun control after helping apply a tourniquet to Scalise, who was wounded on a baseball field as Republicans practiced for their annual game against Democrats.

"As with any constitutional provision in the Bill of Rights, there are adverse aspects to each of those rights that we enjoy as people," says Brooks. "And what we just saw here is one of the bad side effects of someone not exercising those rights properly." Read more

Trump appears to confirm he is being investigated for firing Comey in new 'witch hunt' tweet

President Trump
Trump appears to confirm he is being investigated for firing Comey in new 'witch hunt' tweet
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 16, 2017 09:04 am CDT


Updated: President Donald Trump apparently confirmed he is under investigation for firing FBI director James Comey in an early morning tweet.

The tweet read: "I am being investigated for firing the FBI Director by the man who told me to fire the FBI Director! Witch Hunt."

Trump was likely referring to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, according to several media reports, including stories by the New York Times, the Hill and Politico.

Some commentators, however, said Trump could be referring to special counsel Robert Mueller. Rosenstein appointed Mueller following the recusal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions in the FBI’s probe of Russian influence.

Trump’s tweet could force Rosenstein’s recusal in the Mueller investigation, according to a Bloomberg View article by Harvard law professor Noah Feldman.

If Mueller is investigating Trump’s firing of Comey as possible obstruction of justice, he might want to learn about Trump’s interactions with Rosenstein, the Justice Department official who wrote the memo criticizing Comey’s performance before his firing.

That would mean Rosenstein is a potential witness in the investigation he is overseeing, a point made by Politico in a May 31 article.

Trump’s tweet deepens the potential conflict by asserting that Comey’s firing was Rosenstein’s idea, Feldman says.

If Rosenstein recuses himself, supervision of the Mueller probe would be left to Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand, a Harvard law graduate who clerked for Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and ran the Office of Legal Policy at the Justice Department.

"She’s a horse of a different color from career prosecutors such as Rosenstein, Comey and Mueller," Feldman writes. "Her attitude toward the investigation is likely to be a bit different from Rosenstein’s, more informed by the structure of presidential authority and less by unwritten norms of prosecutorial independence."

The Times points out that Trump’s tweet came hours after an "oddly worded" statement by Rosenstein about leaks.

Rosenstein’s statement read: "Americans should exercise caution before accepting as true any stories attributed to anonymous ‘officials,’ particularly when they do not identify the country—let alone the branch or agency of government—with which the alleged sources supposedly are affiliated."

The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that Mueller is investigating possible obstruction of justice by Trump. According to the Post, both Comey and Daniel Coats, director of national Intelligence, have said Trump sought their help in hopes the FBI would drop the investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

The Post’s information on Coats is based on anonymous sources who claimed Trump asked Coats whether he could ask Comey to back off the FBI’s focus on Flynn. Coats reportedly said he didn’t feel pressured however.

Comey’s claim was aired in public congressional testimony on June 8. He testified that, about three months before his firing, Trump pressed him to drop the investigation of Flynn by saying he hoped Comey could let it go. Read more
I am being investigated for firing the FBI Director by the man who told me to fire the FBI Director! Witch Hunt
    — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
June 16, 2017
Updated at 12:25 p.m. to include information from Bloomberg View article and at 12:40 to correct typos.

Nursing home regulation banning arbitration as a condition of admission may be removed

Nursing home regulation banning arbitration as a condition of admission may be removed
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Stephanie Francis Ward
Posted Jun 16, 2017 10:10 am CDT


A proposed Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rule calls for removing regulation that prevents nursing homes from including binding arbitration agreements as a condition of admission.

The existing rule was overhauled by the Obama administration, but has yet to be implemented due to litigation, Modern Healthcare reports. A Mississippi U.S. district court judge in November granted a motion from the American Health Care Association, a nursing home trade group, to block the rule from being implemented on the basis that the CMS did not have authority to enact the mandate without statutory authority.

The proposed rule, released June 5, requires that nursing homes explain the arbitration contracts to residents or their representatives, and the contracts can’t prohibit or encourage parties from communicating with state or federal agencies, according to the article. Also, the proposed rule requires that arbitration contract language not be bogged down in legal jargon.

The AHCA lobbied hard for the proposed rule, resident advocates tell the Los Angeles Times.

