OPINION
Donald Trump Is Not Above the Law
By The Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
Aug. 26,
2022
This
article has been updated to reflect news developments.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/26/opinion/trump-documents-jan-6-prosecute.html
Over the
course of this summer, the nation has been transfixed by the House select
committee’s hearings on the events of Jan. 6, 2021, and how or whether Donald
Trump might face accountability for what happened that day. The Justice
Department remained largely silent about its investigations of the former
president until this month, when the F.B.I. searched his home in Palm Beach,
Fla., in a case related to his handling of classified documents. The spectacle
of a former president facing criminal investigation raises profound questions
about American democracy, and these questions demand answers.
Mr. Trump’s
unprecedented assault on the integrity of American democracy requires a
criminal investigation. The disturbing details of his postelection misfeasance,
meticulously assembled by the Jan. 6 committee, leave little doubt that Mr.
Trump sought to subvert the Constitution and overturn the will of the American
people. The president, defeated at the polls in 2020, tried to enlist federal
law enforcement authorities, state officials and administrators of the nation’s
electoral system in a furious effort to remain in power. When all else failed,
he roused an armed mob that stormed the Capitol and threatened lawmakers.
The Justice
Department is reportedly examining Mr. Trump’s conduct, including his role in
trying to overturn the election and in taking home classified documents. If
Attorney General Merrick Garland and his staff conclude that there is
sufficient evidence to establish Mr. Trump’s guilt on a serious charge in a
court of law, then they must indict him, too.
This board
is aware that in deciding how Mr. Trump should be held accountable under the
law it is necessary to consider not just whether criminal prosecution would be
warranted but whether it would be wise. No American president has ever been
criminally prosecuted after leaving office. When President Gerald Ford pardoned
Richard Nixon, he ensured that Nixon would not be prosecuted for crimes
committed during the Watergate scandal; Ford explained this decision with the
warning that such a prosecution posed grave risks of rousing “ugly passions”
and worsening political polarization.
That
warning is just as salient today. Pursuing prosecution of Mr. Trump could
further entrench support for him and play into the conspiracy theories he has
sought to stoke. It could inflame the bitter partisan divide, even to the point
of civil unrest. A trial, if it is viewed as illegitimate, could also further
undermine confidence in the rule of law, whatever the eventual outcome.
The risks
of political escalation are obvious. The Democratic and Republican parties are
already in the thick of a cycle of retribution that could last generations.
There is a substantial risk that, if the Justice Department does prosecute Mr.
Trump, future presidents — whether Mr. Trump himself or someone of his ilk —
could misuse the precedent to punish political rivals. If their party takes a
majority in the House of Representatives after the midterm elections, some
Republicans have already threatened to impeach President Biden.
There is an
even more immediate threat of further violence, and it is a possibility that
Americans should, sadly, be prepared for. In the hours after federal agents
began a court-approved search of Mr. Trump’s residence in Palm Beach, based on
a warrant investigating possible violations of three federal laws, including
one that governs the handling of defense information under the Espionage Act,
his most fervent supporters escalated their rhetoric to the language of warfare.
As The Times noted, “The aggressive, widespread response was arguably the
clearest outburst of violent public rhetoric since the days leading up to the
Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.”
Mr. Garland
has been deliberate, methodical and scrupulous in his leadership of the Justice
Department’s investigations of the Jan. 6 attack and the transfer of documents
to Mr. Trump’s home. On Friday a redacted version of the affidavit used to
obtain the warrant was released, revealing that the Justice Department asked to
search the premises to recover documents because of concerns that their
disclosure could compromise “clandestine human sources” of intelligence and
because it had probable cause to believe it would find “evidence of
obstruction” at the premises.
No matter
how careful Mr. Garland is or how measured the prosecution might be, there is a
real and significant risk from those who believe that any criticism of Mr.
Trump justifies an extreme response.
Yet it is a
far greater risk to do nothing when action is called for. Aside from letting
Mr. Trump escape punishment, doing nothing to hold him accountable for his
actions in the months leading up to Jan. 6 could set an irresistible precedent
for future presidents. Why not attempt to stay in power by any means necessary
or use the power of the office to enrich oneself or punish one’s enemies,
knowing that the law does not apply to presidents in or out of office?
More
important, democratic government is an ideal that must constantly be made real.
America is not sustained by a set of principles; it is sustained by resolute
action to defend those principles.
Immediately
after the Jan. 6 insurrection, cabinet members reportedly debated privately
whether to remove Mr. Trump from power under the authority of the 25th Amendment.
A week after the attack, the House impeached Mr. Trump for the second time.
This editorial board supported his impeachment and removal from office; we also
suggested that the former president and lawmakers who participated in the Jan.
