Trump impeachment defense to attack the process, lawyer says
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[February 06, 2021]
By Karen Freifeld
(Reuters) - Donald Trump's lawyers will
make "procedural objections" a focus during his U.S. Senate impeachment
case next week, including challenging the notion the former president
can face trial after leaving office, one of his attorneys said.
Trump is charged with inciting an assault on the U.S. Capitol in which
five people died, including a police officer.
Attorney Bruce Castor Jr. decried the U.S. Senate proceeding due to
begin on Tuesday as "unconstitutional," telling Reuters by phone late on
Thursday: "We're trying to win a case on a bunch of procedural
objections."
"This is 'Law School 101' stuff. This isn't advanced legal treatises in
bound volumes that are used in the Supreme Court as references," Castor
said.
It may well be enough to win the case in the 100-member Senate where
Trump's fellow Republicans appear likely to deny rival Democrats the
total 67 votes they need to convict Trump. The Republicans assert they
do not have the authority to hold a trial for Trump since he left office
on Jan. 20.
On Jan. 6, Trump exhorted a crowd of supporters to go to the Capitol,
told them to "fight like hell," and repeated his false claims the
November election was stolen from him. The ensuing rampage interrupted
the congressional certification of President Joe Biden’s election
victory and sent lawmakers into hiding.
A majority of constitutional law experts assert that it is lawful to
hold an impeachment trial after a president leaves office. They assert
that presidents who commit misconduct late in their terms should not be
immune from the very process the U.S. Constitution created to hold them
accountable.
Because the Constitution makes clear that impeachment proceedings can
result in disqualification from holding future office, there is a live
issue for the Senate to resolve, they say.
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President Donald Trump looks on at the end of his speech during a
rally to contest the certification of the 2020 U.S. presidential
election results by the U.S. Congress, in Washington, U.S, January
6, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo/File Photo
Castor and his co-counsel David Schoen were hired on Sunday after
Trump parted ways with his prior defense team due to disagreements
over strategy.
The new team's first filing, a 14-page response on Tuesday to the
article of impeachment passed by the House of Representatives on
Jan. 13 misspelled "United States" as "Unites States" in its
salutation to the U.S. Senate.
Trump is only the third U.S. president to be impeached and the first
to be impeached twice and to face trial after leaving office.
Castor did not directly respond to assertions made by the nine House
Democrats who will prosecute the case that multiple news reports
indicated Trump was "delighted" as he watched the unprecedented
violence on television.
"However the president reacts has nothing to do with whether there's
any nexus between what he did and what the breachers did," Castor
said.
Trump on Thursday rejected a request to testify at his impeachment
proceeding. The House members trying the case have yet to say
whether they will call witnesses or how long the trial might run.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld in New York; Editing by Scott Malone
and Howard Goller)
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