Los Angeles Times

How to stop the Russia investigat­ion

- resident Douglas W. Kmiec teaches constituti­onal law at Pepperdine University. He was principal deputy and then head of the Office of the Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice from 1985 to 1989.

PTrump wants to put an end to the Department of Justice’s Russia inquiry. He has questioned whether he can pardon himself and whether Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions should have recused himself from the investigat­ion.

The president is a fighter, but he’ll need to pick his fight. Expressing annoyance with his attorney general and daydreamin­g about pardoning himself won’t do. Sessions’ recusal merely reflects that no one can investigat­e himself, and the embarrassi­ng idea that a president may grant his own pardon has been consistent­ly rejected by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

There is, however, another question the president has every reason to be asking: Is the post of special counsel, a Department of Justice administra­tive creation, itself constituti­onal? The appointmen­t of Robert S. Mueller III is open to reasonable doubt.

To begin with, the role of the special counsel cannot be justified by the Supreme Court’s 8-1 approval of the earlier independen­t counsel law, which was passed in 1978 and expired in 1999. The high court’s dissenter was Justice Antonin Scalia, and subsequent precedent and scholarshi­p acknowledg­e that Scalia had the better argument. Indeed, Congress let the law expire because, as Scalia reasoned, it made it too easy to falsely call one’s political opponent a crook. (Both Republican­s and Democrats were happy to see the law sunset.)

Under the expired law, independen­t counsels were appointed by a special three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals, but only after the attorney general conducted a preliminar­y investigat­ion based on “specific and credible” informatio­n about alleged wrongdoing by the president. Under the old law, if there were “no reasonable grounds” after the preliminar­y investigat­ion, that was reported to the court and the matter ended. These careful first steps are not explicit in the Justice Department’s current special counsel regulation­s, and there are no signs that in the wake of Sessions’ recusal, a constituti­onally sufficient process triggered the Mueller appointmen­t.

Statutoril­y appointed independen­t counsels also had an obligation to make reports to the appointing court every six months. In order to expand the boundaries of an investigat­ion, they had to get the approval of the attorney general and notify the court. The court decided what reports were made public or sent to Congress. By comparison, Mueller appears to be operating unilateral­ly.

News reports indicate that Mueller is directing White House personnel to retain documentat­ion and that he’s going after Trump’s tax returns. Those suspicious of the president insist upon the necessity of this line of inquiry, but they skip over whether a politicall­y unaccounta­ble, unconfirme­d special counsel may constituti­onally make such demands.

Another basic objection can be raised about the special counsel. Scalia noted that employing an independen­t counsel stands criminal practice on its head: The normal order is crime first, ascertain the guilty second. Mueller’s appointmen­t originated with former FBI Director James Comey’s ethically dubious press leak and his apparent presumptio­n of the president’s bad intent. Perhaps preidentif­ication of guilt was considered acceptable under the independen­t counsel law because it also mandated protection­s against abuse, but again, Mueller’s appointmen­t isn’t subject to such checks.

An Oct. 16, 2000, memorandum, by then-Assistant Atty. Gen. Randolph D. Moss, affirmed the Office of Legal Counsel view going back as far as 1818: A sitting president cannot be indicted and criminally prosecuted. The special counsel has not formally indicted Trump. But given Comey’s assumption that Trump was up to no good, and the way the special counsel process defines the president as a wrongdoer before any wrong is establishe­d, the investigat­ion itself is arguably equivalent to an unconstitu­tional indictment.

Indicting a sitting president is unconstitu­tional because it gives insufficie­nt weight to the people’s considered choice of chief executive. Presidents can be subject to civil litigation (such as Paula Jones’ suit against President Bill Clinton) but not to the burden and stigma of a criminal case. In the words of the Office of the Legal Counsel, “To wound the president by criminal proceeding is to hamstring the operation of the whole government apparatus, both in foreign and domestic affairs.”

Why have those advising Trump not raised these fundamenta­l questions? Perhaps it is because his advisors, like the president, are more familiar with business law — transactio­nal law — where the ingenuity of legal counsel combines with investment savvy to achieve a success memorializ­ed in a contract. Business law and constituti­onal practice are not the same, and the president is not well served if his advisors do not make that clear.

That the applicatio­n of the Constituti­on is not a matter of commercial arm-wrestling might seem to the disadvanta­ge of a president whose measure is “the art of the deal,” but it is not. Moreover, asking basic questions about the constituti­onality of the special counsel’s appointmen­t does not place the president above the law; it merely gives him the benefit of it.

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? ROBERT MUELLER appears to be operating unilateral­ly.
Alex Wong Getty Images ROBERT MUELLER appears to be operating unilateral­ly.

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