Saturday, March 14, 2026

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: Judge Rules Lawmaker Must Be Allowed to Join Kennedy Center Board Meeting (Zach Montague, NY Times, March 14, 2026)


NO KINGS! 
Three cheers for United States District Court Judge Court Judge Christopher R. Cooper, the Rule of Law and for judicial independence.  Fond memories of attending Kennedy Center performances with the late David Brian Wallace and with other friends.  Thanks to the late Melody Miller in Senator Ted Kennedy's office, where I worked 1974-76, another intern watched from box seats as Hal the late Holbrook performed in "Mark Twain Tonight.' From The New York Times:

Judge Rules Lawmaker Must Be Allowed to Join Kennedy Center Board Meeting


A judge ordered that Representative Joyce Beatty, a Democrat, be given access to planning documents and have the chance to oppose changes to the center at a board meeting next week.

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The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts now features President Trump’s name on its exterior.Credit...Eric Lee for The New York Times

A federal judge in Washington on Saturday ordered that Representative Joyce Beatty, Democrat of Ohio, be granted more information and be allowed to participate in a planning meeting about the future of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, temporarily resolving a minor standoff with President Trump.

The ruling gave Ms. Beatty a window into the president’s goals for remaking the center in his own image, after dozens of performers canceled shows in protest and patrons worried about a proposed multiyear closure of the performance space.

Ms. Beatty was designated an ex officio member of the board of the Kennedy Center and has used that role to fight against changes to the institution as Mr. Trump asserts more control over its governance.

The center’s board is scheduled to meet on Monday, though Ms. Beatty argued that the purpose of the meeting had not been explained, and that she had been kept out of the loop.

On Saturday, Judge Christopher R. Cooper of the Federal District Court in Washington agreed that Ms. Beatty needed to receive a more thorough accounting of plans and be allowed “a meaningful opportunity to lodge her dissent” at the meeting, “and not be categorically barred from speaking.”

She has said that she plans to attend and voice her opposition to Mr. Trump’s proposals to overhaul the performing arts center.

Judge Cooper wrote that the secrecy surrounding the project and the agenda on Monday appeared hard to square with the scale of the president’s stated ambitions.

“These are exceptional circumstances, both in the potential immensity of the announced work on the Kennedy Center and the manner in which most of its trustees have been sidelined from one of the more consequential decisions in the institution’s life span,” he wrote.

Ms. Beatty has also asked the court to issue an order barring Mr. Trump from redeveloping the site, arguing that her job on the board was to be a steward of the center. Judge Cooper has not yet considered that request.

Image
Representative Joyce Beatty, Democrat of Ohio
Representative Joyce Beatty, Democrat of Ohio, in Washington in January. Credit...Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Mr. Trump has told performers and staff that he intends to transform the space into a “new and spectacular Entertainment Complex.”

In a 37-page opinion, Judge Cooper laid out a list of documents — including budgets and planning reports — that had to be sent to Ms. Beatty within 24 hours, “to the extent they exist.” He added that the government’s claims in the lawsuit that no plans had been finalized, just four days before the board could meet to approve them, “borders on preposterous.”

Ms. Beatty sued in December, objecting to Mr. Trump’s decision to add his own name above John F. Kennedy’s on the theater’s facade. Mr. Trump also overhauled the center’s board, which then named him chairman of the group in February.

In March, she expanded her lawsuit after Mr. Trump abruptly announced plans last month to close the center for two years beginning on July 4. Mr. Trump said the closure would allow for a “complete rebuilding,” after referring to the facility as “a tired, broken, and dilapidated center.”

Ahead of the meeting, Mr. Trump also announced that Ric Grenell, one of his close allies and advisers who was serving as president of the center, would leave the role.

Ms. Beatty’s lawyers have argued the center could be taken down at the president’s whim, after he similarly moved without warning last year to demolish the East Wing of the White House and build a 90,000-square-foot ballroom in its place. Another judge in Washington is considering whether the East Wing project also unlawfully exceeded Mr. Trump’s authority.

“The shell game here has been a pretense,” Nathaniel Zelinsky, a lawyer representing Ms. Beatty, said in court on Thursday. Like with the East Wing, he said “the next thing you know, the bulldozers are at the door.”

At an emergency hearing on Thursday, Judge Cooper stressed that the only questions he would address immediately centered on the upcoming board meeting.

He limited arguments to the narrow issue of whether Ms. Beatty was entitled to participate and vote, and if so, what he could realistically order the board to do about it without “micromanaging” their work. In earlier filings, Ms. Beatty’s lawyers contended that she had been excluded from the meeting entirely, though they later acknowledged that she had missed an emailed invitation when it landed in her email spam folder.

On Thursday, they argued that Ms. Beatty had nevertheless been unable to properly prepare for the meeting because details had not been shared about what was to be discussed, including whether the board would be asked to vote to approve Mr. Trump’s vision for its future.

Mr. Zelinsky argued that the center was built as a living memorial to John F. Kennedy and as a “national landmark institution,” meaning its board had to follow rules that go beyond those followed by average nonprofit organizations.

Judge Cooper expressed some doubt that Ms. Beatty was automatically entitled to a vote on Monday. On Friday, her lawyers filed a tax form indicating that the I.R.S. counted ex officio members among the board’s “voting members,” suggesting she was entitled to vote on any possible redevelopment plans.

In the ruling on Saturday, he stopped short of ordering that Ms. Beatty be allowed to vote on Monday, writing that “at this very early stage” she had not established that right.

But the judge reserved equally pointed questions for William Jankowski, a Justice Department lawyer, who argued that there were no laws dictating how the board should conduct business.

“Why not just give her the info?” Judge Cooper asked. “How is the government harmed?”

“I’ve got to say, this is a pretty big deal,” Judge Cooper told Mr. Jankowski. “A major renovation of the nation’s premier performing arts center would strike me as something you need advance notice on.”

Zach Montague is a Times reporter covering the federal courts, including the legal disputes over the Trump administration’s agenda.

RelateHd Content

HERE IS JUDGE COOPER'S DECISION IN REP. JOYCE BEATTY v. DONALD TRUMP:

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

JOYCE BEATTY,

Plaintiff,

v.

DONALD J. TRUMP et al.,

Defendants.

Case No. 25-cv-4480 (CRC)

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

The notion of a national cultural center in Washington, D.C. dates back to the mid-1950s,

when President Eisenhower formed a commission to consider creating a public auditorium in the

country’s capital. Both the idea—and the necessary fundraising—stalled for a few years, until

President Kennedy resuscitated the effort in the early 1960s. After President Kennedy’s

assassination, Congress enacted a statute authorizing the federal government to provide millions

of dollars to match private donations to the new institution—known, henceforth, as the John F.

Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (“Kennedy Center” or “Center”).1 Upon signing the bill

into law, President Johnson foresaw that “the institution now given the breath of life [would]

have a long and distinguished future.”2

Roughly sixty years later, the Kennedy Center’s immediate future is considerably

cloudier. After taking office for the second time in early 2025, President Trump fired the chair

1 See generally “Creating the National Cultural Center,” The Trump Kennedy Center (last

accessed March 12, 2026), https://www.kennedy-center.org/memorial/jfk/highlights/national-

cultural-center/.

2 President Signs Arts Center Bill; Cultural Complex in Capital to Have Kennedy Name,

N.Y. Times (Jan. 24, 1964), https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/24/archives/president-signs-arts-

center-bill-cultural-complex-in-capital-to.html?searchResultPosition=87.Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 2 of 37

of the Center’s Board of Trustees (“the Board”), replaced many of its general trustees, appointed

himself as a trustee, and then became the Board’s chair. In December 2025, the Board voted to

add President Trump’s name to the Center, making it the “Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy

Center for the Performing Arts.

” And just a few weeks ago, on February 1, 2026, President

Trump announced that the Center would close for roughly two years for construction,

revitalization, and what he has characterized as “Complete Rebuilding.”

Plaintiff Joyce Beatty, a member of the House of Representatives and an ex officio

member of the Board, has sued to challenge the Center’s renaming and imminent closure,

bringing a bevy of statutory claims sounding in trust law, along with Administrative Procedure

Act (“APA”), ultra vires, and mandamus claims. She has also moved for a preliminary

injunction (“PI”) to prevent the Center’s closure and reconstruction.

On an even more exigent timeline, Representative Beatty seeks emergency relief in the

form of a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) that would enable her to prepare for, participate

in, and vote during a March 16, 2026 meeting, at which the parties seem to agree the Board will

consider and officially decide whether to close the Center. In this Memorandum Opinion and

Order, the Court weighs only Beatty’s TRO request and does not reach issues raised by her

concomitant PI motion unless strictly necessary to consider here.

After reviewing the expedited briefing and record evidence before it, the Court will

GRANT Beatty’s TRO motion in part and DENY it in part. The parties agree that Beatty will

be able to attend the meeting, so no further relief is due there. The Court further concludes that

she has a likelihood of success on her common law-inflected statutory claims that (1) her lack of

access to any information about the Center’s imminent closure; (2) the potential bar on her

participation at the March 16 meeting; and (3) her inability to vote on the Kennedy Center’s

2Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 3 of 37

closure violate her rights as a fiduciary under the Center’s organic statute. As to her information

and participation requests, Beatty faces the risk of irreparable harm without the Court’s

intervention, especially because once the meeting comes and goes without a meaningful ability

for her to consider the issues and weigh in, that injury cannot be undone. That harm outweighs

the minimal burden to the government of providing her certain readily-available information in

advance of Monday’s meeting and allowing her a reasonable opportunity to participate in

deliberations. The Court will therefore order that Beatty receive certain information and

documents in advance of the meeting, to the extent they exist. It further orders that Beatty be

afforded a meaningful opportunity to lodge her dissent at the meeting and not be categorically

barred from speaking. By contrast, as explained further below, the irreparable harm and balance-

of-equities factors do not clearly support Beatty’s request for an order directing the Board to let

her vote at the meeting.

It goes without saying that the conclusions in this Memorandum Opinion were reached

on an emergency basis and may be revisited down the road, especially “to the extent the factual

or equitable circumstances change.” Lawyers’ Committee for Civ. Rights Under Law v. Pres.

Advisory Comm’n on Elec. Integ., 265 F. Supp. 3d 54, 59 (D.D.C. 2017). But in light of present

extenuating circumstances, and the unprecedented swiftness and opacity with which the Kennedy

Center is poised to close, the Court believes that the extraordinary relief of a TRO—limited in

time and scope as it may be—is warranted.

I. Background

A. Legal Background

The Kennedy Center is a creature of statute. Congress organized the Center as a

“bureau” within the Smithsonian Institution, directed by a Board “whose duty it shall be to

3Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 4 of 37

maintain and administer” the Center and “site thereof as . . . a living memorial to John Fitzgerald

Kennedy, and to execute such other functions as are vested” in it. 20 U.S.C. § 76h(a)(1). By

statute, the Center’s Board is composed of several ex officio members who occupy positions in

federal and D.C. government, as well as thirty-six general trustees who are appointed by the

President to serve six-year terms. Id. § 76h(a)(2,), (b).

The statute assigns to the Board several enumerated duties and goals, including to

“present” a variety of performing arts from the United States and other countries; to serve as a

leader in developing national performing arts education, policy, and programming; to offer

“facilities for other civic activities”; and to establish within the Center “a suitable memorial in

honor of the late President[.]” 20 U.S.C. § 76j(a)(1)(A)–(E). Among other things, the Board is

responsible for “plan[ning], design[ing], and construct[ing] each capital repair, replacement,

improvement rehabilitation, alteration, or modification necessary to maintain the functionality of

the building and site at current standards of life, safety, security and accessibility.” Id. §

76j(a)(1)(G).

To achieve these objectives, Congress has empowered the Board to do the kinds of things

boards typically do: negotiate contracts, prepare budgets, employ personnel, solicit and accept

gifts, transfer property, bargain with employees, procure insurance, and issue annual reports. Id.

§§ 76j(a)(2)(A)–(D); 76k(a)–(d), (f); 76l(c), (e). The statute further provides that the Board

“shall have all the usual powers and obligations of a trustee in respect of all trust funds

administered by it.

” Id. § 76l(b). To that ultimate end, the Board is “authorized . . . to make

such bylaws, rules, and regulations, as it deems necessary for the administration of its functions .

. . including, among other matters, bylaws, rules, and regulations relating to the administration of

its trust funds and [its own] organization and procedure[.]” Id. § 76(a).

4Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 5 of 37

A review of the Center’s organic statute does, however, reveal some important guardrails.

For one thing, “[n]o change in the management and operation of the grounds may be made

without the express approval of Congress and of the Secretary of the Interior.” Id. § 76j(a)(2)(F).

For another, the Board’s actions related to performing arts and to the payment of trust funds

“shall not be subject to review by any officer or agency other than a court of law.” Id. § 76k(e).

Furthermore, although the Board may “function notwithstanding vacancies,” “twelve members

of the Board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.” Id. § 76l(a). Impliedly,

then, the Board needs at least a quorum to do its core “business.”

Two final points underscore the Center’s role not just as a national institution for the

performing arts, but as a presidential memorial. Congress commanded that it be “the sole

national memorial” to President Kennedy “within the city of Washington and its environs.” Id. §

76q. And, with a handful of exceptions, see id. § 76j(b)(2), “no additional memorials or plaques

in the nature of memorials shall be designated or installed in the public areas” of the Center. Id.

§ 76j(b)(1).

B. Factual Background

Representative Beatty is a member of Congress who hails from Ohio’s third

congressional district, which encompasses part of Columbus and its northeastern suburbs. First

Amended Complaint (“FAC”) ¶ 13. By virtue of that position, she serves as an ex officio trustee

on the Kennedy Center’s Board. Id. Beatty has lodged a declaration indicating that prior to

2025, “the Board of Trustees conducted its affairs in a manner consistent with the Kennedy

Center’s statutory mission: to maintain and administer the Center as a living memorial to

President John F. Kennedy and as a premier performing arts institution for all Americans.” See

Declaration of Joyce Beatty (“Beatty Decl.”), ECF No. 13-2 ¶ 3.

5Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 6 of 37

In Beatty’s telling, things changed in 2025. President Trump fired the Board’s longtime

chair in February 2025 and replaced several of its general trustees. Id. ¶ 4. The President also

appointed himself as a general trustee, and the Board elected him as its new chair. Id. ¶ 5.

Under his direction, the Board fired the Center’s president and replaced her with Defendant

Richard Grenell. Id.

1. May 2025 Bylaw Amendment

Following this initial upheaval, the reconstituted Board convened in May 2025 to amend

the Center’s bylaws to reflect that ex officio members were “non-voting members” of the body

and general trustees were “voting members.

” Beatty Decl. ¶ 8; see also Bylaws of the Board of

Trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, as approved May 19, 2025

(“May Bylaws”), ECF No. 13-5, at 4. The parties contest whether this amendment to the bylaws

reaffirmed or departed from the Board’s prior practice. Beatty explains that, “[i]n [her] recent

memory, votes of the Kennedy Center Board have largely been non-controversial and

unanimous.” Beatty Decl. ¶ 6. She further attests that “[v]otes were conducted by voice, with no

differentiation made between ex officio and appointed trustees,” and that she has “voted on

matters in the past.” Id. With her reply brief, Beatty also submits a declaration from Lawrence

Wilker, who served as President of the Kennedy Center from 1991 to 2001. See Declaration

from Lawrence Wilker (“Wilker Decl.”), ECF No. 20. Mr. Wilker explains that, during his

tenure, he had “full responsibility for the day-to-day operations” at the Center and “attended and

participated in numerous” Board meetings. Id. ¶ 4. And during that time, “[t]o the best of [his]

knowledge and recollection, the ex officio members of the Board were treated in all respects the

same as the trustees appointed by the President,” including that they shared the same “voting”

and “participatory” rights. Id. ¶¶ 5–6.

6Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 7 of 37

The government responds with two declarations that controvert Beatty and Wilker’s

assertions. Joseph LaFauci, Vice President of Board Relations and Government Affairs for the

Kennedy Center since spring of 2025, states that based on his “own personal knowledge, and

from Center records that [he] has reviewed, it is [his] understanding and belief that ex officio

Board members have never counted toward a quorum of voting members, nor have they voted.

See Declaration of Joseph LaFauci (“LaFauci Decl.”), ECF No. 19-1 ¶ 3. Mr. LaFauci also notes

that the May amendments “were presented to the Board, put to a vote, and were passed

unanimously,” with “[n]o ex officio member disput[ing] this practice.” Id. ¶ 4. The government

has also offered a declaration from former Congressman William Shuster, who attests that during

his seven years as an ex officio Board member from 2012 to 2019, he “never voted, never

observed other ex officio members vote, or ever heard of an ex officio member voting.” See

Declaration of William Shuster (“Shuster Decl.”), ECF No. 19-2 ¶ 2. Per Mr. Shuster, “[e]x

officio members do not count and have never counted toward a voting quorum.” Id.

In a late-breaking filing, Beatty has submitted copies of the Kennedy Center’s tax forms

from 2022 and 2023, which appear to include an institutional representation that it had fifty-nine

“voting” members during those years. See ECF No. 22-1; ECF No. 22-2. This number

corresponds to the sum of the thirty-six presidentially-appointed general trustees and remaining

ex officio members identified in the statute. See ECF No. 22 at 1. Where the tax form gives

regulated parties a space to detail “material differences in voting rights” between board

members, the Center appears not to have identified any such differences. Id. at 2.

