Chattanooga Times Free Press

SUPREME COURT SHOULD MAKE IT CLEAR TRUMP NOT ABOVE THE LAW

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Should former president Donald Trump be immune from federal criminal prosecutio­n for his conduct in the run-up to Jan. 6? He’s argued both that his position as president should make him immune from prosecutio­n and that because the Senate did not convict him after he was impeached, criminal charges would amount to a kind of double jeopardy. A federal district court has already thrown out those arguments. The special counsel, Jack Smith, has now asked the Supreme Court to fast track a decision.

The legal questions in this case aren’t close calls. The president is not above the law. Impeachmen­t is not a criminal trial that would preclude subsequent prosecutio­n. And Trump isn’t even in office, so there is no risk that his trial would disrupt the functionin­g of government.

The Supreme Court long ago ruled, in Clinton v. Jones, that even a sitting president may be subject to civil suits for conduct committed before entering office. The core principle underlying the court’s decision to let Paula Jones sue Bill Clinton is that the president is not above the law. Even a delay in Jones’s case until Clinton left office, the court ruled, would deny her justice.

The same principle of legal accountabi­lity applies even more strongly to criminal conduct. When a president commits crimes, it’s not just one injured party who has an interest in seeing justice done. It’s all of us. Federal crimes are, legally and morally, crimes against the United States.

The fact that Trump’s alleged crimes were committed while he was president is also no reason to grant him immunity. Quite the contrary. The president is required by the Constituti­on to take care that the laws be faithfully executed. Any criminal act committed by a president is necessaril­y a violation of his oath of office, committed outside the legal bounds of his authority.

Trump has also argued that his impeachmen­t, followed by the Senate’s failure to convict him, is an independen­t reason for immunity. This argument is also obviously faulty.

An impeachmen­t isn’t a criminal trial. It’s a unique constituti­onal tool for removing a president from office. If a president is convicted after impeachmen­t, he doesn’t go to prison. He simply loses his job. And if an impeached president isn’t removed, he hasn’t been acquitted like a defendant found not guilty by a unanimous jury. He just hasn’t met the high bar — a two-thirds vote in the Senate — for removal from office. So Trump cannot claim that a criminal trial now would subject him to double jeopardy.

In any case, it makes no constituti­onal sense that an impeachmen­t, a political process effectuate­d in Congress, would block a judicial process, which takes place in the courts. The legislatur­e and judiciary are separate and coequal branches of government.

So the big question is the timing. The court could agree to consider the issue expeditiou­sly, allowing the trial to begin on time in March 2024. Or the justices could say the question must wait, in which case Trump might be able to delay the proceeding­s until the height of the presidenti­al campaign or even after the election. This would be a way for justices to help Trump without saying anything in his favor.

Time is of the essence. Trump’s goal is to thwart justice by delaying the trial as long as he can. If he wins and is inaugurate­d, he can almost certainly dismiss the charges against himself. In general, it’s good for the Supreme Court to wait for the courts of appeals to rule before the justices weigh in — the idea is that the higher court benefits from the wisdom of lower courts’ arguments. But in recent years, the court has preempted the appellate courts some 19 times. This case is more important than any of those.

If the justices let Trump delay, they will be doing a disservice to the rule of law. That’s something they all say they care about. Here’s a chance for them to prove it.

 ?? ?? Noah Feldman
Noah Feldman

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