Presidential candidate Donald Trump unveiled his sweeping tax reform plan during a news conference at Trump Tower.
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A federal judge in New York scheduled a closed session Wednesday afternoon at the request of lawyers for President Donald Trump’s campaign to dismiss a gender discrimination lawsuit filed by a former senior adviser over his 2016 White House tenure.
Law firm LaRocca, Hornik, Greenberg, Kittredge, Carlin & McPartland seeks withdrawal of Arlene Delgado In a court motion on Friday, it called it “an irreparable breakdown in the attorney-client relationship between the company and the campaign.”
The company “respectfully requests permission to confidentially explain to the court” the details of the glitch, the filing said.
Judges hold hearings in secret without the presence of the public or media.
Magistrate Judge Catherine Parker said she will hold a closed-door conference “with the defendants and their attorneys” at the company’s request starting at 3 p.m. ET on Wednesday. Parker’s notice showed Delgado was not invited to the meeting.
Delgado filed the lawsuit in 2019, claiming she was stripped of her job responsibilities as the Trump campaign’s Hispanic outreach adviser and director in late 2016 and from her expected job at the White House after she disclosed she was pregnant.
The lawsuit also claims the defendants breached a 2017 agreement to privately resolve her complaints for an undisclosed amount.
Delgado told Parker in a filing Monday that she opposed LaRocca and Hornik’s motion to withdraw from the case. The defendants include the Donald J. Trump Presidential Company, former Trump White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, former White House adviser Steve Bannon and former White House press secretary Sean Spicer.
“Our firm has been representing the Trump campaign in this matter since July 2017, nearly seven years,” Delgado wrote in a lawsuit representing himself in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.
“However, it abruptly filed a motion to withdraw on the afternoon of Friday, April 26, 2024: (a) with just six days left to discover; and (b) just two days after the Athletic was ordered to provide plaintiffs with critical information that would Expires this week.
Delgado noted that on April 24, Pack agreed to her request that the Trump campaign “must file any complaints of sex discrimination, pregnancy discrimination and sexual harassment during the 2020 election cycle.”
Delgado said the timing of the withdrawal motion was “disgusting.”
“What happened between Wednesday and Friday to cause a sudden ‘irreparable rupture’ with customers, allegedly leaving the company with no choice but to exit?” Delgado wrote.
CNBC has asked Larocca, one of Hornik’s attorneys, and a spokesperson for Trump’s current presidential campaign for comment.