Biden’s Justice Dept may defend Trump in Capitol riot lawsuits
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[June 23, 2021]
By Peter Eisler and Joseph Tanfani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former U.S.
President Donald Trump may have an unlikely ally to defend him against
lawsuits alleging he incited the U.S. Capitol insurrection: President
Joe Biden’s Justice Department.
The Biden administration paved the way for that possibility, say
constitutional scholars and lawyers in the cases, by arguing in an
unrelated defamation case against Trump that presidents enjoy sweeping
immunity for their comments while in office - and the right to a defense
by government lawyers. Biden’s Justice Department used that rationale in
a surprise decision this month to continue defending Trump in a case
filed by E. Jean Carroll, who contends Trump raped her 25 years ago and
then lied about it while in office, defaming her.
That decision reaffirms the position the department took under the Trump
administration. And it has profound implications for several ongoing
lawsuits, including one filed by two U.S. Capitol Police officers
seeking to hold Trump liable for injuries they suffered defending the
building in the Jan. 6 attack.
Attorney Philip Andonian said he fears the Justice Department, under the
same legal rationale, will also defend Trump in a case Andonian is
pursuing on behalf of U.S. Representative Eric Swalwell, a California
Democrat. Swalwell alleges Trump incited the deadly Jan. 6 riot in an
effort to stop Congress from performing its duty to certify Biden as the
election winner. Andonian called the logic behind the department’s
decision to defend Trump against Carroll’s defamation suit “alarming.”
The Justice Department appears to put no limits on immunity for speech
by a sitting president on any matter considered “of public concern,”
Andonian said.
The Justice Department declined to comment on whether it would use the
same argument as a basis for intervening in the other lawsuits Trump
faces. The White House did not respond to a request for comment but has
previously said it had no role in the department’s decision on whether
to defend Trump in the Carroll case or others.
Trump faces more than a dozen active investigations and lawsuits
involving a wide range of matters, including sexual misconduct
allegations, financial disputes and government probes into his business
dealings and his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. But the Justice
Department’s assertion of presidential immunity in the Carroll case
would only be relevant to other cases involving his statements or
actions while in office.
The Justice Department laid out its rationale for defending Trump in a
June 7 brief in the Carroll case. After Carroll, a former magazine
writer, wrote in 2019 that Trump raped her, Trump - while in office -
accused her of lying and said he’d never met her. Carroll is among about
two dozen women who have accused Trump of sexual misconduct. The brief
argues that Trump, like any president, is covered by federal laws,
including the Westfall Act, that protect federal employees from being
sued for actions taken as part of their jobs.
Although Trump’s remarks were “without question unnecessary and
inappropriate,” the brief said, he was acting within the scope of his
office when he made them. “Elected officials can – and often must –
address allegations that inspire doubt about their suitability for
office,” the argument says. “Speaking to the public and the press on
matters of public concern is undoubtedly part of an elected official’s
job.”
‘TITANIC’ LEGAL BLUNDER
One prominent constitutional scholar characterized the department’s
position in the Carroll case as a blunder that will be difficult to
undo.
“It would be very difficult for the Justice Department to change course
now,” said Laurence Tribe, a Harvard University constitutional law
professor and a frequent critic of Trump. “The Titanic is aimed at the
iceberg.”
Tribe and other critics of the department’s position say it fails to
draw obvious distinctions between a president's official conduct and
matters that clearly fall outside the duties of the office. When a
president says or does something illegal, they say, it does not warrant
a taxpayer-financed defense by government lawyers.
Tribe served as a legal adviser for the House of Representatives’ second
impeachment of Trump, in which the former president was accused - but
eventually acquitted - of trying to overturn legitimate election results
to retain presidential power. Tribe said it would be “outrageous” for
the department to defend Trump against the lawsuits related to the U.S.
Capitol riots “on the basis that fomenting a violent insurrection, as
charged in those suits, fell within the president’s job description.”
