Congress is known for moving slowly, but not so for Cawthorn and Meadows, whose need for speed has landed them in trouble with the law though they’ve sometimes avoided the worst legal consequences.
Meadows' lawsuit seeks to "invalidate and prohibit the enforcement of two overly broad and unduly burdensome subpoenas" issued by the January 6 committee, which "wrongly seeks to compel both Mr. Meadows and a third party telecommunications company (Verizon Wireless) to provide information to the Select Committee that the Committee lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain."
Meadows' lawsuit seeks to "invalidate and prohibit the enforcement of two overly broad and unduly burdensome subpoenas" issued by the January 6 committee, which "wrongly seeks to compel both Mr. Meadows and a third party telecommunications company (Verizon Wireless) to provide information to the Select Committee that the Committee lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain."
Meadows' lawsuit seeks to "invalidate and prohibit the enforcement of two overly broad and unduly burdensome subpoenas" issued by the January 6 committee, which "wrongly seeks to compel both Mr. Meadows and a third party telecommunications company (Verizon Wireless) to provide information to the Select Committee that the Committee lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain."
Meadows' lawsuit seeks to "invalidate and prohibit the enforcement of two overly broad and unduly burdensome subpoenas" issued by the January 6 committee, which "wrongly seeks to compel both Mr. Meadows and a third party telecommunications company (Verizon Wireless) to provide information to the Select Committee that the Committee lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain."