In a significant defeat for former President Donald Trump, the Supreme Court on Monday allowed the turnover of his tax records to a Democratic prosecutor in New York.
The court’s action is the apparent culmination of a lengthy legal battle that had already reached the high court once before.
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Trump’s tax records are not supposed to become public as part of the prosecutor’s investigation, but the high court’s action is a blow to Trump because he has for so long fought on so many fronts to keep his tax records private.
Numerous ongoing investigations into his life prior to his presidency have become an issue for Trump in his life after the presidency. Trump has called it “a fishing expedition” and “a continuation of the witch hunt — the greatest witch hunt in history.”
The Supreme Court waited months to act in the case. The last of the written briefs in the case was filed Oct. 19. But a court that includes three Trump appointees waited through the election, Trump’s legal challenges to his defeat, and a month after Trump left office before finally issuing its order.
The court offered no explanation for the delay, and the legal issue before the justices did not involve whether Trump was due any special deference because he was president.
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The court’s order is a win for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., a Democrat who has been seeking Trump’s tax records since 2019 as part of an investigation. Vance had subpoenaed the records from the Mazars accounting firm that has long done work for Trump and his businesses. Mazars has said it would comply with the subpoena, but Trump, a Republican, sued to block the records’ release.
Vance’s office had claimed it would obtain the records in the event the Supreme Court declined to step in and halt the records’ turnover, but it was unclear when that might happen.
The case the high court ruled in involves a grand jury subpoena for more than eight years of Trump’s personal and corporate tax records. Vance has disclosed little about why he has demanded the records. In one court filing last year, however, the Democrat-led prosecutors said they were justified in demanding the records because of public reports of “possibly extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organization.”
Part of the probe involves payments by former lawyer Michael Cohen to two women — adult film star Stormy Daniels and model Karen McDougal — to keep them quiet during the 2016 presidential campaign. Trump has denied the affairs.
In July, the justices in a 7-2 ruling rejected Trump’s argument that the president is immune from investigation while he holds office or that a prosecutor must show a greater need than normal to obtain the tax records.
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Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, whom Trump nominated to the high court, joined that decision. It was issued before Trump’s third nominee, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, replaced the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the court.
As part of its July decision, the high court returned the Vance case and a similar case involving records sought by Congress to lower courts. And the court prevented the records from being turned over while the cases proceeded.
Since the high court’s ruling, in the Vance case, Trump’s attorneys made additional arguments that his tax records should not be turned over, but they lost again in federal court in New York and on appeal. It was those rulings that Trump had sought to put on hold.
The Associated Press contributed to this article