2. Kennedy Center Renaming

Whoever is right on the matter, Beatty apparently was not able to vote after the bylaw

amendment was put in place. In December 2025, she participated remotely in a Board meeting

7Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 8 of 37

convened at the private residence of Defendant Andrea Wynn, whom President Trump had

appointed as a trustee. Beatty Decl. ¶¶ 9–10. To Beatty’s surprise, it was announced at the end

of the meeting that Board would vote on whether to add Trump’s name to the Kennedy Center

title. Id. ¶ 11. Beatty tried to voice her opposition to the announcement, but found herself

involuntarily muted. Id. ¶ 12. The Board took a vote and declared the result “unanimous”: The

Center would be renamed. Id. ¶ 13. The next day, President Trump’s name “was installed on the

Kennedy Center’s front portico.” Id. ¶ 14. Public reporting suggests that, in the wake of the

renaming, numerous artists canceled performances, and ticketholders have canceled reservations.

Id. ¶ 16.

Beatty, for her part, decided to file suit in this case, challenging the name change as

unlawful under 28 U.S.C. § 76l and the common law of trusts, among other authorities. See ECF

No. 1. She named as defendants the Kennedy Center, President Trump, Mr. Grenell, the Board

itself, and scores of its general and ex officio trustees (who are collectively referred to,

hereinafter, as “Defendants”).

3. Kennedy Center Closure

That brings us to the more recent present. On February 1, 2026, President Trump took to

Truth Social and announced that the Kennedy Center would close for roughly two years, starting

in July 2026:

After a one year review of the Trump Kennedy Center, that has taken place with

Contractors, Musical Experts, Art Institutions, and other Advisors and Consultants,

deciding between either Construction with Closure and Re-Opening or, Partial

Construction while continuing Entertainment Operations through a much longer period of

time . . . I have determined that the Trump Kennedy Center, if temporarily closed for

Construction, Revitalization, and Complete Rebuilding, can be, without question, the finest

Performing Arts Facility of its kind, anywhere in the World. . . .

Based on these findings, and totally subject to Board approval, I have determined that the

fastest way to bring the Trump Kennedy Center to the highest level of Success, Beauty and

8Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 9 of 37

Grandeur, is to cease Entertainment Operations for an approximately two year period of

time . . .

Therefore, the Trump Kennedy Center will close on July 4th, 2026, in honor of the 250th

Anniversary of our Country, whereupon we will simultaneously begin Construction of the

new and spectacular Entertainment Complex. Financing is completed, and fully in place!

This important decision, based on input from many Highly Respected Experts, will take a

tired, broken, and dilapidated Center . . . and turn it into a World Class Bastion of Arts,

Music, and Entertainment . . .

Feb. 1, 2026 Truth Social Post by President Trump (“Truth Social Post”), ECF No. 13-12, at 1.

Beatty again reports being taken by surprise: She had been “aware that the Board had

previously discussed plans for various capital improvements to the Center—including

improvements funded by Congress’s recent $257 million appropriation, which the Board was

informed were already underway—but to [her] knowledge the Board had never discussed” such

an extended closure. Beatty Decl. ¶ 18.

So a few weeks into February, Beatty sent a letter to President Trump and Mr. Grenell,

expressing concerns about the closure and seeking several pieces of information from them,

including: a detailed description of the intended renovations or “rebuilding,” along with

timelines, proposed contracts, and details about funding sources; a timeline for securing

approvals from the National Capital Planning Commission, the Commission on Fine Arts, and

other relevant authorities; a list of performance contracts the Center had in place for the two-year

closure period and explanations as to how they would be addressed; a list of the experts President

Trump had consulted during the one-year review, along with reports and communications from

those experts regarding the Kennedy Center; and any analysis conducted as to the need to close

the Center and documentation related to the costs associated with closure. See Feb. 20, 2026

Letter from Rep. Beatty to President Trump and Mr. Grenell (“Feb. 20 Letter”), ECF No. 13-6, at

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3–4; see also Beatty Decl. ¶ 23. She has yet to hear back from either the President or Mr.

Grenell. Beatty Decl. ¶ 24.

4. March 16 Board Meeting

On or about February 27, Beatty learned from another congressional ex officio member

that President Trump would be convening a special meeting of the Board on March 16 at the

White House. See FAC ¶ 53; Declaration of Todd Valentine (“Valentine Decl.”), ECF No. 20-1

¶ 2. Beatty’s chief of staff emailed Mr. Grenell and the General Counsel of the Kennedy Center

on March 4, explaining that Beatty had not received an invitation and was therefore unable to

RSVP. Her chief of staff did not hear back, which suggested to him that Beatty “was being

treated differently than other members of the Board because of her vocal opposition to recent

steps” it had taken. Valentine Decl. ¶ 3.

Beatty then amended her complaint in this case, expanding her common law and

administrative law claims to encompass the impending closure. Sensing that others on the Board

intended to box her out of the closure decision, as they had with the renaming, Beatty also

challenged that exclusion as a violation of her rights as a trustee under 20 U.S.C. § 76l. See id.

¶¶ 85–91. And because the March 16 meeting is slated to take place in just a few days, Beatty

has also moved the Court for a TRO that would require the Board to invite her to the meeting,

give her the information she asked for in her letter of concern, allow her to participate fully as a

Board member in the meeting, and authorize her to vote on the closure decision. See generally

ECF No. 13. That same motion also includes a request for a PI to stay the closure and renaming

of the Center during the pendency of the litigation. The Court will tackle these issues at a later

date—though not too much later, given the time-sensitive nature of the events here described.

10Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 11 of 37

Briefing on the TRO motion has taken place over the course of the last few days, and a hearing

was held just two days ago.

During the course of briefing, the parties have come to agree that Beatty was, in fact,

invited to the March 16 meeting; as it turned out, the electronic invitation had gone to the spam

folder of her personal email account. Valentine Decl. ¶ 4; see also LaFauci Decl. ¶ 2. The

government has also represented that Beatty “will be permitted to participate, to the same extent

as any other trustee, subject to the rules governing Board proceedings and as applied in the

Chair’s discretion.” Opp. to TRO Mot. at 7. However, it refuses to provide Beatty the

information she has requested or to permit her to vote at the meeting. Id. at 16–17.

II. Legal Standard

A TRO is “an extraordinary remedy, one that should be granted only when the moving

party, by a clear showing, carries the burden of persuasion.” Dellinger v. Bessent, 766 F. Supp.

3d 57, 62 (D.D.C. 2025) (quoting Sibley v. Obama, 810 F. Supp. 3d 309, 310 (D.D.C. 2011)).

“As with a preliminary junction, a party seeking a TRO must establish (1) that he is likely to

succeed on the merits[;] (2) that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of

preliminary relief; (3) that the balance of equities tips in his favor; and (4) that an injunction is in

the public interest.” State v. Musk, 769 F. Supp. 3d 1, 4–5 (D.D.C. 2025) (quoting Aamer v.

Obama, 742 F.3d 1023, 1038 (D.C. Cir. 2014)). The third and fourth factors generally “merge”

when the government opposes a motion for emergency injunctive relief. Nken v. Holder, 556

U.S. 418, 435 (2009).3 At base, “[c]rafting” emergency or preliminary relief “is an exercise of

3 The Court notes that some doctrinal wrinkles persist when it comes to the standard for

preliminary relief. The D.C. Circuit has previously applied a “sliding scale” approach, in which

a stronger showing on one factor may make up for a weaker showing on others, but the Circuit

has also flagged that such an approach may be “in tension with intervening Supreme Court

decisions” suggesting that each factor must be considered independently. Changji Esquel Textile

11Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 12 of 37

discretion and judgment, often dependent as much on the equities of a given case as the

substance of the legal issues it presents.” Kim v. FINRA, 698 F. Supp. 3d 147, 161–62 (D.D.C.

2023) (quoting Trump v. Int’l Refugee Assistance Proj., 582 U.S. 571, 579 (2017)).

III. Analysis

As initially presented in the TRO motion, the limited, albeit multi-part, question before

the Court was whether it may order the Board to (1) invite Representative Beatty to the March 16

meeting; (2) give her access to the information she requested in advance of the meeting; (3)

permit her to participate meaningfully at the meeting; and (4) authorize her to vote on the closure

and any proposed construction of the Kennedy Center at the meeting. As the briefing process

has unfolded, the first request for relief has resolved itself. The parties now agree that Beatty’s

invitation to the meeting got lost in the “mail,” and that she will be permitted to attend the

meeting, after all. So on that front, there is no relief left for the Court to order.

