Marin Independent Journal

Is a crime necessary for impeachmen­t?

- By Eric Tucker

President Donald Trump’s defense hinges largely on arguments made in the impeachmen­t trial of President Andrew Johnson more than 150 years ago: that impeachmen­t requires a crime.

But most legal scholars disagree, including Jonathan Turley, the law professor called by Republican­s in the House investigat­ion to argue against impeaching Trump.

A lawyer for Johnson argued in his opening statement to the Senate that Johnson could not be removed from office because he was not guilty of a crime. Johnson was acquitted by a single vote. One of Trump’s lawyers, Alan Dershowitz says that same argument — that impeachmen­t requires “criminal-like conduct” — will be central to the constituti­onal defense he will make on the president’s behalf.

The idea may be attractive to Republican­s seeking a legal basis to acquit Trump of having abused his power and obstructin­g Congress. But legal scholars dispute the idea that the Founding Fathers ever intended for impeachabl­e offenses to require proof of a crime.

Historians are equally dubious that the argument from Johnson’s lawyer, Benjamin Robbins Curtis, can be credited with securing Johnson’s narrow acquittal.

“This is a way in which history is weaponized and distorted in order to give these kinds of arguments heft,” said Rachel Shelden, a Penn State University history professor and Civil War-era expert. “It’s a way of trying to promote an understand­ing of the Johnson impeachmen­t that is false, based on what historians now believe.”

At issue is the Constituti­on’s standard for impeachmen­t: “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeano­rs.” Over the centuries, the threshold has been understood to encompass actual crimes — judges have been impeached for soliciting bribes and sex abuse, among other offenses — but also noncrimina­l misconduct such as being drunk on the bench or favoritism in the appointmen­t of bankruptcy receivers.

Johnson was impeached in part over accusation­s that he violated the Tenure of Office Act, which barred presidents from firing Senateconf­irmed officials without Senate approval, over his removal of his War Secretary Edwin Stanton. Johnson’s defense team questioned the constituti­onality of that now-extinct law, and at his 1868 trial, one of his lawyers asserted that an impeachabl­e offense “refers to, and includes only, high criminal offenses against the United States.”

“There can be no crime, there can be no misdemeano­r without a law, written or unwritten express or implied,” said Curtis, a former Supreme Court Justice who served as Johnson’s principal attorney. “There must be some law; otherwise there is no crime. My interpreta­tion of it is that the language ‘high crimes and misdemeano­rs’ means ‘offenses against the laws of the United States.’”

Dershowitz, who is expected to make a constituti­onal presentati­on to the Senate within days, said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union” that he would paraphrase Curtis’s argument that “the framers intended for impeachabl­e conduct only to be criminal-like conduct or conduct that is prohibited by the criminal law.”

“That argument prevailed. I will be making that argument as a lawyer on behalf of the president’s defense team against impeachmen­t. That’s my role. It’s very clear. I have done it before,” he said.

But legal scholars and Democrats are decrying the claim that an impeachabl­e offense must be an indictable crime. A former student of Dershowitz’s at Harvard Law School described it as “rubbish.” Turley, a George Washington University law professor, wrote in The Washington Post that such an argument was politicall­y unwise and constituti­onally shortsight­ed.

“They had to go outside the realm of constituti­onal lawyers and scholars to a criminal defense lawyer to make that argument because no reputable constituti­onal law expert would do that,” said California Rep. Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee. He is one of the seven Democratic managers prosecutin­g the impeachmen­t case.

Even Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, wrote in a June 2018 memo before he was nominated for the Cabinet post that Congress could impeach presidents who abused their power.

Democrats contend that Trump’s abuse of power — pressing Ukraine for an investigat­ion into a Trump Democratic rival, Joe Biden, at the same time Trump’s administra­tion withheld hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid — is a “quintessen­tial impeachabl­e offense.” They say the Founding Fathers intentiona­lly created a flexible standard of bad acts that could result in impeachmen­t, and that Trump’s acts in this instance are the framers’ “worst nightmare.”

 ?? SENATE TELEVISION ?? House impeachmen­t manager Rep. Adam Schiff walks to the podium to speak during the impeachmen­t trial against President Donald Trump on Wednesday.
SENATE TELEVISION House impeachmen­t manager Rep. Adam Schiff walks to the podium to speak during the impeachmen­t trial against President Donald Trump on Wednesday.

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