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Lawyers for Harvard in Trump administration dispute are no strangers to high-profile legal matters

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Lawyers for Harvard in Trump administration dispute are no strangers to high-profile legal matters
News

News

Lawyers for Harvard in Trump administration dispute are no strangers to high-profile legal matters

2025-04-16 08:52 Last Updated At:09:02

WASHINGTON (AP) — The two attorneys representing Harvard University in a pitched fight with the Trump administration are no strangers to the spotlight or to Washington investigations that reach into the White House.

One of them, Robert Hur, was a senior Justice Department official during President Donald Trump's first term and served for a time as the top federal prosecutor in Maryland. But he's perhaps best known as the special counsel who investigated President Joe Biden's handling of classified information and produced a report that painted a damaging assessment of Biden's mental acuity months before the Democrat dropped his bid for reelection.

The other, William Burck, has been a go-to attorney for Washington legal crises dating back years. A former lawyer in President George W. Bush's White House, he represented multiple Trump associates during special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference and has more recently defended New York Mayor Eric Adams in a corruption case that was brought, and later dropped, by the Justice Department.

The involvement of the lawyers — both well-known in conservative legal circles and both selected in the past for prominent Trump orbit positions — is an interesting wrinkle to a hugely consequential dispute between the federal government and the country's oldest and wealthiest university. The clash is shaping up to be a seminal moment in Trump's ongoing efforts to bend elite universities to his will by threatening to withhold billions of dollars in federal funding if they don't agree to major campus reforms.

“It’s a wise move on Harvard’s part” to pick the pair, said Kermit Roosevelt, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “They’re looking for people that the administration won't dismiss as leftists.”

A look at the lawyers and the issues at stake:

The son of Korean immigrants and a Harvard alumnus himself, Hur has spoken openly about his desire to give back to the country that took in his family decades ago.

He spent years as a federal prosecutor in Maryland before being selected as the Justice Department's principal associate deputy attorney general — one of the agency’s most powerful positions — early in the first Trump administration and even spoke from the White House podium in 2017 about efforts to counter gang violence. He was later unanimously confirmed by the Senate for the role of U.S. attorney in Maryland.

“Rob proved himself to be extremely competent, affable and a straight arrow — and an exceptionally good litigator,” said Harvey Eisenberg, a former federal prosecutor in Baltimore who worked with Hur. “He’s just a professional."

In January 2023, he was selected by then-Attorney General Merrick Garland to serve as special counsel and investigate whether Biden mishandled classified materials that he took with him after serving as vice president.

Hur pledged at the time of the appointment to conduct the investigation fairly and with “dispassionate judgment.” His conservative bona fides — besides his Trump administration service, he also clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist at the Supreme Court — were meant to signal to the public that it could trust the outcome of the investigation because it was in the hands of an outside prosecutor who would not protect the president for political purposes.

His final report a year later faulted Biden for his retention of classified material but decided criminal charges weren't warranted. One of Hur's more memorable conclusions was that it would be hard to prove to a jury that Biden possessed the required criminal intent because he would likely present himself as a “sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

Republicans seized on that language to raise questions about Biden's ability to lead the country for a second term, while Biden and his advisers accused Hur of straying beyond his mandate and reaching an unjustified assessment. Hur has defended his investigation as independent and rigorous and said he needed to explain Biden's state-of-mind to show how he arrived at his decision to not charge.

Hur has since returned to private practice and is a partner in the law firm of King & Spalding.

Burck has long been one of the most prominent attorneys in Washington, with a track record of participating in a litany of politically complicated and high-profile matters.

A former federal prosecutor who was part of the Justice Department's trial team in the Martha Stewart case, Burck was also a top lawyer in the Bush White House and advised the president on legal matters.

“Bill was always a straight shooter,” said Roosevelt, who was a Supreme Court clerk at the same time as Burck. “He was honest, dependable, honorable and a very good lawyer.”

Years later, as Mueller investigated whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia during the 2016 election, Burck represented a stable of Trump associates, including adviser Steve Bannon, then-White House counsel Don McGahn and Reince Priebus, the White House chief of staff at the time. All were witnesses in the investigation; none was charged.

He also played a role in the 2018 confirmation process of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, when he was responsible for culling documents for the Senate from Kavanaugh’s White House years. Some Democrats accused Republicans of cherry-picking the documents they made available and called Burck conflicted because of his representation of Trump-world figures, an assertion he brushed off when he told The Associated Press at the time: “I think partisanship may be getting in the way of rational thought."

Burck also represented New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft against accusations that he paid for massage parlor sex acts — Florida prosecutors later dismissed the case — and was part of the defense team for Adams as Justice Department prosecutors in the Trump administration moved to throw out the prosecution.

In January, the Trump Organization announced that it was hiring Burck, a managing partner of Quinn Emanuel LLP, to vet deals that could pose conflicts with public policy. He also represented the Paul Weiss law firm when it reached a settlement last month with the Trump White House that resulted in an earlier executive order against it being rescinded.

The federal government said this week that it was freezing more than $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to Harvard, the seventh time the Trump administration has taken such a step at one of the nation’s most elite colleges.

It's part of a broader effort to force compliance with the administration's political agenda, as well as to influence campus policy and limit student activism.