6 plot could be permanently barred from holding office under a provision of the
14th Amendment that applies to any official who has “engaged in insurrection or
rebellion” or given “aid or comfort” to those who have done so. But most
Republicans in the Senate refused to convict Mr. Trump, and Congress has yet to
invoke that section of the 14th Amendment against him. As a result, the threat
that Mr. Trump and his most ardent supporters pose to American democracy has
metastasized.
Even now,
the former president continues to spread lies about the 2020 election and
denounce his vice president, Mike Pence, for not breaking the law on his
behalf. Meanwhile, dozens of people who believe Mr. Trump’s lies are running
for state and national elected office. Many have already won, some of them
elevated to positions that give them control over how elections are conducted.
In June the Republican Party in Texas approved measures in its platform
declaring that Mr. Biden’s election was illegitimate. And Mr. Trump appears
prepared to start a bid for a second term as president.
Mr. Trump’s
actions as a public official, like no others since the Civil War, attacked the
heart of our system of government. He used the power of his office to subvert
the rule of law. If we hesitate to call those actions and their perpetrator
criminal, then we are saying he is above the law and giving license to future
presidents to do whatever they want.
In addition
to a federal investigation by the Justice Department, Mr. Trump is facing a
swirl of civil and criminal liability in several other cases: a lawsuit by the
attorney general for the District of Columbia over payments during his
inauguration ceremonies; a criminal investigation in Westchester County, N.Y.,
over taxes on one of his golf courses; a criminal case in Fulton County, Ga.,
over interference in the 2020 election; a criminal case by the Manhattan
district attorney over the valuation of Mr. Trump’s properties; and a civil
inquiry by New York’s attorney general into Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization.
The
specific crimes the Justice Department could consider would likely involve Mr.
Trump’s fraudulent efforts to get election officials in Georgia, Arizona and
elsewhere to declare him the winner even though he lost their states; to get
Mr. Pence, at the Jan. 6 congressional certification of the election, to throw
out slates of electors from states he lost and replace them with electors loyal
to Mr. Trump; and to enlist officials from the Departments of Justice, Homeland
Security and Defense to persuade officials in certain states to swing the
election to him and ultimately stir up a mob that attacked the Capitol. The
government could also charge Mr. Trump with seditious conspiracy, a serious
charge that federal prosecutors have already brought against leaders of
far-right militia groups who participated in the Capitol invasion.
The
committee hearings make it clear: Mr. Trump must have known he was at the
center of a frantic, sprawling and knowingly fraudulent effort that led
directly to the Capitol siege. For hours, Mr. Trump refused to call off the
mob.
The
testimony from hundreds of witnesses, many of them high-ranking Republican
officials from his own administration, reveals Mr. Trump’s unrelenting efforts,
beginning months before Election Day and continuing through Jan. 6, to sow
doubt about the election, to refuse to accept the result of that election and
then to pursue what he must have known were illegal and unconstitutional means
to overturn it. Many participants sought pre-emptive pardons for their conduct
— an indication they knew they were violating the law.
Other
evidence points to other crimes, like obstruction of Congress, defined as a
corrupt obstruction of the “proper administration of the law.” The fake-elector
scheme that Mr. Trump and his associates pushed before Jan. 6 appears to meet
this definition. That may explain why at least three of Mr. Trump’s campaign
lawyers were unwilling to participate in the plot. People involved in it were
told it was not “legally sound” by White House lawyers, but they moved forward
with it anyway.
Cassidy
Hutchinson, a top aide to Mr. Trump’s last chief of staff, Mark Meadows,
provided powerful evidence that could be used to charge Mr. Trump with
seditious conspiracy. In her public testimony at a Jan. 6 committee hearing,
she said that Mr. Trump was informed that many in the throng of supporters
waiting to hear him speak on the Ellipse that day were armed but that he
demanded they be allowed to skip the metal detectors that had been installed
for his security. “They’re not here to hurt me,” he said, according to Ms. Hutchinson.
“Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol from here.”
If Mr.
Garland decides to pursue prosecution, a message that the Justice Department
must send early and often is that even if Mr. Trump genuinely believed, as he
claimed, that the election had been marred by fraud, his schemes to interfere
in the certification of the vote would still be crimes. And even though Mr.
Trump’s efforts failed, these efforts would still be crimes. More than 850
other Americans have already been charged with crimes for their roles in the
Capitol attack. Well-meaning intentions did not shield them from the
consequences of their actions. It would be unjust if Mr. Trump, the man who
inspired them, faced no consequences.
No one
should revel in the prospect of this or any former president facing criminal
prosecution. Mr. Trump’s actions have brought shame on one of the world’s
oldest democracies and destabilized its future. Even justice before the law
will not erase that stain. Nor will prosecuting Mr. Trump fix the structural
problems that led to the greatest crisis in American democracy since the Civil
War. But it is a necessary first step toward doing so.


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