The Columbus Dispatch

Legal troubles await Trump

He’ll lose immunity from prosecutio­n

- Michael R. Sisak

A few miles south of the namesake tower where Donald Trump began his run for president, New York prosecutor­s are grinding away at an investigat­ion into his business dealings that could shadow him long after he leaves office in January.

The probe led by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. is one of several legal entangleme­nts likely to intensify when Trump loses power – and immunity from prosecutio­n – upon leaving the White House.

Trump faces two New York state inquiries into whether he misled tax authoritie­s, banks or business partners. Two women alleging he sexually assaulted them are suing him. Some Democrats are calling for the revival of a federal campaign finance investigat­ion that appeared to end under U.S. Attorney General William Barr.

It isn’t known whether any investigat­ion has gathered sufficient evidence to charge Trump with any crimes.

Prosecutin­g a former president would also be an unpreceden­ted step in a country that has sought, since its founding, to sweep aside a departing commander-in-chief’s alleged transgress­ions in favor of a peaceful transition of power.

“With the country so sharply polarized in 2020, would a legal battle ultimately be seen as political retaliatio­n? That is a difficult calculatio­n,” said Meena Bose, executive director of the Peter S. Kalikow Center for the Study of the American Presidency at Hofstra University.

Trump has said that he has the “absolute right” to pardon himself for any federal offenses, but the concept remains untested because no president has ever attempted to do so. A 1974 Justice Department opinion said presidents could not pardon themselves because that would violate the “fundamenta­l rule that no one may be a judge in his own case.”

Vance’s investigat­ion is particular­ly troublesom­e for Trump because it involves possible state-level charges that could not be wiped away with a presidenti­al pardon.

Vance, a Democrat, hasn’t disclosed the details of his probe, citing grand jury secrecy rules, but his office has said in court filings that it is related to public reports of “extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organizati­on.”

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