‘An infringement of one’s right’: Nassau County Bar Association condemns Trump’s targeting of law firms
The Nassau County Bar Association is the latest group to condemn President Donald Trump for signing executive orders targeting three law firms that represented his political enemies or were linked to attorneys that pursued criminal cases against him.
Trump signed an executive order on Friday suspending security clearances for Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, a New York law firm. The firm’s ex-employee Mark Pomerantz built a case against Trump at the Manhattan District Attorney’s office after retiring from the firm. Pomerantz left Paul Weiss in 2012, and the district attorney ultimately did not pursue those charges against Trump in 2021.
“This is not a political issue, but an issue we believe goes to the heart of the judicial system,” Daniel Russo, president of the Nassau County Bar Association, told Newsday, adding that the “executive orders are an infringement on one’s right to counsel of their choosing.”
The Nassau Bar Association, which Russo said is one of the nation’s largest suburban professional membership groups for attorneys, assailed Trump’s executive orders against Paul Weiss and two other law firms. Last month, Trump issued an executive order that sought to revoke security clearances of Covington & Burling LLP, a Washington-based law firm that represented a federal prosecutor who brought criminal cases against the president. Those cases were dropped after Trump was elected last November.
Early this month, Trump signed another executive order against Perkins Coie LLP, a law firm that provided legal services for the Democratic National Committee and worked on Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.
Trump’s order suspended security clearances for employees at Perkins Coie, who are now limited from entering federal buildings. Attorneys cannot effectively represent their clients if they can’t get into buildings, infringing on an individual’s right to have counsel of their choice, Russo said.
“These Executive Orders severely punish private attorneys and their law firms who have represented individuals the Executive Branch deems political adversaries,” the statement from Nassau’s bar association reads. “The Nassau County Bar Association unequivocally supports individuals’ rights to legal counsel who can advocate on their behalf without the fear of reprisal.”
A spokesperson for the White House did not immediately respond to an inquiry. But in what the Trump administration called a “fact sheet” published on Friday, Pomerantz was considered an “unethical attorney” and said that “federal agencies will also refrain from hiring Paul Weiss employees unless specifically authorized.”
The New York State Bar Association issued a similar letter of condemnation last week, calling the executive orders “retaliation against lawyers who represent causes the president does not like.”
“When our government vilifies lawyers and law firms for representing causes that the administration despises, our system of justice is undermined. If all members of our society do not have access to justice, there is no justice,” the letter reads.
The New York City Bar Association also slammed the executive order against Covington & Burling, saying it was “clearly intended to deter law firms from representing clients whose interests are not aligned with those of the Executive Branch.”
A federal judge last week blocked Trump from enforcing parts of the executive order against Perkins Coie, describing the mandate as a threat “to the very foundation of our legal system.”
“Our justice system is based on the fundamental belief that justice works best when all parties have zealous advocates,” said U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell.
Source link