Setting that request aside, the government has expressly refused to grant Beatty’s

requests for information about the closure and the opportunity to vote. In fact, it contends not

only that she lost the right to vote last May, but also that she never had the right to begin with.

With regard to Beatty’s request about speaking at the meeting, the government states that she

“will be permitted to participate, to the same extent as any other trustee, subject to the rules

governing Board proceedings and as applied in the Chair’s discretion.” Opp. to TRO Mot. at 7.

Beatty points out that this assurance is “carefully caveated” and therefore gives her reason to

think, based on past experience, that she will again be silenced. TRO Reply Br. at 21. The Court

Co. Ltd. v. Raimondo, 40 F.4th 716, 726 (D.C. Cir. 2022). The Court would come to the same

conclusions laid out in this Memorandum Opinion under either approach.

12Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 13 of 37

will review the TRO factors as to the informational request first before turning to Beatty’s right

to participate in and vote at the meeting.

A. Access to Information

1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits

a. Threshold Issues: Cause of Action, Duty of Prudence, and Trustee

Standing

In her FAC, Beatty alleges that the Defendants have violated her rights as a trustee and

fiduciary of the Kennedy Center, as laid out in 20 U.S.C. § 76l. See FAC ¶¶ 84–91. That claim,

over which the Court has federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, serves as a basis

for Beatty’s present emergency request for access to information about the Kennedy Center’s

planned closure in advance of the March 16 meeting. In the alternative, Beatty’s complaint

suggests that her lack of access to information and general exclusion from the closure decision

are ultra vires. See id. ¶¶ 99–100.

At this juncture, the Court is persuaded that Beatty may sue under the terms of the

Kennedy Center’s organic statute itself and thus need not address whether the alleged violations

are alternatively actionable through the vehicle of an ultra vires claim. Moreover, the

government has not meaningfully objected to Beatty’s claims for emergency relief for lack of a

cause of action; instead, it focuses on rebutting her claims on their merits.

Under Beatty’s theory, which the Court accepts at this preliminary stage, a Kennedy

Center trustee can sue under 20 U.S.C. § 76l because the statute affords the Board “all the usual

powers and obligations of a trustee in respect of all trust funds administered by it,” id. § 76l(b),

and the Board, in turn, is “composed of” its ex officio and general trustee members, id. §

76h(a)(2). The statute thus confers “the usual powers and obligations of a trustee” on its

individual members. Neither side disputes that in so stating, Congress intended to legislate

13Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 14 of 37

against the backdrop of common-law trust principles. That consensus is unsurprising, given that

“words of a statute must be read in their context and with a view to their place in the overall

statutory scheme,” including with an eye toward “statutory history,” and, in appropriate

circumstances, “considerations of incorporation and the old-soil canon.” Jazz Pharmaceuticals,

Inc. v. Kennedy, 141 F.4th 254, 261 (D.C. Cir. 2025) (cleaned up); cf. Central States, Se. and

Sw. Areas Pension Fund, Inc. v. Central Transport, Inc., 472 U.S. 559, 570 (1985) (explaining

that in the ERISA context, “rather than explicitly enumerating all of the powers and duties of

trustees and other fiduciaries, Congress invoked the common law of trusts to define the general

scope of their authority and responsibility”).

Looking to those common-law principles, the Court cannot but conclude that, as a

general matter, Kennedy Center trustees may sue to rectify an infringement on their ability to

carry out their fiduciary duties. See, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 81(1)–(2) (“If a trust

has more than one trustee, except as otherwise provided by the terms of the trust, each trustee has

a duty and the right to participate in the administration of the trust,” and “[e]ach trustee also has

a duty to use reasonable care to prevent a co-trustee from committing a breach of trust and, if a

breach of trust occurs, to obtain redress.”); id. § 94(2) (authorizing “suit for the enforcement” of

both private and charitable trusts); id. § 94, cmt. c (“If a trust has several trustees, one or more of

them can maintain a suit against one or more others to compel them to perform their duties under

the trust or to enjoin them from committing or compel them to redress a breach of trust.”).4 The

4 The Court will refract present questions of trust law through well-established and oft-

cited treatises, as well as the statutory and case law of the District of Columbia, which it has no

reason to believe is consequentially distinct from the trust law of other jurisdictions. The parties

appear to agree that relying on D.C. authority to resolve this motion is appropriate. See Opp. to

TRO Mot. at 10–11 (“Given the location of the Center in the District of Columbia and the fact

that this Court and the D.C. Circuit have previously assessed similar trustee claims under the

laws of the District of Columbia, providing persuasive and potentially binding precedent for this

14Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 15 of 37

statute further contemplates that judicial review is available where a trustee suffers such an

infringement, as it provides that the “actions of the Board relating to performing arts and to

payments made or directed to be made by the Board from any trust funds shall not be subject to

review by any officer or agency other than a court of law.” 20 U.S.C. § 76k(e) (emphasis

added).

Having examined the vehicle for Beatty’s common law-inflected statutory claim, the

Court now looks under the hood. Beatty asserts that she needs access to information in advance

of the March 16 meeting because, without it, she cannot fulfill one of her core fiduciary duties as

a trustee—namely, her duty of prudence. It is black-letter trust law that a trustee “has a duty to

administer the trust as a prudent person would, in light of the purposes, terms, and other

circumstances of the trust.” Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 77(1). That duty “requires the

exercise of reasonable care, skill, and caution.” Id. § 77(2). And exercising fiduciary care, in

turn, requires the trustee to expend

reasonable effort and diligence in planning the administration of the trust, in making

and implementing administrative decisions, and in monitoring the trust situation,

with due attention to the trust’s objectives and the interests of the beneficiaries.

This will ordinarily involve investigation appropriate to the particular action under

consideration, and also obtaining relevant information about such matters as the

contents and resources of the trust estate and the circumstances and requirements

of the trust and its beneficiaries.

Id. § 77, cmt. b (emphasis added).

The duty of prudence thus entails at least some modicum of access to information.

Moreover, as a leading treatise in the field explains, the “correlative of the duty of a co-trustee to

participate actively in the administration” of a trust is “the duty of a co-trustee, particularly one

Court to apply, Defendants proceed here as if District of Columbia law governs.”); TRO Reply

Br. at 8–12 (applying D.C. trust law).

15Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 16 of 37

empowered to exercise greater control of having greater knowledge of trust affairs, to inform

each co-trustee of all material facts that have come to his or her attention and that are relevant to

the administration of the trust.” G. Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees § 584. That

transparency is equally important when it comes to “a trustee with a minority vote.” Id.5

Before considering what the duty of prudence means for Beatty in the lead-up to the

March 16 meeting, two preliminary points. First, the government suggests that the Kennedy

Center, as a charitable trust rather than a private trust, “is subject to very different legal rules,

including a balancing of policy concerns and objectives.” Opp. to TRO Mot. at 10 n.2. Not

quite. Although there are some important differences between charitable trusts and private

trusts—as the Court will discuss in just a moment—

“[t]he powers, duties, and liabilities of

trustees of a charitable trust are, with only a few exceptions, the same as the powers, duties[,]

and liabilities of private trusts.” Bogert, Law of Trusts § 391; see also Restatement (Third) of

Trusts § 1, cmt. c (“Much of the law stated throughout this Restatement applies to charitable

trusts.”); D.C. Code § 19-1301.02 (“This chapter applies to express trusts, charitable or

noncharitable . . .”). In any case, the parties do not suggest that the duty of prudence is applied

differently to charitable trustees as to private trustees.

5 Beatty’s briefing and argument at the TRO hearing leaned heavily on the D.C. Circuit’s

decision in Cummock v. Gore, 180 F.3d 282 (D.C. Cir. 1999). That opinion, which confronted

the exclusion of a member of a committee established under the Federal Advisory Committee

Act, supports the general principle that members of deliberative bodies need information to make

decisions. It also reinforces the “absurd[ity]” of holding that a “public deliberative body that is

subject to precise statutory mandates to ensure openness and fair deliberations” may “simply

exclude unpopular viewpoints from participation.” Id. at 291. While informative, the decision is

somewhat orthogonal to this case, which doesn’t involve the same “precise statutory mandates.”

Given the hybrid statutory/common-law theory of Beatty’s claim, she gets more mileage out of

the deep body of trust law that underscores the importance of information to prudent decision-

making.

16Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 17 of 37

Second, the government submits that Beatty lacks a sort of common-law standing to sue

for breach of fiduciary duty because, when it comes to charitable trusts, “the traditional rule has

been that only a public officer, usually the state Attorney General, has standing to bring an action

to enforce the terms of the trust.” Hooker v. Edes Home, 579 A.2d 608, 612 (D.C. 1990). That

general rule is true—and crucial—when it comes to the risk that “any and all” beneficiaries of a

charitable trust, who are necessarily a “large and constantly shifting” class because the res of a

charitable trust is to be applied “for some form of public benefit,” may engage in “vexatious

litigation” and place undue, “recurring burdens on the trust res.

