Officials in Maryland and
the US capital Washington will sue President Donald Trump for accepting
payments and benefits from foreign governments through his business empire,
news reports said Sunday night.
Trump
International Hotel is located near the corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and 12th
Street, just a short 15-minute walk to The White House North Lawn.
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The
suit to be unveiled Monday centres on the so-called emoluments clause, which
bans US officials from taking gifts or other benefits from foreign governments.
An
NGO that centres on ethics issues filed a similar suit in January. But this is
the first one presented by government entities.
The
announced lawsuit adds to Trump's woes as he grapples with congressional and a
special prosecutor's probes into his campaign's alleged ties with Russia, which
US intelligence agencies say meddled aggressively in the 2016 election to held
Trump win.
Since
taking power in January, Trump has turned day to day control over his real
estate empire and other assets to his adult sons, but not sold them off as many
in America said he should to avoid conflicts of interest.
The
lawsuit will be filed Monday by the attorneys general of Maryland and
Washington in the US District Court for the District of Maryland, the
Washington Post reported.
Maryland
Attorney General Brian Frosh said the case is about Trump's failure to separate
his personal interests from his presidential duties.
Frosh
told the Post that the emoluments clause mandates that "the president put
the country first and not his own personal interest first."
A
key case in the dispute is a hotel that Trump opened last year by leasing a
large, stately building that used to be a central post office, just down the
road from the White House.
Aside
from the issue of the foreign payments ban, Maryland and Washington complain
that the presence of a Trump hotel hurts competing hotels in their
jurisdictions.
The
Post cited examples of foreign government showing preference for that hotel
over others, at what neighboring Maryland and Washington say is their expense.
It
said the embassy of Kuwait had planned to hold an event at a Four Seasons hotel
but eventually moved it to the Trump property, which is called the Trump
International Hotel.
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