Trump has denied any responsibility for the violence at the Capitol. His
lawyers have said he was making political arguments, protected by the
First Amendment, and not inciting people to riot.
Jesse Binnall - a private lawyer defending Trump in the Capitol Police
case, the Swalwell case and at least two other ongoing suits - declined
to comment on whether he will seek the department's intervention on
Trump's behalf in any of those matters. Such a request would require the
Justice Department to take an official position.
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U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during an event
at the Justice Department in Washington, U.S., June 15,
2021. Garland addressed domestic terrorism during his
remarks. Win McNamee/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Binnall has echoed the Justice Department's immunity
argument in briefs filed for some of those cases, but he so far has
not directly requested that the department intervene in any of them.
If the Justice Department does end up defending Trump
in any of the other cases pending against him, he still would be
able to retain his private counsel, allowing him to protect his own
interests if they diverge from those of the government.
‘MATTERS OF PUBLIC CONCERN’
While Trump was president, the Justice Department argued in the
Carroll case that federal law gave him a “broad grant of immunity”
against her lawsuit, adding that he was protected because he spoke
about her in his role as president. A federal district court
rejected that position in October, and the department filed an
appeal in the waning days of Trump’s presidency. If the Justice
Department wins on appeal, that would effectively end Carroll’s case
against Trump.
Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta A. Kaplan, said it was “shocking” that the
department would maintain the same argument under U.S. Attorney
General Merrick Garland, who was appointed by Biden after the appeal
was filed.
In testimony before Congress, Garland defended the position by
saying the department had a duty to follow the law rather than to
protect any administration. “Sometimes it means we have to make a
decision about the law that we never would have made and that we
strongly disagree with as a matter of policy,” he said.
The Justice Department’s appeal in the Carroll case is pending
before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The outcome could have
implications for at least four other federal lawsuits pending
against Trump. Three of them seek to hold Trump liable for remarks
in a speech on Jan. 6 shortly before the Capitol riots. They include
the case filed by injured Capitol Police officers, as well as the
cases filed by Representative Swalwell and U.S. Representative
Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat. Thompson alleges that Trump
violated federal law by inciting his supporters to block Congress
from executing its official duties.
The fourth case was filed by the Michigan Welfare Rights
Organization, an advocacy group for low-income people. The lawsuit
claims Trump disenfranchised Black voters by trying overturn the
results in Detroit, a majority Black city, after the 2020 election.
Andonian, the lawyer in Congressman Swalwell's suit against Trump,
said he fully expects that Trump’s lawyers now will adopt the
Justice Department's reasoning to argue that the former president
was speaking on “matters of public concern” in his Jan. 6 speech.
Trump that day continued his false claims that the election had been
stolen from him through voter fraud; assailed Vice President Mike
Pence for refusing to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s win; and
called for his supporters to march to the Capitol.
Andonian and other attorneys argue there’s a legal distinction
between Trump’s attacks on Carroll and his incendiary speeches
seeking to reverse his election loss.
Ben Berwick, a lawyer representing the Capitol police officers, said
that Trump’s appearance at the Jan. 6 gathering just before the
Capitol insurrection amounted to a “campaign rally” unrelated to his
official duties. That’s a different setting, he said, than the
presidential news conference where Trump made the statements about
Carroll.
“He is effectively acting as a candidate,” Berwick said. “He has no
official role in the certification of electoral votes.”
Joseph Sellers, an attorney representing Congressman Thompson in his
suit against Trump, concurred that Trump had stepped well beyond the
cover of presidential immunity.
“I don't think anyone would think it's within the scope of the
president’s legitimate duties to encourage people to interfere with
the functioning of another branch of government,” Sellers said. “He
was promoting an insurrection and a riot.”
(Reporting by Peter Eisler and Joseph Tanfani; additional reporting
by Disha Raychaudhuri and Rick Linsk; editing by Jason Szep and
Brian Thevenot.)
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