Trump's three US Supreme Court appointees thrash out immunity claim
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[April 26, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately rules on
Donald Trump's claim of presidential immunity from prosecution, a third
of those deciding the matter will be justices he appointed to their
lifetime posts.
Those three - Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch -
posed questions from various angles as the nation's top judicial body
heard arguments on Thursday in a case that provides a vital test of the
power of the presidency. They comprise half of the court's 6-3
conservative majority.
"We're writing a rule for the ages," conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch,
said during the arguments.
A key question, Gorsuch said, is "how to segregate private from official
conduct that may or may not enjoy some immunity."
Gorsuch also said that "fear that their successors would criminally
prosecute them for their acts in office" might be an incentive for
presidents "to try to pardon themselves."
"I mean, we've never answered whether a president can do that," Gorsuch
said.
Trump appealed after lower courts rejected his claim of presidential
immunity in a criminal case brought against him by Special Counsel Jack
Smith on four charges related to efforts to overturn Trump's 2020
election loss. Trump is the Republican candidate challenging Democratic
President Joe Biden in the Nov. 5 U.S. election in a rematch of the
election four years ago.
Barrett questioned D. John Sauer, the lawyer arguing for Trump, about
his contention that a president must be impeached and removed from
office by Congress - something that has never happened in U.S. history -
in order to be prosecuted for an official act taken while in office.
"OK," Barrett told Sauer. "So there are many other people who are
subject to impeachment, including the nine sitting on this bench, and I
don't think anyone has ever suggested that impeachment would have to be
the gateway to criminal prosecution for any of the many other officers
subject to impeachment. So why is the president different when the
(Constitution's) impeachment clause doesn't say so?"
Sauer cited reasoning by a Justice Department official dating to the
1970s.
Barrett followed up on liberal Justice Elena Kagan's hypothetical
question on prosecuting a president who orders a coup.
"You're saying," Barrett asked Sauer, "that he couldn't be prosecuted
for that, even after a conviction (in an) impeachment proceeding if
there was not a statute that expressly referenced the president and made
it criminal for the president?"
A president could be prosecuted under that scenario, Sauer said, only if
the criminal law specifically references that it applies to a president.
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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Judge Amy Coney Barrett
after she was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme
Court on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S.
October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Sauer cited Article II of the Constitution, which delineates
presidential powers, as the "source" of immunity from prosecution,
even though it is not specifically mentioned in the 18th century
document that laid out the American form of government.
"Then, on the source of immunity, it's not explicit in the
Constitution?" Kavanaugh asked Sauer.
Kavanaugh noted that executive privilege - the legal principle that
allows certain presidential records and communications to be
shielded from lawmakers and the courts - is not explicit in the
Constitution even though the Supreme Court has found that Article II
allows for it.
"And the same principle, presumably, would apply to executive
immunity being encompassed within that executive power as
historically understood?" Kavanaugh asked.
"That's absolutely correct," Sauer responded.
Kavanaugh asked Michael Dreeben, the lawyer representing the special
counsel, "Do you agree that there's some aspects of Article II
presidential power that are exclusive and that Congress cannot
regulate and therefore cannot criminalize?"
"Absolutely," Dreeben said.
For other official acts that the president may take that are not
within that exclusive presidential power laid out in the
Constitution, Kavanaugh asked whether "Congress has to speak clearly
to criminalize official acts of the president by a specific
reference."
Dreeben said that he did not think Supreme Court precedents on the
issue "speak that broadly."
Barrett's appointment in 2020 after the death of liberal Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg pushed the court's conservative majority to 6-3,
from 5-4.
Gorsuch was appointed in 2017 to fill a vacancy left by the 2016
death of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia after the
Republican-led Senate refused to consider Democratic President
Barack Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland for the post. Kavanaugh
was appointed in 2018 after conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy
announced his retirement.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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