” Id. at 611–12 (quoting, in part,

G. Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees § 411 (2d ed. rev. 1977)). “An exception to th[is]

general rule . . . exists where an individual seeking enforcement of the trust has a ‘special

interest’ in continued performance of the trust distinguishable from that of the public at large.”

Id. at 612. In order to proceed under the “special interest” exception, a plaintiff must

demonstrate that she belongs to a “particular,” “sharply defined,” and “limited” class of potential

beneficiaries and that she challenges more than “an ordinary exercise of discretion on a matter

expressly committed to the trustees.” Id. at 614–15.

The Court does not read Hooker, its underlying rationale, or its progeny to restrict the

availability of a fiduciary-duty cause of action against a trust when the suit is brought by other

trustees. For one thing, D.C.’s Uniform Trust Code provides both that trustees “shall exercise

reasonable care” to “[p]revent a cotrustee from committing a serious breach of trust” and

“[c]ompel a cotrustee to redress a serious breach of trust,” see D.C. Code § 19-1307.03(g)(1)–

(2), and that “[t]he settlor of a charitable trust, among others, may maintain a proceeding to

enforce the trust,” id. § 19-1304.05(c) (emphasis added).

17Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 18 of 37

For another, both the Restatement of Trusts and Bogert—key sources of trust law

authority in the District6

—acknowledge that “[a] suit can be maintained for the enforcement of a

charitable trust” by a “co-trustee,” in addition to the Attorney General, other public officer, or

another person with a special interest in enforcement. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 391;

Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 94(2) (“A suit for the enforcement of a charitable trust may be

maintained only by the Attorney General or other appropriate public officer or by a co-trustee or

successor trustee, by a settlor, or by another person who has a special interest in the enforcement

of the trust.”); Bogert, Law of Trusts § 413 (“Cotrustees, former and subsequent trustees, or

subtrustees frequently obtain standing to enforce a charitable trust. These individuals hold a

fiduciary interest that distinguishes them from the general public and provides reason to believe

that, in a representational capacity, such a person will give whole-hearted support to the cause of

the charity.”).

The Moon cases, on which the government heavily relies, are not to the contrary—if

anything, they bolster Beatty’s position. See Family Fed’n for World Peace v. Hyun Jin Moon,

129 A.3d 234 (D.C. 2015) (“Moon I”); Family Fed’n for World Peace v. Hyun Jin Moon, 338

A.3d 10 (D.C. 2025) (“Moon II”). The plaintiffs in those D.C. Court of Appeals cases alleged

that the defendants “undertook a series of coordinated and calculated illegal actions to usurp” a

D.C. nonprofit corporation “and its corporate assets and wrest control” of the corporation from

the Unification Church religious movement. Moon I, 129 A.3d at 238. Two of the five plaintiffs

6 See, e.g., He Depu v. Yahoo! Inc., 950 F.3d 897, 901 n.2 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (“Because

the D.C. Court of Appeals cites Bogert on Trusts and the Restatement (Second) of Trusts as

authoritative in applying the common law of the District, we do so as well.”); Cabaniss v.

Cabaniss, 464 A.2d 87, 91 (D.C. 1983) (“In the absence of any definitive case or other authority

in this jurisdiction on the specific matter at issue, we have turned to, and conclude we agree[]

with[,] the pertinent sections of the Restatement . . .”).

18Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 19 of 37

in the case were former directors of the corporation before they were “ousted,” id. at 240, so they

presumably owed a fiduciary duty to the corporation in a way that was unique from the other

beneficiary plaintiffs. The Court of Appeals concluded that both the former director plaintiffs

and other plaintiffs satisfied the special interest test, permitting them to “contest the complained-

of actions by the defendants” under trust law. Id. at 244. But the Court of Appeals was also

careful to note that, “[i]n addition to finding that the ousted directors have special interest

standing, . . . they fall within the definition of ‘among others’ in D.C. Code § 19-1304.05 . . . for

enforcement of charitable trusts, and may ‘maintain a proceeding to enforce the trust.’” Id. at

244 n.16. And it elaborated that the D.C.’s Uniform Trust Code “establishes that when co-

trustees are appointed to act as stewards of a trust, each trustee shall exercise reasonable care

to . . . prevent a co-trustee from committing a serious breach of trust; and . . . compel a co-trustee

to redress a serious breach of trust.” Id. (cleaned up).

The Court therefore does not view Hooker or the Moon cases as obstacles to Beatty’s

common-law standing to sue as a trustee and declines to apply the special interest test given

Beatty’s unique position and fiduciary interest in protecting the trust.7

b. Underlying Merits

With the brush cleared, the Court returns to the question at hand: Has Beatty clearly

shown that she needs access to some preliminary information in advance of the March 16

meeting in order to fulfill her fiduciary duty? On the record before the Court at this early stage,

7 The Court further notes that Representative Beatty was appointed a trustee by virtue of

her elected position, so perhaps she is a type of “public official” who would have standing to

enforce the trust under what Hooker calls the “traditional rule.” Cf. Raven v. Sajet, 334 F. Supp.

3d 22, 30 (D.D.C. 2018) (explaining that “political accountability persists” at the Board of

Regents of the Smithsonian Institution because it “sports heads from the Executive, Legislative,

and Judicial Branches,” along with individuals “appointed by politically-accountable

representatives in Congress”). In any case, the Court need not reach this question today.

19Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 20 of 37

the answer is yes. According to President Trump’s Truth Social post, the Kennedy Center has

undergone a “one year review,” during which time the President (and perhaps others) consulted

with “Contractors, Musical Experts, Art Institutions, and other Advisors and Consultants” to

envision its future. See Truth Social Post at 1. After that review, and “[b]ased on [his]

findings,” President Trump concluded that temporary closure for “Construction, Revitalization,

and Complete Rebuilding” was in order. Id. He further touted that “[f]inancing is completed,

and fully in place!” Id. In the President’s words, “[t]his important decision, based on input from

many Highly Respected Experts, will take a tired, broken, and dilapidated Center . . . and turn it

into a World Class Bastion of Arts, Music, and Entertainment . . . .” Id.

The President’s social media post underscores that he, along with contractors, experts,

advisors, and consultants, have been reimagining the Kennedy Center for a full year. The

financing for this “Complete Rebuilding” is “fully in place.” Although Mr. LaFauci’s

declaration attests that “there will be no significant construction work” at the site until after July

7 of this year, “some preliminary work” has already “been started.” LaFauci Decl. ¶ 5 (emphasis

added). And “limited information regarding construction planning has been presented to the

members of the Building and Grounds Committee, of which [Beatty] is not a member.” Id. ¶ 6.

As the foregoing facts suggest, a project of this salience and magnitude—which threatens

to involve at least some demolition and reconstruction of a major national memorial and active

performing arts theater—does not happen overnight. If it is the case that many external advisors

and Board members have been consulted, the financing is set, and already-made decisions are

currently being implemented on-site, there must be some concrete information to share with the

full Board, including Beatty. The government’s assertion, both in its briefing and at the hearing,

that such information is “preliminary” and not yet sufficiently “finalized” to share with the full

20Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 21 of 37

slate of decisionmakers—just four days before the Board is set to vote on a complete, two-year

closure of the Center they are statutorily charged with overseeing—borders on preposterous.

That’s not all. Beatty has submitted declarations from several experts of her own,

including a former president of the New York Philharmonic and a practitioner in arts

management. Together, these declarations reveal that

[a] governing board charged with stewardship of an institution like the Kennedy

Center would expect to receive, before approving a closure of this kind, a

comprehensive package of planning materials: an overall architectural concept,

identification of the major professional consultants who will lead the project,

timelines, budgets, and supporting analysis from each of the relevant specialists.

See Declaration of Deborah Borda (“Borda Decl.”), ECF No. 13-19 ¶ 18; see also Declaration of

Edwin Andrew Taylor (“Taylor Decl.”), ECF No. 13-20 ¶ 15 (same).

It hardly takes an inferential leap to conclude that a Kennedy Center trustee who wants to

“exercise reasonable effort and diligence” in “planning,” “making,” and “implementing” trust-

related decisions, see Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 77, cmt. b, would require more than the

length of a single meeting to evaluate such a “comprehensive package.” The government’s

assurance that Beatty “will be provided with [unspecified] information regarding the proposed

construction at the Center” at the March 16 meeting is thus cold comfort—and, from a fiduciary

perspective, strikes the Court as falling below even a forgiving standard of prudence.

To be clear, none of this is to say that all trustees at all stages in the trajectory of a major

project must have all the information about the undertaking. As the government points out,

Congress authorized the Board to set procedures to govern its internal business, and that may

very well encompass when and how it conveys information to its trustees. See 20 U.S.C.

