D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rules for House on grand jury materials and unredacted Mueller Report

Last week Judge Reggie B. Walton sharply criticized Attorney General William P. Barr’s handling of the report by the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, saying that Mr. Barr put forward a “distorted” and “misleading” account of its findings and lacked credibility before the court.

The judge ordered the Department of Justice to privately show him the portions of the report that were censored in the publicly released version so he could independently verify the justifications for those redactions. The ruling came in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit seeking a full-text version of the report.

In a separate legal action today, House Democrats scored a major legal victory as a federal appeals court panel granted them permission to access grand jury materials and the unredacted Mueller Report.

Politico reports, Democrats should get Mueller evidence, judges rule:

The 2-1 ruling (.pdf) from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court decision in favor of the House’s ability to see the deleted passages in the public version of the Mueller report, the 448-page tome that describes the two-year investigation into potential links between Trump’s campaign and Russia. The report, released in April 2019, also examines President Donald Trump’s attempts to stymie the Russia probe.

If it stands, the ruling would give lawmakers access to all the report’s blacked-out words, phrases, sentences, paragraphs and entire pages — nearly 1,000 portions in all — as well as underlying interviews and memos cited in Mueller’s review.

The Democrats’ courtroom win, nearly a year in the making, is a symbolic blow to Trump and his sweeping claims that his administration can block Congress from talking to witnesses and accessing information.

[T]he House’s victory Tuesday does not guarantee that lawmakers will get to immediately see the full range of Mueller’s evidence. Appeals from the Justice Department are all but certain, and the case could still face Supreme Court review.

Nevertheless, the House in its legal filings argued that it could still consider new articles of impeachment against Trump. The deletions could shed further light on the campaign’s attempts to connect with WikiLeaks, or the infamoust Trump Tower meeting between senior campaign staffers and a Russian attorney promising “dirt” on Hillary Clinton, Trump’s opponent.

On Tuesday, the majority of the appeals court said that reasoning was sufficient to authorize the release of the grand jury secrets. Courts, according to the majority opinion, should not “micromanage” the House’s need for information in the context of an impeachment investigation.

“The courts cannot tell the House how to conduct its impeachment investigation or what lines of inquiry to pursue, or how to prosecute its case before the Senate,” Judge Judith Rogers wrote in an opinion joined by Judge Thomas Griffith.

Rogers rejected the Justice Department’s argument that impeachment is not the kind of court proceeding where grand jury materials are routinely available.

“The constitutional text confirms that a Senate impeachment trial is a judicial proceeding,” Rogers wrote. “The term ‘judicial proceeding’ has long and repeatedly been interpreted broadly.”

Judge Neomi Rao, the only Trump appointee on the panel, dissented. She said the lower court had authority to lift the veil of secrecy on the grand jury materials, but not to order the Justice Department to disclose them to Congress.

“The Committee can point to no statutory entitlement to this information and the judicial relief it seeks is contrary to historical practice and the separation of powers,” Rao wrote.

Rao also repeatedly cited the Senate’s decision to acquit Trump on two articles of impeachment last month as a development that could diminish the House’s need to access Mueller’s evidence.

“A reasonable observer might wonder why we are deciding this case at this time. After all, the Committee sought these materials preliminary to an impeachment proceeding and the Senate impeachment trial has concluded,” Rao wrote. “Why is this controversy not moot? The majority simply turns a blind eye to these very public events.”

But the majority rejected this suggestion, noting that the House had authorized its committees to pursue all ongoing impeachment investigations — including a Judiciary Committee probe related to Mueller — and could consider additional charges against Trump if the new evidence warrants it.

Neomi Rao was unqualified and unfit to serve as judge. She was rammed through the Senate by Republicans seeking to pack the federal courts with right-wing activist judges approved by the right-wing Federalist Society. In her short time on the bench, Rao has demonstrated that she is purely a political partisan, not an impartial jurist. She needs to be removed from the bench for failing her judicial obligations.

A separate three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit just 10 days ago, a mostly-overlapping panel of judges, ruled for Trump in another closely-watched case stemming from the Trump-Russia probe: an attempt to get the courts to enforce a subpoena forcing testimony from former White House counsel Don McGahn, one of Mueller’s star witnesses.

That panel ruled unanimously that the courts should not attempt to referee subpoena fights between Congress and the executive branch. The House has asked the full, 11-judge bench of the D.C. Circuit to take up the issue.

The McGahn decision is likely of greater lasting impact, since it affects most fights between Congress and the executive branch over access to information.

House Democrats had repeatedly pressed the D.C. Circuit to address the McGahn and Mueller cases before their impeachment proceedings concluded.

The court heard arguments in both cases on Jan. 3, days after the House impeached Trump. But ultimately, it held back from issuing opinions on those subjects while the Democrat-led impeachment effort rolled forward, culminating with Trump’s acquittal in early February.

The much-anticipated rulings have arrived in recent weeks as the House Democratic investigators continue shedding their impeachment-focused staffers and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi redirects the chamber’s agenda toward kitchen-table issues like the economy and health care.

How the Democrats will actually make practical use of their win remains unclear. During impeachment, the House made only a glancing reference to the Mueller probe in the two articles seeking Trump’s removal from office over his alleged attempts to pressure Ukraine’s leader into launching investigations into his political rivals.

But House lawyers also told the federal judges that lawmakers could still pass additional articles of impeachment based on the information they secure from the Mueller case.

The truth will out, eventually. At the pace this is moving, it will be more use to historians than to House Democrats.