"The Trump administration apparently thinks it is [OK] for nursing homes to force seniors into signing contract terms that give up their right to sue in court if they are subsequently victimized by neglect or abuse," Rob Weissman, president of Public Citizen, told the newspaper. "It’s hard to imagine a more callous policy."

The AHCA maintains that arbitration is easier for all parties.

"Arbitration produces swifter resolution to disputes, compensates residents without undue litigation expense for either party, and reduces the funding burden on the Medicare and Medicaid programs," Mark Parkinson, president and CEO of the organization, said in a statement.
Read more

Oregon judge admits to mistakes, but not marrying same-sex couples isn't one of them

Oregon judge admits to mistakes, but not marrying same-sex couples isn't one of them
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Stephanie Francis Ward
Posted Jun 16, 2017 02:56 pm CDT


An Oregon judge, who reportedly displayed a portrait of Adolf Hitler at his courthouse and twice provided a felon with a gun, directed his staff to lie about his availability to same-sex couples looking to marry, according to the state’s Commission on Judicial Fitness and Disability.

Vance Day, a state circuit court judge, admits he’s made some mistakes, his attorney Janet Schroer told the Oregon Supreme Court on Wednesday–but refusing to marry same-sex couples is not one of them, because her client opposes such unions based on his "sincerely held" religious beliefs, Oregon Live reports.

In addition, the commission found that Day used his judicial business card to try and intimidate a referee at his son’s college soccer game. Day also was charged with two felony counts of a felon in possession of a firearm for allegedly aiding and abetting the crime, and two misdemeanor counts of official misconduct.

The Oregon Supreme Court has not indicated when it will rule on Day, according to the article. Punishment could range from public reprimand to removal from the bench.

"The commission’s findings have him doing so many bad things that trying not to marry same-sex couples should be the least of it," Douglas Laycock, a University of Virginia School of Law professor, told the ABA Journal.

Federal protections on the issue are limited, Laycock added, and unlikely to apply to Day’s situation. Also, Laycock wrote in an email, Oregon does not have state-law protection for the exercise of religion.

Various officers of the courts have publicly opposed same-sex marriage.

Roy Moore, the former chief judge of the Alabama Supreme Court, was suspended by a special supreme court of retired judges in April, after he issued an order that probate judges there had a "ministerial duty to not give gay couples marriage licenses." Earlier, the Alabama Court of the Judiciary found that Moore’s directive was contrary to both federal orders and Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 landmark U.S. Supreme Court case that found same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.

And in Wyoming, the state supreme court in March publicly censured a state court magistrate, who had said religious beliefs would prevent her from presiding over a same-sex marriage The court did not adopt a Wyoming Commission on Judicial Conduct and Ethics recommendation that Ruth Neely, who is not a lawyer, be removed from her job.

Some judges marry anyone who asks, and may get paid for doing so, according to Laycock, and others perform the ceremonies on a limited basis–usually for someone they know. In Laycock’s view, both should be viewed as a religious context if that’s part of the judge’s beliefs.

"But that is not how the judicial ethics opinions and the few court decisions have been going," wrote Laycock, who has argued many landmark religious cases in the U.S. Supreme Court. "I don’t think that anyone in authority has been willing to protect judges so far, except in Delaware where, by statute, no one with authority to perform weddings has to do any wedding that he doesn’t want to do."

In Day’s situation, he reportedly told staff to investigate couples who asked that he marry them. If the staff thought the couple was gay, they were told to tell the couple that Day had a full schedule. Schroer told the Oregon Supreme Court that this plan was never carried out, because only one same-sex couple asked Day to perform their marriage ceremony and he was actually too busy to do it on the specific day requested.

Day’s attorney also told the court that this was no longer an issue, because Day–who hasn’t heard cases since November– has decided to stop performing wedding ceremonies if he returns to the bench. His criminal trial is expected to take place in November, Oregon Live reports.

A defense fund has been created on Day’s behalf. According to its website, his policy of not performing same-sex marriages does not alter gay couples’ rights to marry in Marion County, where he is a judge.

In regards to providing a felon with gun, the website states that Day was acting as a "good samaritan and helping a disabled veteran." According to the Judicial Fitness and Disability Commission finding, Day allowed a man in his veteran treatment court program, who pleaded guilty to driving under the influence, handle a gun at Day’s family events, and the man went target shooting with Day’s son.