§ 76l(a). The trouble here is that the Defendants have flatly refused to provide any information

within a timespan that any reasonable trustee—including general trustees—would deem

necessary to assess a proposal of such magnitude. In other words, these are exceptional

21Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 22 of 37

circumstances, both in the potential immensity of the announced work on the Kennedy Center

and the manner in which most of its trustees have been sidelined from one of the more

consequential decisions in the institution’s lifespan. As such, the Court finds that Beatty is likely

to succeed in proving that the failure to timely provide her with any information about the

Kennedy Center’s imminent closure has infringed on her fiduciary rights and duties under 20

U.S.C. § 76l and the principles of trust law it imports.

2. Irreparable Harm and Balance of Equities

In light of the foregoing, the Court has little trouble concluding that Beatty’s lack of

access to core information about the Kennedy Center’s closure and reconstruction plans will

cause her irreparable harm, and that her harm outweighs any conceivable prejudice to the

government.

First, the Court considers Beatty’s irreparable harm, for which the D.C. Circuit “has set a

high standard.” Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches v. England, 454 F.3d 290, 297 (D.C. Cir.

2006). The injury must “be both certain and great,” and “actual and not theoretical.” Id.

(citation omitted). It must also be imminent and beyond remediation without the Court’s

intervention. Id.

Again, to date, Beatty has not received any information from her co-trustees, Board

leadership, or staff as to even the basic scope of the work that is planned for the Kennedy

Center—whether it turns out to be modest renovation, complete demolition and rebuilding, or

something in between. See Beatty Decl. ¶¶ 19, 24, 28. This harm is certain, great, and actual, as

Beatty and her co-trustees are tasked with making a decision of serious consequence for the

nation’s flagship cultural institution. The informational deprivation has been ongoing for at least

a few weeks, if not longer, since Beatty formally requested eight categories of documents from

22Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 23 of 37

the President and Mr. Grenell on February 20. “[T]imely awareness” is “necessary” here

because there are “ongoing proceedings of national importance,” and under such exigent

circumstances, “stale information is of little value.” Brennan Ctr. for Justice v. Dep’t of

Commerce, 498 F. Supp. 3d 87, 101 (D.D.C. 2020) (cleaned up). Nor is there an imminence

problem, not least because the Board is slated to make a decision about the near-term future of

the Kennedy Center in a few days. Finally, the specific harm considered here is irreparable

because, after the March 16 meeting passes, “there can be no do over and no redress” as to the

lost opportunity to exercise her fiduciary duty in that pivotal moment. League of United Latin

Am. Citizens v. Executive Off. of President, 808 F. Supp. 3d 29, 81 (D.D.C. 2025) (citation

omitted). Beatty has faced, and will continue to face, irreparable harm without the information

she needs to make an informed decision about the Kennedy Center’s future.

Second, balancing the equities. The government’s showing of prejudice is lackluster.

Defendants’ submission that they would incur “significant harm” by having to turn over some set

of documents rings hollow. Opp. to TRO Mot. at 16. Beatty “is not asking” for anything

“bespoke,” but instead the “timelines, budgets, and plans Defendants already have prepared.

TRO Reply Br. at 3. Since plans for major work at the Kennedy Center have been brewing for a

year, the government is hard-pressed to argue that there is no readily-available material to

provide. If there are no such plans, the Defendants are free to say so. Given that the government

has proffered no other monetary, informational, or other administrative harm to outweigh the

irreparable injury Beatty has identified, she has carried her burden for emergency relief by a

clear showing.

23Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 24 of 37

3. Scope of Relief

Finally, the Court considers whether to grant Beatty’s request for all eight categories of

information detailed in her February 20 letter, or some other subset of information. Given that

this dispute has arrived in Court very late in the game, it might have been sufficient for present

purposes to direct Board leadership to circulate whatever presentation they have planned for

March 16. That way, at the very least, Beatty could preview what would be discussed a few days

in advance. But based on the government’s briefing and representations at the TRO hearing,

even that material is a moving target and/or has not been “finalized.” Opp. to TRO Mot. at 16;

see also TRO Hearing Tr. 56:10–17 (government counsel explaining that it “could take up until

the moment” of the meeting to finalize the presentation of information and that the Board’s chair

“has a well-known proclivity for trying to make sure that pieces of information are included that

might be relevant . . . to upcoming matters that he’s involved in”).

Absent any inkling of what, if anything, will be presented at the meeting, the Court is

forced to craft its own list of materials to order the Defendants to supply. In arriving at the

documents described below, the Court has attempted to carefully balance Beatty’s obligation to

be prepared to consider matters before the Board with the Board’s power to manage its own

affairs. It is neither the Court’s role nor desire to micromanage Board meetings or delve into the

minutia of the Board’s decision-making process. Nor does the following list require the Board to

create a “bespoke” presentation for Beatty. It encompasses standard items that any prudent

trustee would expect to review before reaching a decision on the matter being presented.

Moreover, all the materials, if they exist, should be readily available to the Defendants. With

some narrowing, the Court’s order draws from the list of documents that Beatty requested in her

February 20 letter, less a few categories which appear to be moot given the unfolding of events.

24Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 25 of 37

Accordingly, the Court will order Mr. Grenell or his designee to provide Beatty, through

counsel, within 24 hours of the March 16 meeting:

1. All documents prepared for or presented to the Board’s Buildings and Grounds

Committee in connection with its vote to recommend the closure and any subsequent

construction projects.

2. The following categories of information, to the extent not covered by (1):

a. All information provided to members of the Board’s Buildings and Grounds

Committee in advance of its vote to recommend (i) the closure of the Center,

and (ii) any subsequent construction projects on the Center’s grounds;

b. The latest consolidated budget for the anticipated work;

c. A list of the artistic or performance contracts that will be affected by the

planned closure of the Center, or alternatively, documents indicating which

artistic or performance contracts will be affected by the planned closure;

d. A list of the experts or advisors who provided input during “one year review”

of the Center as described in President Trump’s Truth Social Post, or

alternatively, documents indicating which experts or advisors were consulted;

and

e. Any reports provided by those experts and advisors to the Center’s leadership

or the Building and Grounds Committee relating to the “one year review” or

the planned closure of the Center.

3. If any of the documents described in (1) or (2) do not exist, Mr. Grenell or his

designee must notify Beatty of that fact in writing.

25Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 26 of 37

B. Right to Participate and Vote

The Court now turns to Beatty’s contention that the Defendants are poised to violate her

statutory fiduciary rights if she is not permitted to speak and vote at the meeting. The threshold

conclusions about Beatty’s cause of action and trustee standing outlined above apply here.

1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits

In evaluating her participation and voting requests for relief, the Court will start by

briefly reiterating a point it made earlier. The Kennedy Center statute confers “the usual powers

and obligations of a trustee” on the Board’s individual members. 20 U.S.C. § 76l(b). In addition

to a right to information derived from a trustee’s duty of prudence, a trustee also has a “duty and

the right to participate in the administration of the trust,” except “as otherwise provided by the

terms of the trust.” Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 81(1). In other words, trustees have both an

obligation and an opportunity to participate in trust decision-making, whether or not that takes

the precise form of casting a vote. Cf. id. § 39, cmt. a (“[W]hen feasible all trustees must be

consulted before decisions are made.”).

Beyond being well-rooted in black-letter trust law, this default rule is entirely sensible;

after all, if an individual joins a deliberative body, but is then entirely “wall[ed] . . . off” from its

operations, her membership is “render[ed] . . . essentially meaningless.” Cummock v. Gore, 180

F.3d 282, 291 (D.C. Cir. 1999). To render Beatty’s Kennedy Board membership “meaningless”

not only contravenes common-law trust principles, but also by extension, Congress’s carefully

chosen language. These considerations persuade the Court that a blanket prohibition on Beatty’s

ability to participate at Board meetings, including by speaking and engaging in deliberation,

violates her core fiduciary right to participate in the trust’s administration.

26Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 27 of 37

Whether Beatty has a statutory right to vote at Board meetings, including the upcoming

one, is a trickier question. In May 2025, the Board amended its bylaws to designate general

trustees as voting and ex officio trustees as non-voting. Beatty contends that the Center’s organic

statute vests her with a right to vote in Board proceedings, and therefore the May 2025

amendments are void.

To assess this claim, it is necessary to explore what the statute does and doesn’t say on

the matter. Congress has delineated whom the Board “shall be composed of” in granular detail.

See 20 U.S.C. § 76h(a)(2). It has also provided that the Board “may function notwithstanding

vacancies and twelve members of the Board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of

business.” See 20 U.S.C. § 76l(a). And the Board is “authorized . . . to make such bylaws, rules,

and regulations, as it deems necessary for the administration of its functions under this

subchapter, including, among other matters, bylaws, rules, and regulations relating to the

administration of its trust funds” and, relevant here, “the organization and procedure of the

Board.” Id. (emphasis added).

