President Trump’s lawyers asked the Supreme Court to quash congressional and criminal subpoenas seeking financial records from his bankers and accountants
Justices ask why president should be able to stop House accessing his records when Nixon and Clinton were required to comply
The U.S. plans to accuse China of attempting to steal information from coronavirus vaccine researchers, Elon Musk says he will move Tesla’s headquarters out of California, and China and South Korea report new clusters of cases. WSJ’s Shelby Holliday has the latest. Photo: Getty Images
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
President Trump to claim 'absolute immunity' from subpoenas in Supreme Court appealAttorneys for President Donald Trump this week will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to grant him sweeping immunity from investigation by Congress and local prosecutors into his conduct as a private citizen, as long as he's still in office. During oral arguments in three cases Tuesday, the justices will
Read more »
President Trump to claim 'absolute immunity' from subpoenas in Supreme Court appealAttorneys for President Donald Trump this week will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to grant him sweeping immunity from investigation by Congress and local prosecutors.
Read more »
Listen live: Supreme Court hears oral arguments in Trump financial records casesThe U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments via telephone conference in the cases of Trump v. Mazars and Trump v. Vance.
Read more »
Supreme Court hears arguments over whether Trump can keep tax records shielded from CongressAttorneys for President Donald Trump faced questions from the justices of the Supreme Court on Tuesday over whether allowing Trump to keep his tax records shielded from House Democrats would unconstitutionally limit the power of Congress to conduct investigations.
Read more »
Supreme Court justices raise concern about 'harassment' by subpoenas for Trump taxes, financial recordsNEW: A divided Supreme Court wrestled with the legality of sweeping congressional subpoenas for Pres. Trump’s personal financial records, raising concerns about potential for 'presidential harassment.'
Read more »
Explainer: What's at stake in Supreme Court fight over Trump financial recordsThe U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday considers three blockbuster cases concerning efforts by the Democratic-led House of Representatives and a grand jury working with a prosecutor in New York City to obtain copies of President Donald Trump's financial records.
Read more »