"The charges are false and independent witnesses have stated that Judge Day did no such thing," states the defense fund website, which claims that his legal fees as of April were more than $650,000. Read more

Friday, June 16, 2017

Emoluments clause lawsuits against Donald Trump face uphill battle

ABA Journal online
Emoluments clause lawsuits against Donald Trump face uphill battle
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Victor Li
Posted Jun 15, 2017 07:45 am CDT


One of the most obscure and least-litigated clauses in the U.S. Constitution is about to get a lot of scrutiny from the federal judiciary. And the repercussions for President Donald Trump could be huge—provided the lawsuits can get past some significant procedural hurdles.

Since January, three lawsuits have been filed against Trump alleging that the president, through his various business dealings, is in violation of the emoluments clause, which prohibits officeholders from accepting gifts, titles or compensation from foreign governments without the consent of Congress. The suits allege that Trump profits when foreign governments pay for hotel rooms at Trump properties and conduct business with the Trump organization.

Trump had originally promised to put his business assets in a blind trust for the duration of his presidency, however, according to the New York Times, he has resisted doing so.

The first emoluments clause lawsuit was filed in January in the Southern District of New York by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics (CREW) and several prominent legal scholars, including University of California at Irvine law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky, former Obama administration ethics lawyer Norman Eisen, Supreme Court litigator Deepak Gupta and Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe. In April, Restaurant Opportunities Centers United and Jill Phaneuf, an event booker for two Washington, D.C. hotels, joined the lawsuit.

This week, two more lawsuits were filed. On Monday, the attorneys general of Maryland and Washington, D.C. (along with CREW) filed a complaint with the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland claiming Trump had not fully separated himself from his businesses. According to the Washington Post, the attorneys general said they would seek copies of Trump’s long-sought-after tax returns and other financial records.

On Wednesday, nearly 200 congressional Democrats announced they would file suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia arguing that Trump is required to obtain congressional approval before accepting any gifts or compensation. "Because [the President] has not sought congressional consent before accepting these foreign emoluments, nor provided information about them to Congress, [Congress is] unable to exercise their constitutional prerogative to authorize or reject the specific emoluments he is accepting," the complaint said.

According to constitutional experts, the main hurdle for all three of these suits is whether the plaintiffs have standing to sue. University of Iowa law professor Andy Grewal tells the ABA Journal that "all three cases have serious standing problems" and that "the New York case seems stronger, but only because the other two seem so weak."

He argues that the congressional lawsuit runs counter to established Supreme Court precedent that individual representatives or senators cannot challenge the president in court unless they suffer individual injuries. (The plaintiffs are filing as individuals and not on behalf of House of Representatives or Senate.) As for the Maryland case, he argues that state standing can be hard to establish, but notes that some courts (particularly the ones that have adjudicated the travel ban) have taken a broad view. The New York lawsuit, however, has a shot, according to Grewal, because it’s easier for private organizations to prove standing and because they recently added parties that can claim injuries.

Eisen, a former ambassador to the Czech Republic and co-founder of CREW who serves as co-counsel in the New York and Maryland lawsuits, disagrees. He tells the ABA Journal that all three cases should meet the standing requirement.

"Both the states and the members of Congress are harmed and both have standing, as do the hotel, restaurant and other plaintiffs in the SDNY case," says Eisen. "With respect to congressional standing in the case filed today, it flows from the fact that, in an action unprecedented in American history, President Trump has refused to seek permission from that body for his many foreign emoluments. Neither has he been willing even to identify their extent or to provide information such as his tax returns that would allow such identification."

It could be that Trump’s elusive tax returns are the main target of these various suits.

"There’s a good chance that the endgame here is to get more information about his financials," says Andrew Hessick, a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law. "Otherwise, I don’t know what the courts could do. I can’t see them forcing Trump to disgorge his profits."

Hessick agrees with Grewal that all three cases are facing huge obstacles in establishing standing, but points out that anything can happen when the law ventures into previously uncharted waters.

"That’s the thing about lawsuits—lawyers and judges can be really creative," says Hessick. "You never know what they might come up with." Read online

Nearly 200 Democrats in Congress plan to sue Trump over conflicts, claim standing under Constitution


President Donald Trump
Nearly 200 Democrats in Congress plan to sue Trump over conflicts, claim standing under Constitution
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 14, 2017 08:51 am CDT


Congressional Democrats claim in a suit to be filed on Wednesday that the emoluments clause gives them standing to challenge benefits received from foreign leaders by President Donald Trump's business organization.

