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US House Jan 6 panel asks Supreme Court to deny Trump's bid to shield records

By IANS | Updated: December 31, 2021 04:45 IST

Washington, Dec 31 The US House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot has asked the Supreme ...

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Washington, Dec 31 The US House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot has asked the Supreme Court to reject former President Donald Trump's bid to block the release of his White House's records requested in the ongoing probe.

Lawyers for the Select Committee on Thursday in a brief filed with the high court argued against Trump's claim of executive privilege over a trove of records that the panel considered to be necessary for their investigation into the deadly attack, Xinhua news agency reported.

"The Select Committee's work is of the highest importance and urgency: investigating one of the darkest episodes in our nation's history, a deadly assault on the US Capitol and Congress, and an unprecedented disruption of the peaceful transfer of power from one President to the

next," the legal document said.

"The investigation is indispensable to the Select Committee's ability to propose remedial measures to ensure the peaceful transfer of power and prevent future attacks on our democratic institutions," it added.

Having lost his case in lower courts in Washington, D.C., Trump appealed to the Supreme Court last week, asking it to stop the National Archives from transferring the over 700 pages worth of records to the Select Committee.

The former President in his petition asked the justices to fully examine the legal and constitutional issues surrounding Congress' request for the records, adding that while the review is underway, the records' transfer should be put on hold.

Trump's legal team has been arguing that the Select Committee's request for the records lack a legitimate legislative purpose. It said in a brief filed with the Supreme Court on Wednesday that the panel "is looking to find evidence that could provide the basis for a criminal referral to the US Department of Justice," calling the lawmakers' effort an "inquisitorial tribunal" whose "purpose is outside of any of Congress's legislative powers."

The Select Committee is reportedly eyeing to publish an interim report containing initial findings by the summer of 2022, with the final report expected to be delivered in the fall.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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