In a letter dated Monday, Hur and Burck argued that Harvard had already made “lasting and robust structural, policy, and programmatic changes to ensure that the university is a welcoming and supportive learning environment for all students.” But it said Harvard would not accede to the administration's demands, which include broad government and leadership reforms, in order to preserve its funding.

“The university will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights. Neither Harvard nor any other private university can allow itself to be taken over by the federal government,” the lawyers wrote. “Accordingly, Harvard will not accept the government’s terms as an agreement in principle.”

Harvard President Alan Garber struck a similar note, saying that the government could not dictate what universities teach and whom they admit or hire.

FILE - Attorney William Burck emerges from a courtroom in West Palm Beach, Fla., April 12, 2019. (Patrick Dove/TCPalm.com via AP, Pool, File)

FILE - Attorney William Burck emerges from a courtroom in West Palm Beach, Fla., April 12, 2019. (Patrick Dove/TCPalm.com via AP, Pool, File)

FILE - Department of Justice Special Counsel Robert Hur listens during a House Judiciary Committee hearing, March 12, 2024, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

FILE - Department of Justice Special Counsel Robert Hur listens during a House Judiciary Committee hearing, March 12, 2024, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

FILE - Rowers paddle down the Charles River near the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., March 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

FILE - Rowers paddle down the Charles River near the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., March 7, 2017. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

Next Article

Colorado fights Trump administration bid to help imprisoned loyalist Tina Peters

2025-04-22 23:26 Last Updated At:23:31

DENVER (AP) — Colorado officials say President Donald Trump's administration appears to be wielding its “political power” to give unprecedented help to a former county election clerk convicted of letting Trump supporters access election equipment after his 2020 defeat.

The U.S. Justice Department is trying to intervene in the case of Tina Peters, who wants to be released from prison while she appeals her conviction. A hearing is scheduled for Tuesday afternoon in federal court in Denver.

There have been “reasonable concerns” raised about Peters’ prosecution, wrote acting U.S. Assistant Attorney General Yaakov M. Roth in a court filing last month. Peters’ case is among those the government has said it is reviewing for “abuses of the criminal justice process.”

But Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser wants Magistrate Judge Scott T. Varholak to block the Justice Department's involvement. Lawyers from Weiser's office said the Justice Department has not given any good reason why it should intervene and has just repeated Peters' arguments.

“Tina Peters was not prosecuted because of any political pressure; she was prosecuted because she broke the law. And just as they did not prosecute her for political reasons, her prosecutors will not accede to any political pressure to give her preferred treatment in sentencing or terms of confinement,” lawyers from Weiser's office said in a filing.

Varholak denied a request to allow Peters, now in a state prison in Pueblo after serving a jail sentence, to attend Tuesday’s hearing, saying its only purpose was to hear arguments from lawyers.

The lawyers who originally submitted the Justice Department’s statement, including Colorado’s acting U.S. Attorney J. Bishop Grewell, have since stepped down from the case because their office helped the state investigate Peters. They said that while they wanted to avoid a conflict of interest, they stood by the Justice Department’s statement.

Abigail Stout, a Justice Department lawyer in Washington, is now representing the federal government instead.

A state judge sentenced Peters in October to nine years behind bars after rebuking her for being defiant and continuing to press discredited claims about rigged voting machines. Peters is now trying to get a federal judge to release her while she appeals her conviction.

Peters says Judge Matthew Barrett violated her right to free speech by denying her bond while she appeals because of her outspoken questioning of the voting system. She also argued she should be released from prison while she appeals because she is protected from being punished for trying to preserve election records, which she says is a federal duty.

Jurors found Peters guilty in August for using someone else’s security badge to give an expert affiliated with My Pillow chief executive Mike Lindell access to the Mesa County election system and deceiving other officials about that person’s identity. Lindell is a prominent promoter of false claims that voting machines were manipulated to steal the election from Trump.

Barrett previously found Peters in contempt of court after District Attorney Dan Rubenstein accused her of recording a court hearing for a person accused of being a coconspirator, which she denied.

That conviction was overturned for lack of evidence by the state appeals court in January.

Peters says Rubenstein, a Republican, later admitted that he didn’t know if Peters was recording the hearing but still used it as a reason to encourage Barrett to sentence her to prison for the voting system breach. Her lawyers say a review found no evidence of a recording.

Trump has previously been at odds with officials in Democratic-led Colorado over issues including immigration. In March, he demanded the removal of a portrait of himself from the state Capitol because he thought it was unflattering.

His administration's attempt to involve itself in Peters' case is its latest move to reward allies who violated the law on Trump's behalf.

Previously, Trump pardoned more than a thousand people convicted in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. He nominated an attorney for some of those defendants, Ed Martin, to be acting U.S. attorney in the District of Columbia.

The Department of Justice also moved to drop corruption charges against New York’s Democratic mayor, Eric Adams, saying that they were tainted by “weaponization” and that the administration needed Adams’ cooperation in its immigration enforcement efforts.

FILE - Candidate for the Colorado Republican Party chair position Tina Peters concludes her speech during a debate sponsored by the Republican Women of Weld, Feb. 25, 2023, in Hudson, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

FILE - Candidate for the Colorado Republican Party chair position Tina Peters concludes her speech during a debate sponsored by the Republican Women of Weld, Feb. 25, 2023, in Hudson, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

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