The suit will be filed by 196 Democrats, the Washington Post reports. The lead Senate plaintiff, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said the number of congressional plaintiffs is higher than in any other suit filed against a president.

The emoluments clause states that, absent congressional consent, no one holding any office of profit or trust shall "accept of any present, emolument, office or title, of any kind whatever, from any king, prince or foreign state."

Democrats argue they have standing because congressional consent is required before the president can accept gifts and benefits from foreign leaders.

Two other lawsuits have also claimed Trump is violating the emoluments clause because foreign governments pay for hotel rooms at Trump properties and conduct business with the Trump organization.

One suit was filed by the attorneys general for Maryland and Washington, D.C., and the other was initially filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics. Two additional plaintiffs have joined the CREW suit—an advocacy group for restaurant workers and a woman who books events at hotels in Washington, D.C.

The Justice Department has argued the plaintiffs in the CREW suit lack standing because they can’t allege a specific harm caused by hotel revenue from foreign governments. The department has also argued that fair-market payments to a business aren’t a benefit that violates the emoluments clause.

The state attorneys general argue that Trump’s D.C. hotel is taking business away from a convention center in the district that is owned by taxpayers, and from a taxpayer-subsidized convention center in Maryland.

Experts interviewed by the Post differed on whether the Democratic lawmakers have standing to sue. "Because this is individual legislators who don’t have any individual injuries, it will be hard for them to get standing," said University of Iowa law professor Andy Grewal. Read online

Mueller considering possible obstruction of justice case against Trump, report says

President Donald Trump
Mueller considering possible obstruction of justice case against Trump, report says
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Terry Carter
Posted Jun 15, 2017 09:18 am CDT


Special Counsel Robert Mueller will be interviewing three leading intelligence officials soon, with indications that he is scrutinizing possible obstruction of justice by President Donald Trump, the Washington Post reported Wednesday.

Mueller’s office has reached out to Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats, National Security Agency Director Adm. Mike Rogers and recently retired deputy NSA director Richard Ledgett. Earlier this week, news reports indicated that Trump was thinking about firing Mueller but was dissuaded by staff.

Mueller is taking up an obstruction of justice probe of Trump that began at the FBI soon after Comey was fired on May 9, anonymous sources told the Post.

In congressional testimony last week, Comey said Trump had told him he hoped the FBI could let go of the investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Comey said he understood the president to be requesting that the FBI drop any investigation into alleged false statements Flynn made about his conversations with Russians.

According to the Post’s sources, Trump spoke to Coats and Rogers about the Russia investigation the next month. In a March 22 meeting, Trump reportedly asked whether Coats could ask Comey to back off the FBI’s focus on Flynn. Coats has said he didn’t feel pressured to do so, however.

A day or two later, Trump reportedly asked Coats and Rogers to publicly state there was no evidence of coordination between his campaign and the Russian government. The two officials did not agree to the request.

Ledgett wrote an internal memo about Trump’s phone call to Rogers, officials told the Post.

Trump took to Twitter Thursday morning to slam the report.
They made up a phony collusion with the Russians story, found zero proof, so now they go for obstruction of justice on the phony story. Nice
    — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
June 15, 2017

You are witnessing the single greatest WITCH HUNT in American political history - led by some very bad and conflicted people! #MAGA
    — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 15, 2017
The White House could assert executive privilege to prevent those officials from being questioned about conversations with the president, which could lead to battles in court, where judges have tended to hold that criminal investigations can override such privilege, the New York Times reports. Read more

Debra Cassens Weiss contributed to this article.

Updated at 1:55 p.m. to include more information from the Post article. Updated at 2:12 p.m. to add contributing tagline.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Sessions denies meetings and talks with Russians, disagrees with some Comey details

AG Jeff Sessions
Sessions denies meetings and talks with Russians, disagrees with some Comey details
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Terry Carter
Posted Jun 13, 2017 07:18 pm CDT


Speaking under oath for roughly 2 1/2 hours during a hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions denied having any substantive meetings or discussions with Russian officials outside of his duties as a senator while he was involved in President Donald Trump’s election campaign.

