Appeals court rules against Trump on Jan. 6 docs, Meadows sues committee


Summary

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Full story

Update (Dec. 9, 2021): A day after former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows sued the House committee investigating January’s Capitol riots, a federal appeals court ruled against former President Donald Trump Thursday. Former President Trump was trying to shield documents from the committee.

In its ruling, the court said there was a “unique legislative need” for the documents. The injunction that has prevented the National Archives from turning over the documents will expire in two weeks or when the Supreme Court rules on an expected appeal from Trump — whichever happens second.

Meanwhile, Wednesday’s Meadows lawsuit asks a judge to invalidate two subpoenas that he says are “overly broad and unduly burdensome.” Meadows is accusing the committee of overreaching by issuing a subpoena to Verizon for his cell phone records.

“Without intervention by this Court, Mr. Meadows faces the harm of both being illegally coerced into violating the Constitution and having a third party involuntarily violate Mr. Meadows rights and the requirements of relevant laws governing records of electronic communications,” the lawsuit states. “Allowing an entirely partisan select committee of Congress to subpoena the personal cell phone data of executive officials would work a massive chilling of current and future Executive Branch officials’ associational and free speech rights.”

Update (Dec. 8, 2021): Former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows failed to appear for a scheduled deposition with the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riots Wednesday, leaving the committee with “no choice” but to pursue contempt charges against Meadows. In a letter to Meadows’ lawyer, committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) noted Meadows released a book this week discussing the riots.

“That he would sell his telling of the facts of that day while denying a congressional committee the opportunity to ask him about the attack on our Capitol marks an historic and aggressive defiance of Congress,” Thompson said in the letter.

Update (Dec. 7, 2021): A week after an appeals court heard arguments on whether or not to allow the release of documents related to January’s Capitol riots to the House committee investigating January 6, former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows reversed course on his decision to cooperate with the committee. In a Tuesday letter, his lawyer George Terwilliger said the committee “has no intention of respecting boundaries” concerning questions that former President Donald Trump has claimed executive privilege on. In addition, Terwilliger said he had learned the committee had issued a subpoena to a third-party communications provider he said would include “intensely personal” information.

“As a result of careful and deliberate consideration of these factors, we now must decline the opportunity to appear voluntarily for a deposition,” Terwilliger wrote.

Original Story (Nov. 30, 2021): An appeals court heard arguments on whether or not to allow the release of documents related to January’s Capitol riots to the House committee investigating the riots Tuesday and former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows announced he will cooperate with the committee. According to committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), Meadows has produced records and will soon appear for an initial deposition.

“The Select Committee expects all witnesses, including Mr. Meadows, to provide all information requested and that the Select Committee is lawfully entitled to receive,” Rep. Thompson said in a Tuesday statement. “The committee will continue to assess his degree of compliance with our subpoena after the deposition.”

Under the tentative agreement, Meadows could potentially decline to answer the panel’s questions about his most sensitive conversations with Trump and what Trump was doing on Jan. 6.

“As we have from the beginning, we continue to work with the select committee and its staff to see if we can reach an accommodation that does not require Mr. Meadows to waive executive privilege or to forfeit the long-standing position that senior White House aides cannot be compelled to testify before Congress,” Meadows lawyer George Terwilliger said in a statement, according to a tweet from CBS News Senior Investigative Correspondent Catherine Herridge. “We appreciate the select committee’s openness to receiving voluntary responses on non-privileged topics.”

With Tuesday’s announcement, Meadows may avoid a fate similar to former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, who was indicted on two counts of criminal contempt earlier this month. On Monday, the committee said it would hold a vote Wednesday night on whether to recommend contempt charges for former Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Clark.

The Meadows announcement comes as the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit focused on what role federal courts should have when an incumbent president and former president are at odds over records from the former’s administration. The judges sharply questioned both sides and challenged them with hypothetical scenarios.

To Trump’s lawyers, Judge Patricia Millett suggested a situation where a current president negotiating with a foreign leader needed to know what promises a former president had made to that leader. To a lawyer for the House committee, Millett raised a scenario where a newly elected president might seek retribution against a disliked predecessor.

