The law firm is suing the Trump administration over an executive action banning it from doing business with federal contractors.
A federal judge has declined a request by the Trump administration that she remove herself from overseeing a lawsuit challenging an executive action targeting Perkins Coie LLP, accusing the Justice Department of attacking her character in an effort to undermine the integrity of the judicial system.
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell wrote in a March 26 ruling that a Trump administration filing seeking her recusal was โrife with innuendoโ and that none of the claims it put forward โcome close to meeting the standard for disqualification.โ
โThough this adage is commonplace, and the tactic overused, it is called to mind by defendantsโ pending motion to disqualify this Court: โWhen you canโt attack the message, attack the messenger,โโ U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell wrote in a March 26 ruling.
President Donald Trumpโs action issued on March 6 prevents law firm Perkins Coie from doing business with federal contractors and blocks its lawyers from accessing government officials.
Additionally, it suspends any active security clearances held by individuals at the firm, pending a review of whether such clearances are consistent with the national interest.
Perkins Coie was hired by Hillary Clintonโs presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee in 2016.
According to the presidential action issued by Trump, the law firm has engaged in โdishonest and dangerous activityโ that has affected the United States โfor decades.โ
The firm sued the administration over the order in federal court in Washington on March 11, alleging Trumpโs actions violated its rights under the U.S. Constitution.
Roughly a week after Trumpโs executive action was first issued, Howell temporarily blocked the administration from enforcing much of it, finding the law firm was likely to win its lawsuit.
Last week, the Department of Justice (DOJ) asked for the case to be moved to another judge in Washingtonโs federal court, citing Howellโs public comments about the president and her connection with key aspects of the case.
โThis Court has not kept its disdain for President Trump secret,โ Chad Mizelle, acting associate attorney general at the DOJ, wrote in a motion seeking her disqualification. โIt has voiced its thoughts loudlyโboth inside and outside the courtroom.โ