Sessions also repeatedly parried questions seeking information on some of his discussions with the president and disagreed with some details given to the same committee less than a week ago in testimony by former FBI director James Comey, also under oath.

Several Democrats on the committee repeatedly pressed Sessions to divulge details of some of his conversations with Trump, such as when the president was preparing to fire Comey. Sessions replied that it is "longstanding policy" in the Department of Justice not to do so.

Sessions made clear more than once that he was not claiming executive privilege for himself, but rather that he was protecting the president’s right, "if he chooses," to later assert the privilege.

When he was accused by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., of stonewalling, Sessions disagreed and said, "I’m following historic policies of the Department of Justice. You don’t walk into any committee meeting and reveal confidential communications with the president of the United States."

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., peppered Sessions with a series of questions in an attempt to get him to explain the DOJ policy itself, at one point asking, "Is it in writing?" Sessions replied "I think so," and said he had discussed it with his staff.

"Did you not ask your staff to show you the policy that is the basis for your refusal?" Harris pressed on. Sessions replied that they had talked about it and about the principle of executive privilege.

There were no fireworks in the line of questions concerning Sessions’ meetings with Russian officials. Prior to his confirmation hearing in January, Sessions had not listed meetings with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak last July at the Republican convention in Cleveland, and again in September in then-Sen. Sessions’ office. The former Alabama senator subsequently said he had been advised by staff and in the FBI background check for his nomination not to list meetings with foreign officials that were part of his senatorial duties.

On Tuesday, Sessions was asked about a third meeting – or a possible meeting – with Kislyak in April 2016 at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C., reported by the Washington Post in early March.

Sessions said when that story broke – and again Tuesday – that he has no recollection of even seeing Kislyak at that gathering hosted by the Center for National Interest, which invited people engaged in foreign policy matters, journalists and several ambassadors. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., when questioning Sessions on Tuesday, read an email from the Center about the brief reception at the event featuring about two dozen guests and a receiving line. It stated that the arrangement meant conversations were brief and not private, and that it’s unlikely any meaningful conversation could occur without drawing attention.

That possibility of a meeting between Kislyak and Sessions at the Mayflower had taken on potentially new meaning last Thursday when Comey said there were a number of reasons Sessions had to recuse himself in the Russia investigation, but that he could only discuss the matter in a closed hearing. Some believed Comey was hinting that Sessions’ meeting with Russians was problematic and contributed to his recusal in the investigation. That didn’t pan out.

"I may have had an encounter" with Kislyak at the hotel, Sessions testified, though said he had no recollection of it and knows that Kislyak was there only because he has subsequently seen video of the ambassador entering the event.

THE OVAL OFFICE MEETING

Other questioning probed the differing recollections between Comey and Sessions over a February meeting in the Oval Office with the president and several others – including Sessions– when Trump asked all to leave the room except Comey. The former FBI director testified that the president spoke to him about the investigation of former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, telling him "I hope you can let this go."

Comey testified last week that he spoke with Sessions day after that meeting and told him he was not comfortable being alone with the president in that situation. Comey said Sessions said nothing, and that his body language indicated that there was nothing he could do about it.

The Justice Department subsequently issued a statement saying that Sessions had replied to Comey, telling him that the FBI and DOJ needed to heed policy in such matters. Sessions noted in his testimony Tuesday that Comey had previously been deputy attorney general.

Sessions said, "I think he’s incorrect," and added that he felt Comey had been in the DOJ for so long that he "knew those policies probably a good deal better than I do."

Sessions said his chief of staff was also in that conversation, and that Comey "mentioned no facts of any kind, didn’t mention that he’d been asked to do anything that was improper."

Comey testified that he didn’t mention details to Sessions because he expected the attorney general would soon recuse himself from the investigation that includes a probe of Flynn.

Sessions was asked by Sen. Harris if he would commit to providing the committee with all pertinent written documents, such as his notes. Sessions replied he would commit to reviewing DOJ’s rules and "responding appropriately." Read more

Trump nominates first group of U.S. attorney replacements; some have BigLaw connections

ABA Journal online
Trump nominates first group of U.S. attorney replacements; some have BigLaw connections
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 13, 2017 11:53 am CDT


President Donald Trump has announced "a first wave" of U.S. attorney nominees who share his vision for "making America safe again," according to a White House release on Monday.