By its plain terms, then, the statute says nothing about which members may or may not

vote. How are we to read that silence, in light of the other provisions just mentioned? Though a

close question, the Court is—at least at this early stage—persuaded that each Board member

identified in § 76h(a)(2) is likely entitled to vote at Board meetings, so the provision of the May

2025 bylaws that strips ex officio members of their ability to vote is likely void. It reaches this

tentative conclusion for the textual, structural, and historical reasons that follow.

The Court begins with the observation that the term ex officio does not inherently connote

that a trusteeship is solely honorary in nature. It means, rather, that a role is “[b]y virtue or

because of an office.” Ex Officio, Black’s Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024). Though “[t]he term

27Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 28 of 37

is often misused as a synonym for ‘nonvoting,’” “an ex officio member is a voting member

unless the applicable governing document provides otherwise.” Id.

Next, the Center’s organic statute does not distinguish between general trustees and ex

officio members in any way, other than to identify who they are and to specify the term limits

and parameters of general trustees. See 20 U.S.C. § 76h(a)(2). Coupled with the section

providing that trustees possess “all the usual powers and obligations . . . in respect of all trust

funds” they collectively administer, 20 U.S.C. § 76l(b), the lack of any meaningful distinction

between general and ex officio trustees suggests at least a baseline presumption that they possess

the same fundamental “powers and obligations” under trust law.

Additionally, as Beatty points out, Congress regularly differentiates between voting and

non-voting members of other bodies. See generally TRO Mot. at 13–14 (collecting citations). In

statutes creating various boards, commissions, and centers, it has specified that ex officio

members are non-voting, or that some subset of ex officio members is non-voting. See id. at 14–

15 (collecting citations). That Congress has not done the same here is perhaps telling.

To this point, the government has a rejoinder:

[I]f Congress knows how to impose restrictions on a Board’s ability to manage its

affairs—e.g., by explicitly providing that certain trustees do and do not have voting

rights—then its decision not to impose similar restrictions on the Center suggests it

intended the Board to have full discretion to manage its internal affairs.

Opp. to TRO Mot. at 9. But Beatty would seem to be correct that this argument “proves too

much.” TRO Reply Br. at 14. For example, it would be both bizarre and potentially contrary to

the statute for the Board, in its discretion, to strip voting rights from all the general trustees. See

20 U.S.C. § 76l(a) (requiring a quorum of twelve members in order to “transact[] . . . business”).

Neither does it seem right that the Board could agree to strip the voting rights of all but a

particular set of twelve members. Yet taken to its logical conclusion, the government’s approach

28Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 29 of 37

would seem to allow for an ever-changing set and number of voting members, constrained only

by the quorum provision. That state of affairs strikes the Court as not just a mess, but also

inconsistent with the background principle that there are no distinctions between trustees aside

from the basis of their membership on the Board.8

This brings the Court to a more fundamental point: While the Board is free to make

“bylaws, rules, and regulations, as it deems necessary” for “administrati[ve],” “organization[al],”

and “procedur[al]” purposes, there are some substantive trustee rights and duties that lie beyond

the terrain of bylaws and may be molded only by the trust’s paramount governing document—

the organic statute. Id. To be sure, the bulk of the Board’s operations are appropriately laid out

in bylaws, a core day-to-day governance document, rather than the statute. But where possible,

courts are to give “effect” to “every clause and part of a statute.” RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC

v. Amalgamated Bank, 566 U.S. 639, 645 (D.D.C. 2012) (citation omitted). For this reason, the

Court declines to read the “bylaws, rules, and regulations” language in the statute as a catch-all

that automatically permits the Board to internally regulate any subject, just because that subject

is not expressly mentioned in the organic statute. Congress’s references to “administration,”

“organization,” and “procedure” must be doing some work. Based on the circumstances

8 Perhaps relevant here, in support of their arguments, the parties each lay claim to the

same provision of the Smithsonian Institution’s organic statute, which authorizes its Board of

Regents to “modify the number of members, manner of appointment of members, or tenure of

members, of the boards or commissions” under its jurisdiction “other than” itself, the Kennedy

Center, and two other boards. 20 U.S.C. § 42(b). In Beatty’s view, the statutory limitation

“reflects Congress’s deliberate decision to fix the decision-making structure of the Kennedy

Center Board by statute rather than allow it to evolve through internal bylaw amendments.”

TRO Reply Br. at 16. In the government’s estimation, the fact that Congress did not impose on

the Kennedy Center Board the same restriction it imposed on the Smithsonian Board to tinker

with its own composition suggests that the Kennedy Center Board is in fact free to tinker. TRO

Hearing Tr. 50:15–51:3. As both of those readings are plausible, the Court doesn’t find that

piece of statutory evidence particularly illuminating at this stage.

29Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 30 of 37

presented here, a trustee’s categorical ability to vote tilts toward the substantive side of the line,

not the procedural. The right to vote would seem to implicate a trustee’s core duties, beyond the

Board’s internal organization and housekeeping. By contrast, the Board’s ability to perform

such tasks as “organiz[ing]” itself into committees and reserving only certain matters for full

Board approval strikes the Court as well within the Board’s discretion.

On a final note, the Court takes account of the 1994 amendments to the Kennedy Center

statute, which added several new ex officio members to the Board. At this point, it is not crystal

clear which way these amendments cut. In a corresponding House Report, legislators explained

that “[a]lthough these trustees are ex officio, they are permitted to vote.” H.R. Rep. No. 103-

453, pt. 1, at 11 (1994). Though this language did not make it into the text of the statute, it at

least suggests that Congress did not intend for ex officio trustees to be categorically barred from

voting in all Board proceedings. Still, the language is no doubt permissive. So, at least on the

record before the Court, the notion that the House Report is an unequivocal expression of

Congress’s intent that ex officio members vote is not airtight.

To recap, the Kennedy Center’s organic statute neither expressly prohibits nor expressly

authorizes ex officio members to vote at full Board meetings. In the absence of a clear signal, the

Court has parsed the specific text of the statute, its structure (both internally and in relation to the

rest of the Code), and the only directly on point piece of legislative history that the parties have

brought to the Court’s attention. Taken together, these data points suggest that general trustees

and ex officio trustees were not meant to have different voting powers, and, as a result, that the

May 2025 bylaw amendments stripping ex officio members of their right to vote are likely

contrary to the statute and void.

30Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 31 of 37

That is the legal side of the ledger. The factual side is more puzzling: Different

individuals affiliated with the Board at different times offer divergent perspectives on whether ex

officio members have ever voted in the past. Compare Beatty Decl.; Wilker Decl., with LaFauci

Decl.; Shuster Decl. Notwithstanding that the Board apparently engages in voice votes that may

make it difficult to discern who exactly has participated in any given vote, there are surely

meeting minutes or other relevant records that, once unearthed, will shed light on the Board’s

historical practice. Yet the government has not filed any such documentation thus far.

Based on the present record, the Court is moved more by Beatty’s attestation that she

herself has voted at Board meetings, along with a declaration from a former president of the

Center responsible for “day-to-day operations” who explained that “the ex officio members of

the Board were treated in all respects the same as the trustees appointed by the President,”

including that they shared the same “voting” and “participatory” rights. Beatty Decl. at ¶ 6;

Wilker Decl. at ¶¶ 4–6. The government’s declarations pale in comparison. The government’s

first affiant, Mr. LaFauci, only joined the Center last spring, and his declaration is vague as to the

basis for his conclusion that ex officio members have never voted. See LaFauci Decl. at ¶ 3

(“from [LaFauci’s] personal knowledge, and from Center records that [he] reviewed, it is [his]

understanding and belief that ex officio Board members have . . . [not] voted”). And although

the government’s second affiant, Mr. Shuster, attests that during his seven years as an ex officio

Board member from 2012 to 2019, he never voted, heard about, or saw another ex officio

member vote, Shuster Decl., ECF No. 19-2 ¶ 2, the Court lacks sufficient context to infer from

his declaration that such voting never happened. That Beatty has the more accurate read of the

Board’s historical practice is bolstered by the tax forms she has filed, which indicate that the

Center has institutionally represented in recent years that all trustees may vote, see ECF No. 22

31Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 32 of 37

at 1–2—though the possibility remains that the Board adopted different voting practices in

different eras of its storied history.

The Court has addressed this factual dispute given the considerable time and effort the

parties have devoted to it. But at the end of the day, that dispute is largely beside the point. As

the parties have recognized, Beatty’s right to vote seems to rest on a legal question of statutory

interpretation. In a Chevron world, the Court might have deferred to the Board’s reasonable

interpretation of the statute.9 But we are no longer in that world, and recent developments in the

law counsel in favor of interpreting the statute afresh, see Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,

603 U.S. 369 (2024)—even if that means that some Kennedy Center trustees or staff have held

erroneous understandings of the rights of ex officio members based on their personal experiences.

