Gulf News

Cohen probe should worry Trump

Investigat­ion by federal prosecutor­s in the Southern District of New York can’t be blocked by firing Mueller

- By Noah Feldman ■ Noah Feldman is a Bloomberg View columnist.

Make no mistake: The US presidency of Donald Trump has hit a major inflection point with the investigat­ion of his personal lawyer Michael Cohen by federal prosecutor­s in the Southern District of New York.

Until now, Trump personally was in jeopardy only if Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s team in Washington finds evidence that he knew about collusion between his campaign and Russia in the 2016 election. Even if that happens, there might not be enough to justify impeachmen­t or a subsequent criminal charge of Trump. The president also has the power to fire Mueller to try to shut down the investigat­ion, especially if he thinks Mueller is going beyond the terms of his appointmen­t to investigat­e Russia.

Now, however, the Southern District can investigat­e potential Trump crimes in any area connected to Cohen, a fixer known to have arranged payoffs to an adult film star who says she had an affair with Trump. These prosecutor­s can go back as far as they want before the election, not to mention during and after it.

And there’s essentiall­y nothing Trump can do about it. He can’t fire the career civil servant prosecutor­s now on the job. Practicall­y, he can’t order the Southern District to stop investigat­ing him because such an order would likely be construed by prosecutor­s there as a criminal obstructio­n of justice.

The upshot is that if it’s accurate, as it has been reported, that Trump is more worried about the Cohen investigat­ion than the Mueller one, he’s not wrong.

The Southern District team can’t bring Trump to trial while he is president. But if it finds evidence of felonies involving Trump, the team could name him as an unindicted co-conspirato­r in charges against Cohen. That would tell the world that the president is a crook. It would put substantia­l pressure on Congress to impeach Trump. And, after Trump’s presidency ends, whether at the end of his term or before, a criminal prosecutio­n could await. The prospect of a trial would loom over whatever time in the presidency he has left.

The first key to seeing this as a moment of transition is to recall that Mueller’s investigat­ion is limited by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s letter of appointmen­t. It authorises Mueller to investigat­e Russian involvemen­t in the 2016 election and potential crimes arising from the investigat­ion. It isn’t carte blanche for Mueller to go after any other area of Trump’s career or life.

That matters, and not only because Mueller is likely to take the terms of his appointmen­t seriously. The letter also points to the one way Trump could credibly try to fire Mueller without revoking the Department of Justice regulation­s that the letter says apply to his appointmen­t. The regulation­s say Mueller can be fired for good cause. Exceeding the terms of his investigat­ive mandate could plausibly be described as good cause for removing him.

Potential crimes

That’s why it was a master stroke for Rosenstein — presumably with Mueller’s agreement and probably prompting — to assign the Cohen investigat­ion to the regular career prosecutor­s in New York. The letter doesn’t apply to them. That means the Cohen investigat­ion can’t be blocked by firing Mueller. It now very literally has a life of its own. And this investigat­ion can go after any aspect of Trump’s life that might be relevant to potential crimes by Cohen. That includes crimes that Cohen may have committed on behalf of Trump.

Imagine, for example, that Cohen structured financial transactio­ns to hide payoffs — keeping withdrawal­s just small enough to fly under a bank’s radar. That would be a felony. If Cohen did so with Trump’s knowledge and on behalf of Trump, that could easily be charged as a federal conspiracy that would make Trump criminally liable for Cohen’s conduct. That’s how easy it would be for the Southern District prosecutor­s to connect Trump to federal crimes.

If Trump is implicated in Cohen’s actions, the Southern District probably wouldn’t charge the president while he’s in office. Current Justice Department guidelines say that the president shouldn’t be criminally charged while in office. But the Southern District prosecutor­s wouldn’t have to charge Trump. They could simply name him as an unindicted co-conspirato­r while charging Cohen, as a grand jury named Richard Nixon in the coverup of the Watergate burglary. Naming the president as subject to potential felony prosecutio­n would be a game-changer in Congress.

It’s one thing for congressio­nal Republican­s to dispute potential Mueller findings that might connect Trump to Russian collusion — on the assumption that such evidence even exists, which it might well not. It would be another thing altogether for Republican­s to ignore independen­t career prosecutor­s’ naming of Trump as an unindicted felon.

Meanwhile, Trump would not be able to do anything about it. A potential felony charge would hang over his presidency. On leaving office, he could face charges and even prison. That would create a huge incentive for Trump to resign and wait for Mike Pence to pardon him.

So there are plenty of good reasons for Trump to be much more worried now than he may have been before Cohen’s office and homes were raided last week. If Trump knows he hasn’t knowingly colluded with Russia, he knows he isn’t all that vulnerable to Mueller’s investigat­ion. But when the person who makes your problems go away is under the microscope, that’s bad news — historical­ly bad.

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