Oroville Mercury-Register

What to know in the high court case about Trump immunity claim

- By Mark Sherman

>> The Supreme Court has scheduled a special session to hear arguments over whether former President Donald Trump can be prosecuted over his efforts to undo his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden.

The case, to be argued Thursday, stems from Trump's attempts to have charges against him dismissed. Lower courts have found he cannot claim for actions that, prosecutor­s say, illegally sought to interfere with the election results.

The Republican ex-president has been charged in federal court in Washington with conspiring to overturn the 2020 election, one of four criminal cases he is facing. A trial has begun in New York over hush money payments to a porn star to cover up an alleged sexual encounter.

The Supreme Court is moving faster than usual in taking up the case, though not as quickly as special counsel Jack Smith wanted, raising questions about whether there will be time to hold a trial before the November election, if the justices agree with lower courts that Trump can be prosecuted.

The justices ruled earlier this term in another case that arose from Trump's actions following the election, culminatin­g in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The court unanimousl­y held that states could not invoke a provision of the 14th Amendment known as the insurrecti­on clause to prevent Trump from appearing on presidenti­al ballots.

Here are some things to know:

What's the issue?

When the justices agreed on Feb. 28 to hear the case, they put the issue this way: “Whether and if so to what extent does a former President enjoy presidenti­al immunity from criminal prosecutio­n for conduct alleged to involve official acts during his tenure in office.”

That's a question the Supreme Court has never had to answer. Never before has a former president faced criminal charges so the court hasn't had occasion to take up the question of whether the president's unique role means he should be shielded from prosecutio­n, even after he has left office.

Both sides point to the absence of previous prosecutio­ns to undergird their arguments. Trump's lawyers told the court that presidents would lose their independen­ce and be unable to function in office if they knew their actions in office could lead to criminal charges once their terms were over. Smith's team wrote that the lack of previous criminal charges “underscore­s the unpreceden­ted nature” of what Trump is accused of.

Nixon's ghost

Richard Nixon resigned the presidency in disgrace nearly 50 years ago rather than face impeachmen­t by the House of Representa­tives and removal from office by the Senate in the Watergate scandal.

Both Trump's lawyers and Smith's team are invoking Nixon at the Supreme Court.

Trump's team cites Nixon v. Fitzgerald, a 1982 case in which the Supreme Court held by a 5-4 vote that former presidents cannot be sued in civil cases for their actions while in office. The case grew out of the firing of a civilian Air Force analyst who testified before Congress about cost overruns in the production of the C-5A transport plane.

“In view of the special nature of the President's constituti­onal office and functions, we think it appropriat­e to recognize absolute Presidenti­al immunity from damages liability for acts within the `outer perimeter' of his official responsibi­lity,” Justice Lewis Powell wrote for the court.

But that decision recognized a difference between civil lawsuits and “the far weightier” enforcemen­t of federal criminal laws, Smith's team told the court. They also invoked the high court decision that forced Nixon to turn over incriminat­ing White House tapes for use in the prosecutio­ns of his top aides.

And prosecutor­s also pointed to President Gerald Ford's pardon of Nixon, and Nixon's acceptance of it, as resting “on the understand­ing that the former President faced potential criminal liability.”

Timing is everything

The subtext of the immunity fight is about timing. Trump has sought to push back the trial until after the election, when, if he were to regain the presidency, he could order the Justice Department to drop the case. Prosecutor­s have been pressing for a quick decision from the Supreme Court so that the clock can restart on trial preparatio­ns. It could take three months once the court acts before a trial actually starts.

If the court hands down its decision in late June, which would be the typical timeframe for a case argued so late in the court's term, there might not be enough time to start the trial before the election.

Who are the lawyers?

Trump is represente­d by D. John Sauer, a former Rhodes Scholar and Supreme Court clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia. While serving as Missouri's solicitor general, Sauer won the only Supreme Court case he has argued until now, a 5-4 decision in an execution case. Sauer also filed legal briefs asking the Supreme Court to repudiate Biden's victory in 2020.

In addition to working for Scalia early in his legal career, Sauer also served as a law clerk to Michael Luttig when he was a Republican-appointed judge on the Richmond, Virginia-based federal appeals court. Luttig joined with other former government officials on a brief urging the Supreme Court to allow the prosecutio­n to proceed. Luttig also advised Vice President Mike Pence not to succumb to pressure from Trump to reject some electoral votes, part of Trump's last-ditch plan to remain in office.

The justices are quite familiar with Sauer's opponent, Michael Dreeben. As a longtime Justice Department official, Dreeben argued more than 100 cases at the court, many of them related to criminal law. Dreeben was part of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and joined Smith's team last year after a stint in private practice.

In Dreeben's very first Supreme Court case 35 years ago, he faced off against Chief Justice John Roberts, then a lawyer in private practice.

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