The eight nominees reflect the difficulty of getting "blue-slip" approval from Democratic home state senators, Politico reports. Six of the nominees are from states with two Republican senators, and a seventh would serve as U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., which isn’t covered by the blue-slip process.

The only nominee who received the recommendation of Democratic senators was Justin Herdman, a white-collar defense partner at Jones Day. Herdman, a former assistant U.S. attorney, is nominated to be U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Ohio.

Two other nominees also have BigLaw connections. Jessie Liu, the deputy general counsel for the U.S. Treasury Department, is a previous partner at Morrison & Foerster and Jenner & Block. She is nominated to be U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C.

The other is Jay Town of Alabama, is a former associate at McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter. Currently a prosecutor in a county district attorney’s office, he is nominated to be U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama.

Trump also nominated Utah’s interim U.S. Attorney, John Huber, who was first appointed to the post in 2015. Huber was among the 46 U.S. attorneys asked to resign on March 10, but Attorney General Jeff Sessions appointed Huber as interim U.S. attorney several days later, the Salt Lake Tribune reports.

The full list of nominees is here. The New York Times has coverage here.
________________________________________________________________

Former AG Lynch
Trump tweet accuses former Attorney General Lynch of making decisions 'for political purposes'
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 13, 2017 10:58 am CDT


President Donald Trump on Tuesday tweeted his criticism of former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, saying she gave Hillary Clinton "a free pass" in the investigation of her use of a private email server while secretary of state.

Lynch "made law enforcement decisions for political purposes" and "gave Hillary Clinton a free pass and protection, Totally illegal!" Trump tweeted. The Washington Examiner, the Washington Post and Politico have stories.

According to the articles, Trump was apparently referring to congressional testimony by former FBI director James Comey, who said Lynch directed him to refer to the agency’s probe of Clinton’s server as "a matter" rather than an investigation.

"That concerned me because that language tracked the way the campaign was talking about the FBI’s work, and that, that’s concerning," said Comey, who was fired by Trump on May 9 and testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee last Thursday.
A.G. Lynch made law enforcement decisions for political purposes…gave Hillary Clinton a free pass and protection. Totally illegal!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
June 13, 2017

9th Circuit rules against Trump's revised travel ban, avoids establishment clause claim

Photo credit: Ted S. Warren, AP
9th Circuit rules against Trump's revised travel ban, avoids establishment clause claim
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 12, 2017 12:29 pm CDT


Updated:The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday upheld an injunction blocking President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban.

The 9th Circuit’s per curiam opinion upheld an injunction by U.S. District Judge Derrick Watson, but did not rely on the constitutional grounds he cited. Watson had said the revised travel ban likely violated the establishment clause; the 9th Circuit instead found likely statutory violations and did not reach the constitutional issue.

The 9th Circuit is the second federal appeals court to rule against the revised ban, report the Washington Post and the New York Times.

The Richmond, Virginia-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed an injunction in an en banc opinion in May. The court found a likely establishment clause violation and said the revised travel ban "drips with religious intolerance."

The U.S. Justice Department has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the 4th Circuit case.

The 9th Circuit said it did not need to reach the establishment clause claim because of the statutory violations.

Trump railed against the 9th Circuit in a Tuesday morning tweet.
Well, as predicted, the 9th Circuit did it again - Ruled against the TRAVEL BAN at such a dangerous time in the history of our country. S.C.
    — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 13, 2017
The revised travel ban reduces from seven to six the number of Muslim-majority countries from which travel into the United States is banned for 90 days. It also suspends the entry of all refugees for 120 days and reduces the cap on the admission of refugees from 110,000 to 50,000 for the 2017 fiscal year. The revised order no longer prohibits entry by lawful permanent residents and current visa holders and allows case-by-case waivers.

The appeals court said Trump had failed to make a sufficient finding, as required by the Immigration and Nationality Act, that allowing entry of the banned travelers into the United States would be detrimental.

"National security is not a ‘talismanic incantation’ that, once invoked, can support any and all exercise of executive power" under the immigration law, the court said.

The court also said Trump’s executive order "runs afoul" of provisions that bar nationality-based discrimination and require a specific process when setting an annual cap on the admission of refugees.

The INA "gives the president broad powers to control the entry of aliens, and to take actions to protect the American public," the decision said. "But immigration, even for the president, is not a one-person show. The president’s authority is subject to certain statutory and constitutional restraints. We conclude that the president, in issuing the executive order, exceeded the scope of the authority delegated to him by Congress."

