The Kushner Cos. has argued that the privacy rights of its partners in its Maryland buildings outweigh the public interest in the disclosure, saying the media's "politically- motivated" coverage of the case puts those rights "and the partners' reputations" at risk.
President Donald Trump's son-in law, Jared Kushner, was CEO of the company before becoming an adviser to the president earlier this year.
The Kushner Cos. has said it has broken no laws and denies the charges.
In its motion on yesterday, media outlets argued the press has a "presumptive right" to see court documents, and that the Kushner Cos. has not raised a "compelling government interest" that the law says is needed to block access.
The AP joined ProPublica, The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun and Baltimore TV station WMAR-TV in filing the brief.
Ethics lawyers and good-government groups have argued that policy could be shaped in favour of not just Kushner Cos. itself, but its partners and lenders.
Jared Kushner has filed financial disclosure documents with government ethics officials who oversee potential conflicts of interest, but the disclosures do not detail many of the partners who invest alongside his family company.
In a court filing last month, the Kushner Cos. blasted the media for "unfair sensationalism" in stories about the Maryland case. It said additional coverage triggered by disclosures of its partners' names would hurt the company's ability to get an impartial decision from the court.
"Given the tenor of the media's reporting of this case, including politically-motivated innuendo no doubt intended to disparage the First Family, there is foreseeable risk of prejudice to the privacy rights and reputations of innocent private investors," lawyers for the Kushner Cos. wrote in its filing.
The news outlets wrote in their brief that the Kushner Cos. complaints about the media coverage actually undermine its arguments, suggesting there is "significant public interest" in the case, and therefore public scrutiny shouldn't be limited.
Earlier this year, the Kushner Cos. and a giant Chinese insurer considering a big investment in the Fifth Avenue office building broke off talks following intense media scrutiny of any possible deal. The insurer has close ties to the ruling Communist party. Critics said that any investment from the insurer could be used as leverage in the White House.
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