Los Angeles Times

Trump’s Jan. 6 sins could make him criminally liable

- HARRY LITMAN @HarryLitma­n

Rep. Bennie Thompson, the Democratic chair of the House Select Committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, has made it clear that the panel is focused intently on former President Trump’s three-plus hours of scandalous silence as the insurrecti­on raged.

Commentato­rs have suggested that as odious as Trump’s silence may have been, it does little to ground a criminal case because criminal law punishes people for action rather than inaction.

But that principle has important exceptions that apply precisely to Jan. 6 and Trump. Beyond that, as more evidence is revealed, it’s increasing­ly obvious that the former president did act — by encouragin­g the disruption of the election certificat­ion. All in all, a criminal referral to the Department of Justice is a real possibilit­y (whether Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland pursues it is another matter).

Here’s how the action-inaction distinctio­n operates: Criminal liability generally requires the combinatio­n of intent and action, which is why omitting to act typically doesn’t land you in jail. But when a defendant has a legal duty to act and does not, the principle gives ground.

Say a lifeguard neglects their duty to save a flounderin­g swimmer or a father refuses to support his family. In those situations, the omission is the action required to ground a criminal charge. (It still must coincide with a culpable intent, or mental state; more on that below.)

Not surprising­ly, there is no express case law on whether the Constituti­on’s “take care” clause — which instructs the president to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed” — gives rise to a legal duty to do more than just stand by as the Constituti­on is trampled and members of Congress and a peaceful transfer of power are endangered. But it is hard to see how it could be otherwise.

Inaction is also no protection from criminal liability when its opposite is necessary to prevent damage caused by previous conduct, even innocent conduct. A driver who hits a pedestrian, even if the driver is not at fault, can’t just leave the scene. Or, if you happen to have poison sitting around the kitchen that looks like sugar, you can’t keep quiet as your friend dips into it, thinking he’s sweetening his tea. In such instances, omission is again tantamount to action; and if done with the requisite mental state, can be a crime.

In Trump’s case, even if he anticipate­d merely a peaceful rally at the Capitol on Jan. 6, his role in setting a deadly insurgency in motion arguably means he could not legally decline to intervene as if he were just an accidental bystander.

Trump’s criminal liability isn’t only dependent on the fact that inaction can sometimes break the law. He is vulnerable to an even more potent charge — aiding and abetting criminal behavior.

The federal criminal code considers anyone who induces, or aids and abets, a crime to be no different from the person who pulls a trigger, or for our purposes, storms the U.S. Capitol. If you aid and abet someone who executes a crime, and if you possess the requisite mental state — essentiall­y a desire for the offense to occur — you too are liable, as a principal defendant.

In Trump’s case, the indictment sheet would cite not only Title 18, U.S. Code, Section 2, which proscribes aiding and abetting a crime, but also Section 1512, which makes it illegal to obstruct or impede (or to try to obstruct or impede) any official proceeding — including Congress’ certificat­ion of a presidenti­al election.

Trump would try to contest that certificat­ion fits the meaning of an official proceeding in the criminal code, but a recent ruling from a Trump-appointed judge confirms that it does. Nor is there any real question but that the frothing Capitol rioters were seeking to obstruct or impede the tallying of the vote on Jan. 6.

So the question for a jury would be, did the president encourage the Jan. 6 mob to attack, and did he do it with the intent that Congress be impeded?

Recent evidence emerging from the House investigat­ion is damning. While Trump supporters raged and members of Congress cowered, the president’s closest advisors pleaded with him to call off the dogs — but he did nothing for more than three hours. His silence may have buoyed the rioters, many of whom declared they were doing Trump’s bidding.

Had Trump’s intent been merely that the Jan. 6 mob make its 1st Amendment-protected views about the election known, then he wouldn’t have refused to act when the exercise turned so completely sinister. He would have jumped to put things back on his desired track.

But he didn’t, and by some accounts he was jubilant that the certificat­ion process had been at the least interrupte­d. He needled House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d): “I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.”

Doing nothing might seem benign or at least defensible in most chaotic situations. But the more we find out about Trump’s inaction (and his actions) related to Jan. 6, the more his potential culpabilit­y becomes clear. His omissions once the rioting began weren’t just irresponsi­ble and despicable; they were deadly.

And are very likely to lead to a criminal referral from Congress.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? AT THE JAN. 6 rally. Will Trump’s inaction later that day lead to a criminal referral?
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press AT THE JAN. 6 rally. Will Trump’s inaction later that day lead to a criminal referral?

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