The 9th Circuit did rule for the administration on one issue, however, according to the Times and the Post. The court said Watson should not have barred the administration from conducting an internal review to assess its vetting procedures. Read more

Updated June 13 with tweet from Trump.

 Photo credit, USAToday, Ted S. Warren, AP

Is Trump considering firing special counsel Mueller? President's friend thinks the answer is yes

Robert Mueller
Is Trump considering firing special counsel Mueller? President's friend thinks the answer is yes
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 13, 2017 08:42 am CDT


Updated: A friend of President Donald Trump told PBS on Monday that he thinks the president is considering firing special counsel Robert Mueller.

Newsmax Media chief executive Christopher Ruddy made the comment on the News Hour program, report the New York Times and the Washington Post.

"I think he’s considering perhaps terminating the special counsel," Ruddy said. "I think he’s weighing that option."

But Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told a Senate appropriations subcommittee on Tuesday that "there is no secret plan [to remove Mueller] that involves me," USA Today reports. Rosenstein said Trump has not raised the issue of the special counsel with him and has not discussed Mueller’s tenure.

Rosenstein said he appointed Mueller and he stands by the decision. "I will defend the integrity of that investigation," Rosenstein said.

Ruddy told PBS that Trump was considering the dismissal because of concerns about conflicts of interest. Trump had interviewed Mueller to replace James Comey as FBI director, and his law firm represents members of Trump’s family, according to Ruddy.

Nonetheless, Ruddy said firing Mueller would be "a very significant mistake."

Ruddy appeared to be basing his assessment on comments by Jay Sekulow, a member of Trump’s personal legal team, on ABC News on Sunday, according to the Post. Sekulow said he wasn’t going to speculate on whether the president might order Mueller’s firing.

But Ruddy said on PBS that Trump’s weighing of whether to fire Mueller was "pretty clear by what one of his lawyers said on television recently."

White House press secretary Sean Spicer later released a statement saying that Ruddy "never spoke to the president regarding this issue."

"With respect to this subject, only the president or his attorneys are authorized to comment," Spicer said.

But Ruddy isn’t the only Trump supporter who has raised the idea of firing Mueller. Some have questioned whether Mueller is too close to Comey.

In a tweet on Monday, former House speaker Newt Gingrich wrote, "Republicans are delusional if they think the special counsel is going to be fair." He elaborated on Tuesday in interviews on CBS This Morning and Good Morning America.

Mueller "apparently couldn’t find a single pro-Trump attorney to hire, and I just think that’s a rigged game, and I think that it’s a mistake to pretend this is going to be some neutral investigation," he told CBS.

Gingrich added that Trump is "actually pretty confident" in the investigation and "ultimately, he’s still going to be president and this stuff is all going to go away." Read online

Typo corrected in fourth to the last paragraph at 10:40 a.m. Updated at 11:15 a.m. to include new information and comment from Rosenstein.

Did Comey violate privilege by leaking memo? Trump's lawyer will reportedly file complaint

ABA Journal online
Did Comey violate privilege by leaking memo? Trump's lawyer will reportedly file complaint
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 09, 2017 10:30 am CDT


President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer is targeting fired FBI director James Comey over his revelation on Thursday that he gave a memo summarizing a meeting with the president to a friend so he could give it the press.

Trump lawyer Marc Kasowitz will reportedly file a complaint over the leaked memo, report NBC News, CNN, Fox News and Reuters. The stories are based on an anonymous source. According to Reuters, Kasowitz will file a complaint with the Justice Department’s inspector general and will make a "submission" to the Senate Judiciary and Senate Intelligence committees.

But the memo leak does not appear to be illegal or to violate executive privilege, according to University of Texas law professor Steve Vladeck in a Washington Post article. Other experts interviewed by the Los Angeles Times and ABC News agree with that view.

CNN also points out that the Justice Department has limited jurisdiction over former employees. If the department finds wrongdoing it can make a note in Comey’s file to be used if he seeks employment there in the future.

Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that he gave a memo summarizing one of his meetings with Trump to a law professor and asked him to give it to a reporter. Comey said he wanted the memo released "because I thought that might prompt the appointment of a special counsel."

