Bangkok Post

TRUMP PROBES A STRESS TEST FOR US JUSTICE

Attorney General Garland faces backlash as Trump inquiries reach crucial points.

- By Glenn Thrush

On the morning of Jan 6, 2021, Merrick Garland was busy typing away in his upstairs office at home, finalising remarks he planned to deliver the following day when he was to be introduced as Joe Biden’s nominee to be attorney general. The speech was originally a summons to restore the Justice Department “norms” of independen­ce after political meddling during the Trump administra­tion that depleted morale and sapped public confidence.

Then, after protesters burst through the barricades at the Capitol, Mr Garland began a major rewrite that referenced the attack, and fortified his pledge to hold anyone who threatened democracy to account, from bottom to top.

The department would impartiall­y investigat­e the attack, without “one rule for the powerful and one for the powerless,” Mr Garland said during his sombre introducti­on on Jan 7.

Mr Garland’s conjoined promises — restoring broad confidence in the department’s impartiali­ty while investigat­ing without favour the politicall­y powerful — were not mutually exclusive.

But achieving both simultaneo­usly is proving to be an elusive goal as prosecutor­s at the federal and local level investigat­e former President Donald Trump on multiple fronts.

Even in the absence so far of any charges against Mr Trump, political polarisati­on runs so deep, and mistrust of federal law enforcemen­t is so ingrained on the right, that efforts by Mr Garland and others to offer assurances that justice is being dispensed without regard to politics are often drowned out by powerful counterfor­ces.

Among the strongest of those forces are allies of Mr Trump who have sought to undercut the legitimacy of the Justice Department in general and the FBI in particular.

The Justice Department “has been a remarkable backstop,” said Lindsay Chervinsky, a presidenti­al historian and senior fellow at the Center for Presidenti­al History at Southern Methodist University. “But the department is being given a role that it was never really designed to have — defending American democracy.”

In some ways, the confluence of Trump-focused inquiries is putting the criminal justice system through a public stress test unlike any in American history.

Multiple Trump investigat­ions are marching toward decision points — and potential indictment­s — starting with the inquiry by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg into hush money payments to a porn actress.

In Georgia, a local prosecutor is moving toward a decision about charges related to efforts by Mr Trump and his allies to overturn Mr Trump’s 2020 election loss in that state.

Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith scored an important legal victory last week that could provide critical evidence in the investigat­ion into Mr Trump’s handling of classified documents and the possible obstructio­n of justice.

Mr Smith is also overseeing the parallel investigat­ion into Mr Trump’s efforts to remain in office after losing the 2020 election and his role in instigatin­g the events of Jan 6, 2021.

For months, Justice Department officials have been bracing for an all-out attack from the Republican-controlled House, which has launched investigat­ions into what it calls the “weaponisat­ion” of the department against the right.

Mr Trump set a more menacing tone shortly after the Mar-a-Lago search last year, when he told a rally in Pennsylvan­ia that “the FBI and the Justice Department have become vicious monsters.”

Officials expect the reaction to any indictment of Mr Trump by a grand jury in New York on the hush money charges to be swift and ferocious — a preview of the bigger reaction expected if federal prosecutor­s indict Mr Trump.

That apprehensi­on is especially acute inside the FBI, which bore the brunt of recriminat­ion following its long probe of the Trump campaign connection­s to Russia, and in the aftermath of the documents search of the former president’s Florida club and residence, Mar-a-Lago, in August. The FBI remains a popular target for Republican­s in Congress.

In the short term, senior Justice Department officials are concerned that Mr Bragg’s case, centred on how Mr Trump handled the porn actress’s threats to go public with an account of what she said was a sexual liaison with him, will be conflated in the public consciousn­ess with the differing federal investigat­ions into Mr Trump.

“Everything gets merged together, so people sometimes lose the nuance that these are separate investigat­ions conducted by different entities,” said Anthony D Coley, who served as Mr Garland’s spokesman until earlier this year.

Mr Coley said those concerns were not likely to influence Mr Smith, who has sought to portray himself inside the department as unswayed by external factors. Mr Garland has said much the same in his terse public discussion­s of the probe.

But Mr Garland, a former federal judge, is keenly aware that the prosecutio­n of a former president and leading presidenti­al candidate from the opposing party has enormous political consequenc­es.

And he has taken steps to ensure that the department’s side of the story is being told — disclosing key details of the investigat­ion in public court filings, to make the case that his investigat­ion represents the pursuit, not perversion, of justice.

 ?? ?? HIGH-STAKES GAMBLE: Attorney General Merrick Garland waits to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington on March 1.
HIGH-STAKES GAMBLE: Attorney General Merrick Garland waits to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington on March 1.
 ?? ?? Trump: Probes on many fronts
Trump: Probes on many fronts

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand