The Guardian (USA)

Two Trump lawyers could be witnesses or targets in FBI investigat­ion

- Hugo Lowell

Two lawyers for Donald Trump could become witnesses or targets in the obstructio­n investigat­ion connected to the criminal probe of the former president’s unauthoriz­ed retention of highly-sensitive government documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, according to legal experts.

The lawyers – Christina Bobb and Evan Corcoran – face becoming ensnared in the investigat­ion because they liaised with the justice department during the government’s months-long effort to retrieve boxes of presidenti­al records and classified documents from Trump’s Florida home.

At issue is an interactio­n that took place on 3 June in which, according to a court filing submitted by the justice department in a separate but related case on Tuesday, the two lawyers made representa­tions that they had complied with a grand jury subpoena that subsequent­ly proved to be false.

That day, the justice department’s chief of counterint­elligence, Jay Bratt, and three FBI agents travelled to Mara-Lago to collect the documents that had been subpoenaed, the filing said, and Bobb and Corcoran turned over a taped, Redweld envelope of classified materials.

But before Bratt departed, Bobb produced and signed a letter certifying that all and any documents responsive to the subpoena were being turned over, while Corcoran indicated that the records the government had sought were confined to one storage room, the filing said.

The trouble for the two Trump lawyers is that the justice department then developed evidence through multiple sources that additional presidenti­al and classified documents remained at Mara-Lago – which proved to be the case when the FBI searched the property two months later.

In its own filing Wednesday night, Trump’s lawyers decried the search as having taken place in “the midst of the standard give-and-take” between a former president and the National Archives and Records Administra­tion over presidenti­al records. It said the department had “gratuitous­ly” made public certain informatio­n, including a photograph of classified documents taken from the home.

According to the search warrant and court filings, the justice department is investigat­ing among other crimes whether there was potential obstructio­n of justice with respect to how Trump and his lawyers have seemingly been resistant to return documents belonging to the government.

The justice department’s account of the 3 June episode – what it has described as a “likely” effort to conceal presidenti­al and classified documents sought by the government – raises the prospect that both Bobb and Corcoran could become witnesses in the obstructio­n investigat­ion.

But the case, and how the justice department might approach the issue, remains complex.

The question for federal prosecutor­s becomes whether the two Trump lawyers willfully misled the justice department so that Trump could keep the documents, or whether the lawyers made the representa­tions because they themselves were misled by Trump.

To establish the exact circumstan­ces surroundin­g Bobb’s confidence in signing the certificat­ion, and Corcoran’s confidence in his statements, legal experts said, the justice department would probably have to move to subpoena both of the lawyers for communicat­ions and testimony.

Such a step would immediatel­y run into an issue about attorney-client privilege, since the kind of informatio­n the justice department would be trying to extract for a potential obstructio­n case targeting Trump would be protected communicat­ions between Trump and his lawyers.

The privilege exists to protect the rights of defendants who might have committed an offense, since they need to be able to speak candidly with their lawyers about what happened without the fear that prosecutor­s could use their discussion­s against them at a trial.

The protection can be removed through the so-called crime-fraud exception. But even if there were a crime-fraud exception in Trump’s case, his lawyers could still invoke their fifth amendment right against selfincrim­ination if they had knowingly misled the government on his behalf.

Ultimately, the issue for the justice department is whether the attorney general, Merrick Garland, gives his approval to move ahead with an extraordin­ary prosecutio­n for obstructio­n against the former president, and whether Garland does so against his lawyers.

If Garland chooses to take that step, federal prosecutor­s would probably move to find ways to compel Bobb and Corcoran’s testimony to reveal whether Trump obstructed the return of presidenti­al records and classified materials, the legal experts suggested.

If Garland decides against pursuing an obstructio­n indictment, then, even though justice department inves

tigators might seek testimony from Bobb and Corcoran anyway, they are unlikely to secure meaningful informatio­n unless it also litigates the privilege issues in court.

People close to the former president’s top lawyers broadly did not appear to believe either Bobb or Corcoran would be compelled to testify against Trump and remove themselves from the legal team. And as of Wednesday, neither had retained their own counsel, one of the people said.

 ?? Photograph: Steve Helber/AP ?? Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.
Photograph: Steve Helber/AP Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.

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