Comey leaked the memo after his May 9 firing and after a Trump tweet three days later that read, "James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!" Comey said the tweet led him to believe he needed to get the information out in the "public square."

A story later appeared in the New York Times, based on a Comey memo, about Trump allegedly telling Comey he hoped he could let go of the investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn’s contacts with Russian officials.

Kasowitz said in a statement released after Comey’s testimony that Comey had "unilaterally and surreptitiously made unauthorized disclosures to the press of privileged communications with the president." Kasowitz said the New York Times had been quoting from Comey’s memos while he was still FBI director. He also said that Comey admitted giving to his friends the memos of conversations, one of which was classified.

But Comey said he gave one memo to the law professor—apparently the one about the Flynn conversation—and he was careful not to put any classified information into the memo, Slate points out.

"I remember thinking, ‘This is a very disturbing development,’" Comey had testified. "If I write it in such a way that I don’t include anything that would trigger classification, that would make it easier for us to discuss within the FBI and the government and to hold on to it in a way that makes it accessible to us."

In his Washington Post piece, Vladeck says Comey’s memo isn’t covered by executive privilege and, even if it were, disclosing it without authorization isn’t illegal.

Executive privilege serves to protect against compelled disclosure of confidential executive branch communications, and it is meant to shield against a court order or congressional subpoena, he says.

The privilege "is not a sword, though," Vladeck writes. "So where a current or former government employee wants to cooperate and turn over the requested information, the privilege itself won’t—and can’t—stop him or her."

And voluntary disclosure is not illegal, Vladeck says. Federal law bars unauthorized disclosure relating to national defense or that has pecuniary value to the United States, and neither applies when information in the memo is unclassified.

Vladeck adds that Trump "has almost certainly waived any potential privilege claim" by acknowledging the existence and substance of the discussions. And if the privilege weren’t waived, any interest in confidentiality can be outweighed by the value of disclosure when it has some bearing on criminal cases.

And that means Trump likely could not successfully claim executive privilege to avoid releasing tapes of the conversations, if he has any, Vladeck says.

Though Comey’s disclosure of unclassified information isn’t illegal, that doesn’t mean it is appropriate, Vladeck says.

"Not for the first time, it appears that Comey took it upon himself to breach important norms governing the conduct of senior law enforcement officials—an offense that, perhaps ironically, would have unquestionably justified his termination, if he hadn’t already been fired before doing it," he writes. Read more

Missing word added to third paragraph at 12:20 p.m.

Trump says he is '100 percent' willing to testify about Comey meetings

President Donald Trump
Trump says he is '100 percent' willing to testify about Comey meetings
American Bar Association (ABA)
By Debra Cassens Weiss
Posted Jun 09, 2017 04:02 pm CDT

President Donald Trump told reporters on Friday that he never asked James Comey to pledge his loyalty, and never told Comey to consider dropping the investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn’s ties to Russian officials.

Trump said he was "100 percent" willing to testify about his conversations with the former FBI director, report the New York Times, CNN, the Wall Street Journal (sub. req.) ABC, The Associated Press and CBS.

Trump promised to reveal "in the very near future" whether he had taped his conversations with Comey, and said journalists would be "disappointed when you hear the answer."

Trump stated in a May 12 tweet that, "James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!" Trump had fired Comey three days earlier.

Comey had told the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday that he hoped there were tapes to verify his version of events.

Comey had told the committee that Trump told him in a Feb. 14 meeting that Flynn was "a good guy" and he hadn’t done anything wrong in calls with the Russians. "I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go," Trump allegedly said. "He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go."

But Trump denied making that statement when questioned by reporters.

"I didn’t say that. I will tell you I didn’t say that," Trump said. "And there would be nothing wrong if I did say it, according to everything I’ve read today."

Comey had also described a Jan. 27 dinner in which Trump reportedly said to him, "I need loyalty, I expect loyalty."

But Trump also denied that.

"I hardly know the man. I’m not going to say, ‘I want you to pledge allegiance,’" Trump said. "It hardly makes sense."

Trump’s denial echoed a statement released later on Thursday by Trump’s personal lawyer, Marc Kasowitz. Yet Trump and Kasowitz both said part of Comey’s testimony had benefited the president, showing Trump was not being investigated for colluding with the Russians. And they both said the testimony demonstrated Trump had not obstructed justice. Read more