Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bergdahl case offers legal test of Trump rhetoric

- By JONATHAN DREW

RALEIGH, N.C. — A military court will weigh the real-world consequenc­es of President Donald Trump’s fiery rhetoric as Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl argues he can’t get a fair trial under his new commander in chief.

Minutes into the Republican president’s term, lawyers for Bergdahl cited Trump’s scathing criticism in a request to dismiss charges that Bergdahl endangered comrades by walking off his post in Afghanista­n. The motion filed Friday argues Trump violated his due process rights by repeatedly calling him a traitor and suggesting ways he could be punished.

The motion noted more than 40 instances of Trump’s criticism at public appearance­s and in interviews through August 2016.

“Remember the old days? A deserter, what happened?” Trump said while campaignin­g in July before pantomimin­g pulling a trigger and adding: “Bang.”

Trump’s negative comments take on new importance now that he is commander in chief. Legal scholar Rachel Van-Landingham said she thinks it will be hard for potential jurors and others involved in the case to ignore what Trump has said because of the sheer repetition.

“Ingrained in military culture is the desire to serve and follow commanders’ orders, and that what commanders say is right,” said Van-Landingham, a former Air Force lawyer who teaches at Southweste­rn Law School in California. “And so that applies to the ultimate commander in chief. … They were made time after time after time, and I do think they are seared into the military psyche.”

Bergdahl’s trial is scheduled for April at Fort Bragg on charges of desertion and misbehavio­r before the enemy. The latter carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Bergdahl, who is from Idaho, has said he walked off his post in 2009 to cause an alarm and draw attention to what he saw as problems with his unit.

He was held captive by the Taliban and its allies for five years. The Obama administra­tion’s decision in May 2014 to exchange Bergdahl for five Taliban prisoners prompted some Republican­s to accuse Obama of jeopardizi­ng the nation’s safety.

There is precedent for a military judge to decide a president’s comments have tainted a prosecutio­n. In 2013, a Navy judge cited comments by then-President Barack Obama when he said two defendants in sexual assault cases couldn’t be punitively discharged if they were found guilty because of Obama’s public comments about cracking down on sexual assault.

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