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US Judge strikes down Trump Order against Law Firm Jenner & Block

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday overturned the executive order that President Donald Trump had issued targeting Jenner & Block. This is another blow to his administration’s efforts to crackdown on law firms who represented Trump's political opponents or hired lawyers who investigated him previously.

Trump's order suspended Jenner's attorneys' security clearances and restricted their access government buildings, federal officials and federal contractor work.

U.S. district judge John Bates, a Republican-appointed judge, ruled the directive violated the core rights of the U.S. Constitution. This ruling mirrors a May 2, 2015 ruling that invalidated a similar executive orders against the law firm Perkins Coie.

The Justice Department may appeal Bates's order to the U.S. Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit.

Trump's order towards Jenner accused her firm of engaging what it called "partisan lawfare" as well as taking cases that were detrimental to U.S. interest.

The letter referred to Andrew Weissmann's previous employment at the firm. Weissmann was a federal prosecutor who had been involved in Robert Mueller's investigation, which detailed Russian contacts during Trump's presidential campaign of 2016. Trump has called Russia investigation "hoax", "witch-hunt"

The order also attacked Jenner’s internal diversity policies as well as its free legal services, including those on transgender issues and immigrants' rights.

Jenner filed a lawsuit to block Trump's orders, arguing that it violated First Amendment protections from government abridgment and Fifth Amendment guarantees of due process. This is a requirement of the government to follow a fair legal procedure.

Two other firms, WilmerHale & Susman Godfrey, have also sued the administration in order to permanently block any executive orders issued by him against them.

Nine law firms including Paul Weiss and Milbank, Simpson Thacher, and Skadden Arps have pledged almost $1 billion worth of free legal services for causes that the White House supports. They also made other concessions in order to avoid being targeted as targets by Trump.

The Justice Department has defended Trump’s executive orders against Jenner, and other law firms by claiming that they are consistent with the wide reach of presidential power. (Reporting and editing by David Thomas, Nia Williams and David Bario)

(source: Reuters)