In sum, the Court tentatively concludes that the opportunity to vote at all in Board

proceedings tilts toward the substantive side of the line of trustee rights—making it a statutory

right under 20 U.S.C. § 76l(b)—rather than the procedural, administrative, or organizational side,

which is the province of the Board’s discretion under § 76l(a). The question is, to be sure,

debatable. And it is distinct from the question of whether ex officio trustees’ voting rights can be

curtailed in certain settings, such as Executive Sessions. Beatty has challenged the bylaws’

categorical prohibition on her right to vote on any Board matter whatsoever. On that claim, she

seems likely to succeed.

2. Irreparable Harm and Balance of Equities

Though the Court thinks that Beatty has the better statutory argument as to both

participation and the right to vote, her battle for emergency relief on these fronts is not yet won.

9 That said, the Court recognizes that the Kennedy Center, as a bureau of the

Smithsonian, is not treated as an agency for purposes of the APA. See Dong v. Smithsonian

Inst., 125 F.3d 877, 878–880, 883 (D.C. Cir. 1997).

32Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 33 of 37

She must still clearly establish irreparable harm and show that the balance of equites militates in

her favor. The Court considers these two factors first as to Beatty’s request for the right to

participate at the meeting and then as to her request for the right to cast a vote.

a. Right to Participate

There is no doubt that, if Beatty is completely barred from speaking at or otherwise

participating in the March 16 meeting, she will suffer irreparable harm. At the risk of repetition,

she has a well-defined right to participate in deliberations as a Board trustee, and once the March

16 meeting passes, “there can be no do over and no redress” as to the lost opportunity to exercise

her fiduciary duty. League of United Latin Am. Citizens, 808 F. Supp. 3d at 81 (citation

omitted). Although the facts alleged in the FAC and addressed in the briefing suggest that

Beatty may be unlikely to convince a majority of her colleagues to agree, she still has the right to

voice her dissent and at least try to persuade other colleagues of her position.

The government identifies no prejudice that would befall it or the public if Beatty

exercises her right to participate, so the balance of equities weighs in her favor. Instead, the

government insists that Beatty simply has no basis for relief as to her right to speak at the March

16 meeting because it has assured her that she “will be permitted to participate, to the same

extent as any other trustee, subject to the rules governing Board proceedings and as applied in

the Chair’s discretion.” Opp. to TRO Mot. at 7. This voluntary assurance is close to the relief

that Beatty seeks—“a narrow order that she may not be categorically prevented from exercising

her basic right as a trustee to speak at the meeting and participate in the deliberations,” TRO

Reply Br. at 21—but no cigar. The Court declines to “supervise the minute-to-minute conduct of

a Board meeting,” id., and will not dictate precisely how Beatty’s right should be respected. But

the Board’s rules and Chair’s discretion may not be wielded to entirely prevent her or other

33Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 34 of 37

dissenting colleagues from contributing to the conversation in some meaningful form. After all,

it doesn’t take a parliamentarian to recognize that inviting discussion on motions prior to a vote

is a ubiquitous occurrence at all board meetings.

b. Right to Vote

The Court finally turns to Beatty’s request to cast a vote at Monday’s meeting, whose

merits are less clearcut than those of the information and participation issues. The irreparable

harm and balance of the equities play out differently on this front. Recall that the irreparable

harm standard is “high,” and the injury must be both “certain and great.” See Chaplaincy, 454

F.3d at 297 (citations omitted). Although Beatty’s inability to exercise a statutorily-conferred

vote is sufficiently concrete and would not seem to be redressable once the vote has passed, the

Court will order that Beatty be able to participate at the meeting and engage in deliberations. As

a result, the marginal harm to her from not voting is much less, as she will be able to lodge her

objections on the record and have the opportunity to persuade her colleagues of her position.

The Court further notes that the change to the bylaws, which stripped her of her voting

rights, occurred last May, and she only sued to rectify the problem six months later in December.

To be clear, “a delay in filing” alone “is not a proper basis for denial” of emergency relief.

Gordon v. Holder, 632 F.3d 722, 724 (D.C. Cir. 2011). And a delay in filing is also

understandable when the “effects” of the challenged action “are more acutely felt” as time goes

on. Fed. Ed. Ass’n v. Trump, 795 F. Supp. 3d 74, 100 (D.D.C. 2025). However, delays “may

support a conclusion that the plaintiff cannot satisfy the irreparable harm prong.” Gordon, 632

F.3d at 725. Here, Beatty has not indicated that she opposed the change to the bylaws at the time

(e.g., by objecting to or voting against the change when she still had the power to do so), which,

34Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 35 of 37

notwithstanding the pressing circumstances here, somewhat lessens the force of her request for

the “extraordinary” relief of a TRO.

In balancing the equities, the Court notes that if it is wrong on the close question of

whether the May 2025 bylaws are contrary to statute and thus void, it will have infringed on the

Board’s statutorily-conferred authority to manage its own internal operations. The government

represents that, in preparing for the closure, the Board has “act[ed]” on “assumption that its duly

adopted bylaws were properly in effect.” See Opp. to TRO Mot. at 16–17. Furthermore, to the

extent that a ruling as to the validity of one provision of those bylaws could cast other provisions

into doubt, that qualifies as an injury to the Board—albeit one that could potentially be overcome

with additional factual representations as to prejudice (or the lack thereof) down the road. Given

the diminished injury associated with Beatty’s inability to vote, and the burden that an erroneous

statutory ruling could pose for the Board, the balance of equities tips in the government’s favor.

“The Supreme Court has emphasized that preliminary injunctive relief is never awarded

as of right and, as a matter of equitable discretion, it does not follow as a matter of course from a

plaintiff’s showing of a likelihood of success on the merits,” or even, for that matter, on a

showing of irreparable injury. Kim, 698 F. Supp. 3d at 172 (cleaned up). Even if the Court

tends to agree at this early stage with Beatty’s construction of the Kennedy Center’s organic

statute, “[j]udicial restraint is particularly warranted” given the statutory ambiguity and murkier

showings on the second and third TRO factors. C.G.B. v. Wolf, 464 F. Supp. 3d 174, 218

(D.D.C. 2020) (Cooper, J.).

IV. Conclusion

Having weighed the relevant considerations, the Court will GRANT in part and DENY

in part Beatty’s request for a TRO regarding various aspects of the Kennedy Center Board

35Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 36 of 37

meeting slated to take place on March 16. The parties agree that Beatty will be able to attend the

meeting. The Court finds that Beatty has made a clear showing that the extraordinary relief of a

TRO is warranted as to her right to have advance access to information that will inform the

exercise of her duty of prudence as a trustee. Likewise with her right to participate in the

meeting—meaning that she may not be categorically barred from speaking, as she allegedly was

at last December’s meeting, and must be provided a meaningful opportunity to voice her dissent.

The Court finds, however, that Beatty has not carried her burden as to her right to vote, at

least at this very early stage. While her statutory arguments are persuasive, the question whether

the statute provides a right to vote is not clearcut, and the irreparable harm and balance of the

equities persuade the Court to stay its hand, for now.

To avoid the risk of bad facts making bad law, the Court concludes by stressing the

uniqueness of this case and the narrowness of today’s ruling. Rarely should a trustee, in any

setting, be denied all material information and any opportunity to voice her dissent on a vote as

consequential as one to close and potentially rebuild the trust’s sole piece of real estate. Yet that

is what Representative Beatty alleges here, concerning no less than the lone monument for

President Kennedy in Washington and arguably the most important performing arts center in the

country. All this is to say that today’s ruling should not be taken to encourage future dissenting

trustees to race to the courthouse seeking emergency relief based on quotidian grievances about

board procedures. And it bears repeating that this ruling is not the Court’s final word in the case.

Tentative conclusions made now may not harden into settled judgments later. Still other issues

lie ahead. In light of the urgency and magnitude of the present situation, however, at least some

emergency relief is now in order.

36Case 1:25-cv-04480-CRC Document 24 Filed 03/14/26 Page 37 of 37

For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby

ORDERED that Plaintiff’s [13] Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order is

GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. It is further

ORDERED that Defendants shall supply Plaintiff with the information and documents

identified in this Memorandum Opinion, or indicate that the information and documents do not

exist, at least 24 hours before the March 16, 2026 meeting of the Kennedy Center Board. It is

further

ORDERED that Plaintiff shall be provided a meaningful opportunity to provide input

and not be categorically barred from speaking at the March 16, 2026 meeting.

SO ORDERED.

CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER

United States District Judge

Date: March 14, 2026

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