The 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday upheld a lower-court ruling that the Trump administration unlawfully named Habba as acting US attorney when her appointment on an interim basis expired after 120 days.
“We will affirm the district court’s disqualification order,”
The ruling comes as the Trump administration faces several legal challenges to its pattern of placing loyalists in top federal prosecutor posts on an acting basis after they fail to win US Senate approval for four-year appointments. On Nov. 24, a federal judge threw out criminal charges against former FBI Director
Habba and the Justice Department didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment.
The panel reviewed an Aug. 21 ruling by US District Judge
Habba, a former personal attorney for Trump, was first appointed March 28. Trump also nominated her for a four-year term but New Jersey’s senators, Democrats
Grace Fired
When Habba’s interim term expired, New Jersey’s federal judges then appointed her first assistant, Desiree Grace, to the job. But Attorney General
Brann, the chief judge in the Middle District of Pennsylvania, was assigned to review Habba’s appointment. He concluded the Trump administration used an improper workaround to avoid the 120-day limit for interim appointments, which he said could let the president appoint US attorneys for an entire term “without seeking the Senate’s advice and consent.” He also said it ran afoul of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, or FVRA.
The appellate panel included 3rd Circuit Judge
They ruled that the FVRA bars someone from serving on an acting basis if the president submitted their nomination to the Senate, even if it’s not pending at the time.
“Nothing in the statute indicates the bar lifts when a nomination is no longer pending,” the panel wrote. As a result, “the nomination bar prevents Habba from serving as Acting US Attorney under the FVRA.”
The judges also refuted arguments by the Justice Department that Bondi could delegate the US attorney’s powers to Habba. “Under the Government’s delegation theory, Habba may avoid the gauntlet of presidential appointment and Senate confirmation and serve as the de facto U.S. Attorney indefinitely,” they wrote.
‘Red Flag’
Such an indefinite appointment “should raise a red flag, given the careful time limitations” in the FVRA and another law that deals with US attorney appointments, the appeals court wrote.
During oral arguments, Smith cited a long chain of events, including: Grace’s firing; Trump’s withdrawal of Habba’s nomination to the Senate; her resignation as interim US attorney; her appointment as special attorney to the attorney general; her appointment to the first assistant post vacated by Grace; and her elevation to acting US attorney.
“Can you come up with an example of any kind” of such a sequence of events regarding “the appointment of the United State attorney?” the judge asked. A Justice Department lawyer said he could not.
Challenges are ongoing to other Trump administration appointments. On Oct. 28, a federal judge ruled that
The decision comes days after a different appeals court upheld nearly $1 million in penalties against Trump and Habba over the president’s filing of a “frivolous” civil lawsuit against Hillary Clinton three years ago, when Trump was a private citizen. Habba represented Trump in the case, which was tossed out by a federal judge in Florida who said it the complaint was an improper political “manifesto.”
(Updates with details of ruling)
--With assistance from
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