Chattanooga Times Free Press

How Trump’s tweets, outspoken comments affect the legal system

- BY MARK SHERMAN AND SADIE GURMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s voters may love his outspoken ways. But judges? Not so much.

The president’s tweets already have played a role in court decisions blocking his bans on travel and transgende­r members of the military. The judge who decided Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl’s sentence also said he might take Trump’s scathing criticism of Bergdahl into account. And now the president is calling for the death penalty for the suspect in the bike path attack in New York.

Lawyers for the suspect in the New York attack, Sayfullo Saipov, almost certainly will argue that Trump’s two tweets saying Saipov should get the “DEATH PENALTY” will make it harder for their client to receive a fair trial or sentence.

Although some legal experts said judges in Manhattan’s federal courts will not let the president’s remarks throw the case off track, Trump’s comments broke with longstandi­ng tradition against presidents publicly commenting on criminal cases.

“Once again, the President sabotages his own lawyers, and makes it virtually impossible to provide the defendant with a fair trial,” South Texas College of Law professor Josh Blackman said on Twitter.

Trump’s first comment came around midnight, a few hours after prosecutor­s filed federal terrorism charges against Saipov, a 29-year-old immigrant from Uzbekistan. Authoritie­s say Saipov was inspired by the Islamic State group when he veered onto a city bike path in Manhattan on Tuesday, killing eight people.

The court filing signaled an intent to prosecute him in civilian courts in the United States and was at odds with earlier comments by Trump and others that he might be held as an “enemy combatant” or even be sent to the naval brig at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

By Thursday morning, Trump himself said Saipov would be prosecuted in New York, which the president said would be faster than subjecting him to a military tribunal at Guantanamo. No one held in the U.S. has been sent to Guantanamo since the detention center opened in January 2002.

“There is also something appropriat­e about keeping him in the home of the horrible crime he committed. Should move fast. DEATH PENALTY!” the president said in a tweet.

The Obama administra­tion made a similar argument in trying to move the five men accused in the Sept. 11 attacks from Guantanamo to New York for trial in a civilian court, an effort that was derailed by political opposition. The men remain at Guantanamo and have yet to be tried. Their cases are likely years from resolution.

The president’s potential for influencin­g a criminal case also has arisen in the court martial of Bergdahl. The Army sergeant’s lawyers said candidate Trump’s descriptio­n of Bergdahl as a “dirty rotten traitor” who should be executed unfairly affected his trial.

Bergdahl faced up to life in prison after pleading guilty to charges that he endangered comrades by walking off his post in Afghanista­n in 2009.

The judge, Army Col. Jeffery Nance, said he was not directly affected by Trump’s criticism of Bergdahl, but that he would consider Trump’s comments as a mitigating factor in the sentencing.

On Friday, the judge gave him no prison time but ordered him to be dishonorab­ly discharged.

Trump is not the first president to comment on the guilt and appropriat­e punishment of someone facing trial in notorious killings. Richard Nixon weighed in on Charles Manson’s guilt and Barack Obama suggested execution was the right sentence for accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, though both presidents walked back their comments in short order.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers install a concrete barrier along the West Side bike path in New York on Thursday. New York officials have started putting up additional concrete barriers at intersecti­ons, including the one where a terrorist drove a truck onto a bike path,...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers install a concrete barrier along the West Side bike path in New York on Thursday. New York officials have started putting up additional concrete barriers at intersecti­ons, including the one where a terrorist drove a truck onto a bike path,...

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