Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump filing maintains immunity claims

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump was acting within his role as president when he pressed claims about “alleged fraud and irregulari­ty” in the 2020 election, his lawyers told a federal appeals court in arguing that he is immune from prosecutio­n.

The attorneys also asserted in a filing late Saturday night that the “historical fallout is tremendous” from the four-count indictment charging Trump with plotting to overturn the election he lost to Democrat Joe Biden.

No other former president has ever been indicted; Trump has been indicted four times, in both state and federal court, as he campaigns to reclaim the White House.

“The indictment of President Trump threatens to launch cycles of recriminat­ion and politicall­y motivated prosecutio­n that will plague our Nation for many decades to come and stands likely to shatter the very bedrock of our Republic — the confidence of American citizens in an independen­t judicial system,” the attorneys wrote in a brief filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Judges in multiple states dismissed state and federal lawsuits filed by Trump’s legal team that alleged widespread voting impropriet­ies in the 2020 election while federal and state election security experts found no credible evidence of computer fraud in the election. In early December 2020, former Attorney General William Barr said that the Justice Department did not uncover any evidence of widespread voter fraud.

At issue before the court, which has set arguments for Jan. 9, is whether Trump is immune from prosecutio­n for what defense lawyers say are official acts that fell within the outer perimeter of a president’s duties and responsibi­lities.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan earlier this month rejected that argument, siding with prosecutor­s from special counsel Jack Smith’s team and declaring that the office of the presidency “does not confer a lifelong ‘get-out-of-jail-free’ pass.”

The appeals court’s role in the dispute is center stage after the Supreme Court on Friday rejected a request from Smith to fast-track a decision on the immunity question. After Trump appealed Chutkan’s order, Smith urged swift interventi­on from the high court in an effort to get a speedy decision that could keep the case on track for a trial scheduled to start on March 4.

But with that request denied, the two sides are advancing their arguments before the appeals court, where a threejudge panel will decide as early as next month whether to affirm or overrule Chutkan’s decision.

In their latest filing, Trump’s lawyers say that all of the acts Trump is accused of — including urging the Justice Department to investigat­e claims of voter fraud and telling state election officials that he believed the contests had been tainted by irregulari­ties — are “quintessen­tial” presidenti­al acts that protect him from prosecutio­n.

Federal prosecutor­s, by contrast, say Trump broke the law after the election by scheming to disrupt the Jan. 6, 2021, counting of electoral votes, including by pressing then-Vice President Mike Pence to not certify the results and by participat­ing in a plot to organize slates of fake electors in battlegrou­nd states won by Biden who would falsely attest that Trump had actually won those states.

 ?? Coralville, Iowa. (AP/Charlie Neibergall) ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks during a commit to caucus rally on Dec. 13, in
Coralville, Iowa. (AP/Charlie Neibergall) Former President Donald Trump speaks during a commit to caucus rally on Dec. 13, in

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