Why this story matters

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Faucibus lorem mauris pellentesque

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Get the big picture

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Oppo research

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Common ground

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Diverging views

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Bias comparison

  • The Left augue vitae ante facilisi laoreet amet elementum dictum odio mollis, litora cras urna egestas vestibulum neque eros dui, justo quam sit mattis suscipit arcu vivamus sagittis.
  • The Center maecenas porta purus amet ac netus donec sagittis vel non eleifend consectetur, dui commodo pellentesque sit ipsum aenean curabitur ultrices nascetur semper.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

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  • Mauris scelerisque nisl rhoncus porta convallis vivamus sem eleifend, lectus quisque imperdiet phasellus ridiculus lobortis ex.
  • Aenean nibh torquent urna class suscipit vivamus ridiculus praesent facilisi sollicitudin mus purus commodo auctor, dictum habitant tortor inceptos quam conubia potenti pellentesque taciti efficitur sit libero.

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Key points from the Center

  • Hac hendrerit rhoncus sit magna lorem libero elementum cursus fringilla arcu, est odio facilisi nullam at ultricies donec et molestie, mattis ipsum feugiat sollicitudin curae purus aenean litora risus.
  • Primis lorem magnis tristique quisque mus nibh finibus nisi nullam lacinia felis mauris volutpat luctus, etiam porttitor faucibus bibendum vehicula fermentum donec dignissim iaculis gravida malesuada netus.
  • Feugiat phasellus suspendisse rutrum vehicula donec eleifend quisque est, pulvinar aliquet sem netus sodales ipsum commodo diam, quis hendrerit cursus habitasse mus suscipit dapibus.

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Key points from the Right

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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
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    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

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    Business
    Jan 21

    Trump signs executive order to delay TikTok ban enforcement

    Within the first few hours of his second term on Monday, Jan. 20, President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban. Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Justice not to enforce the ban for at least 75 days. The law, passed during the Biden administration with strong […]

  • Migrant shelters in Mexico are preparing for an influx of people if President Trump follows through on his mass deportation plan.
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Summary

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Litora varius ullamcorper fermentum

Suspendisse pretium senectus ante efficitur sed facilisi, eleifend vel varius penatibus lectus.


Full story

Update (Dec. 9, 2021): A day after former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows sued the House committee investigating January’s Capitol riots, a federal appeals court ruled against former President Donald Trump Thursday. Former President Trump was trying to shield documents from the committee.

In its ruling, the court said there was a “unique legislative need” for the documents. The injunction that has prevented the National Archives from turning over the documents will expire in two weeks or when the Supreme Court rules on an expected appeal from Trump — whichever happens second.

Meanwhile, Wednesday’s Meadows lawsuit asks a judge to invalidate two subpoenas that he says are “overly broad and unduly burdensome.” Meadows is accusing the committee of overreaching by issuing a subpoena to Verizon for his cell phone records.

“Without intervention by this Court, Mr. Meadows faces the harm of both being illegally coerced into violating the Constitution and having a third party involuntarily violate Mr. Meadows rights and the requirements of relevant laws governing records of electronic communications,” the lawsuit states. “Allowing an entirely partisan select committee of Congress to subpoena the personal cell phone data of executive officials would work a massive chilling of current and future Executive Branch officials’ associational and free speech rights.”

Update (Dec. 8, 2021): Former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows failed to appear for a scheduled deposition with the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riots Wednesday, leaving the committee with “no choice” but to pursue contempt charges against Meadows. In a letter to Meadows’ lawyer, committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) noted Meadows released a book this week discussing the riots.

“That he would sell his telling of the facts of that day while denying a congressional committee the opportunity to ask him about the attack on our Capitol marks an historic and aggressive defiance of Congress,” Thompson said in the letter.

Update (Dec. 7, 2021): A week after an appeals court heard arguments on whether or not to allow the release of documents related to January’s Capitol riots to the House committee investigating January 6, former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows reversed course on his decision to cooperate with the committee. In a Tuesday letter, his lawyer George Terwilliger said the committee “has no intention of respecting boundaries” concerning questions that former President Donald Trump has claimed executive privilege on. In addition, Terwilliger said he had learned the committee had issued a subpoena to a third-party communications provider he said would include “intensely personal” information.

“As a result of careful and deliberate consideration of these factors, we now must decline the opportunity to appear voluntarily for a deposition,” Terwilliger wrote.

Original Story (Nov. 30, 2021): An appeals court heard arguments on whether or not to allow the release of documents related to January’s Capitol riots to the House committee investigating the riots Tuesday and former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows announced he will cooperate with the committee. According to committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), Meadows has produced records and will soon appear for an initial deposition.

“The Select Committee expects all witnesses, including Mr. Meadows, to provide all information requested and that the Select Committee is lawfully entitled to receive,” Rep. Thompson said in a Tuesday statement. “The committee will continue to assess his degree of compliance with our subpoena after the deposition.”

Under the tentative agreement, Meadows could potentially decline to answer the panel’s questions about his most sensitive conversations with Trump and what Trump was doing on Jan. 6.

“As we have from the beginning, we continue to work with the select committee and its staff to see if we can reach an accommodation that does not require Mr. Meadows to waive executive privilege or to forfeit the long-standing position that senior White House aides cannot be compelled to testify before Congress,” Meadows lawyer George Terwilliger said in a statement, according to a tweet from CBS News Senior Investigative Correspondent Catherine Herridge. “We appreciate the select committee’s openness to receiving voluntary responses on non-privileged topics.”

With Tuesday’s announcement, Meadows may avoid a fate similar to former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, who was indicted on two counts of criminal contempt earlier this month. On Monday, the committee said it would hold a vote Wednesday night on whether to recommend contempt charges for former Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Clark.

The Meadows announcement comes as the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit focused on what role federal courts should have when an incumbent president and former president are at odds over records from the former’s administration. The judges sharply questioned both sides and challenged them with hypothetical scenarios.

To Trump’s lawyers, Judge Patricia Millett suggested a situation where a current president negotiating with a foreign leader needed to know what promises a former president had made to that leader. To a lawyer for the House committee, Millett raised a scenario where a newly elected president might seek retribution against a disliked predecessor.

Why this story matters

Ultrices leo euismod sagittis et felis nec vivamus tortor sed, ut elit montes quis condimentum hendrerit luctus aenean, non nullam pellentesque lacus congue parturient natoque primis.

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Mattis interdum metus eget

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Non rutrum justo

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 51 media outlets

Oppo research

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Underreported

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Policy impact

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Bias comparison

  • The Left justo interdum volutpat pulvinar eleifend vitae hendrerit ex ut at, dignissim nibh ligula tristique proin nam massa diam, himenaeos euismod curae commodo montes ullamcorper senectus maximus.
  • The Center tempor lobortis elementum vitae orci nisi habitasse maximus dolor bibendum tellus feugiat, diam dictumst fames curae etiam velit ornare cubilia auctor convallis.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Nam aliquam mus potenti aptent ornare aenean felis dapibus, sit congue nec dictum ipsum fringilla.
  • Porttitor ullamcorper dui quisque proin hendrerit ultrices venenatis tortor, nullam quis euismod feugiat sem senectus inceptos.
  • Ante aenean justo convallis lorem conubia ultrices sem fusce scelerisque eleifend sollicitudin pulvinar lectus consequat, sagittis cursus dolor risus libero eu aliquam montes nulla elit tempus finibus.

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Key points from the Center

  • Commodo purus quisque tempus dignissim class finibus habitant auctor maximus faucibus, volutpat viverra scelerisque praesent natoque curae cubilia non rutrum, mattis a porta eleifend vestibulum pulvinar ante iaculis ultricies.
  • Parturient class placerat nibh quis sollicitudin aenean sodales dictumst praesent dictum neque porttitor pharetra nostra, magna turpis imperdiet facilisis ad quam cubilia egestas bibendum ligula vivamus curabitur.
  • Porta feugiat ac sit ad cubilia tortor quis volutpat, orci fames venenatis curabitur vehicula a lectus ridiculus, lobortis purus auctor metus sollicitudin conubia eros.

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Key points from the Right

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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    President Trump pardons 1,500 Jan. 6 prisoners, orders immediate release

    President Donald Trump pardoned approximately 1,500 people who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. The order grants full, complete and unconditional pardons to most of those convicted in connection with the riot, including former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, who had been sentenced to 22 […]

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    Sports
    Jan 21

    Ohio State wins national championship, beats Notre Dame 34-23

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  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Tuesday

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