Jan. 6 Committee Appears to Lay Out Road Map for
Prosecuting Trump
The first prime-time hearing into the Jan. 6 attack
confronted the fundamental question that has haunted Donald J. Trump since he
left office: Should he be prosecuted in a criminal court?
Peter
BakerKatie Benner
By Peter
Baker and Katie Benner
June 11,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/11/us/politics/jan-6-prosecute-trump.html
He had
means, motive and opportunity. But did Donald J. Trump commit a crime?
A House
committee explicitly declared that he did by conspiring to overturn an
election. The attorney general, however, has not weighed in. And a jury of his
peers may never hear the case.
The first
prime-time hearing into the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol this past week
confronted the fundamental question that has haunted Mr. Trump, the 45th
president, ever since he left office: Should he be prosecuted in a criminal
court for his relentless efforts to defy the will of the voters and hang on to
power?
For two
hours on Thursday night, the House committee investigating the Capitol attack
detailed what it called Mr. Trump’s “illegal” and “unconstitutional” seven-part
plan to prevent the transfer of power. The panel invoked the Justice
Department, citing charges of seditious conspiracy filed against some of the
attackers, and seemed to be laying out a road map for Attorney General Merrick
B. Garland to their central target.
Several
former prosecutors and veteran lawyers said afterward that the hearing offered
the makings of a credible criminal case for conspiracy to commit fraud or
obstruction of the work of Congress.
In
presenting her summary of the evidence, Representative Liz Cheney, Republican
of Wyoming and the committee’s vice chairwoman, demonstrated that Mr. Trump was
told repeatedly by his own advisers that he had lost the election yet
repeatedly lied to the country by claiming it had been stolen. He pressured
state and federal officials, members of Congress and even his own vice
president to disregard vote tallies in key states. And he encouraged the mob
led by extremist groups like the Proud Boys while making no serious effort to
stop the attack once it began.
“I think
the committee, especially Liz Cheney, outlined a powerful criminal case against
the former president,” said Neal K. Katyal, a former acting solicitor general
under President Barack Obama.
“A crime
requires two things — a bad act and criminal intent,” Mr. Katyal said. By
citing testimony by Mr. Trump’s own attorney general, a lawyer for his campaign
and others who told him that he had lost and then documenting his failure to
act once supporters stormed the Capitol, Mr. Katyal said, the panel addressed
both of those requirements.
A
congressional hearing, however, is not a court of law, and because there was no
one there to defend Mr. Trump, witnesses were not cross-examined and evidence
was not tested. The committee offered just a selection of the more than 1,000
interviews it has conducted and the more than 140,000 documents it has
collected. But it remains to be seen what contrary or mitigating information
may be contained in the vast research it has not released yet.
Mr. Trump’s
allies have dismissed the hearings as a partisan effort to damage him before
the 2024 election when he may run for president again. And legal defenders
argued that the facts presented by the panel did not support the conclusions
that it drew.
“Unless
there’s more evidence to come that we don’t know about, I don’t see a criminal
case against the former president,” said Robert W. Ray, a former independent
counsel who investigated President Bill Clinton and later served as a defense
lawyer for Mr. Trump at his first Senate impeachment trial.
“Whatever
the Proud Boys had in mind when they stormed the Capitol, I don’t see how you’d
be able to prove that Trump knew that that was the purpose of the conspiracy,”
Mr. Ray added. “Whether or not he ‘lit the fuse’ that caused that to happen,
the government would have to prove he knowingly joined that conspiracy with
that objective.”
Beyond the
legal requirements of making a criminal case, the prospect of prosecuting a
former president also would entail far deeper considerations and broader
consequences. Criminal charges against Mr. Trump brought by the administration
of the man who defeated him would further inflame an already polarized country.
It would consume national attention for months or longer and potentially set a
precedent for less meritorious cases against future presidents by successors of
the opposite party.
“That’s a
hill that no federal prosecutor has tried to climb, prosecuting a former
president,” said John Q. Barrett, a former associate independent counsel in the
Iran-contra investigation. “It’s very fraught,” he said. “It’s a massive
undertaking as an investigation, as a trial, as a national saga and trauma.”
But he added that accountability was important and that “the threat to the
continuity of our government is about as grave as it gets.”
All of
which is almost certainly going through the mind of Mr. Garland, a mild-mannered,
highly deliberative former federal appeals court judge who has largely kept mum
about his thinking. A Justice Department spokesman said Mr. Garland watched the
hearing but would not elaborate.
Democrats
have attacked the attorney general for not already prosecuting Mr. Trump, even
though a federal judge opined in March in a related civil case that the former
president and a lawyer who advised him had most likely broken the law by trying
to overturn the election. Mr. Garland has resisted the pressure. While he has
called the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack the most urgent work in the
history of his department, he has refused to forecast where the inquiry will go
as investigators continue evaluating evidence.
“We are not
avoiding cases that are political or cases that are controversial or
sensitive,” he told NPR in March. “What we are avoiding is making decisions on
a political basis, on a partisan basis.”
Many
officials and rank-and-file prosecutors scattered throughout the 115,000-person
Justice Department have long believed that Mr. Trump acted corruptly,
particularly in pressuring their own department to parrot his baseless claims
of election fraud, according to several people involved in such conversations
who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
But some
career employees expressed fear that as the hearings continued, they would
raise expectations for a prosecution that may not be met.
The
committee “was good at making the case that Donald Trump’s actions were
completely horrific and that he deserves to be held accountable for them,” said
Matthew Miller, a former Justice Department spokesman during the Obama
administration. “But an open-and-shut case on television is different from
proving someone violated a criminal statute.”
With public
attention fixated on Mr. Trump, the Justice Department’s work has proceeded
along three tracks: charge the people who attacked the Capitol; piece together
larger conspiracies, including sedition, involving some of the assailants; and
identify possible crimes that took place before the assault.
In the 17
months since the attack, more than 840 defendants from nearly all 50 states
have been arrested. Of those, about 250 have been charged with assaulting,
resisting or impeding the police, and members of two far-right groups have been
charged with seditious conspiracy, a rare accusation that represents the most
serious criminal charges brought in the department’s sprawling investigation.
Prosecutors
are scrutinizing the plan by Mr. Trump’s allies to create alternate slates of
pro-Trump electors to overturn Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory in key swing
states, with a federal grand jury issuing subpoenas to people involved. That
investigation brings federal prosecutors closer to Mr. Trump’s inner circle
than any other inquiry. Mr. Trump also faces the threat of prosecution by a
local Georgia prosecutor investigating his efforts to overturn the state’s
vote.
No sitting
or former president has ever been put on trial. Aaron Burr was charged with
treason after leaving office as vice president in a highly politicized case
directed from the White House by President Thomas Jefferson, but he was
acquitted after a sensational trial. Ulysses S. Grant, while president, was
arrested for speeding in his horse and buggy. Spiro T. Agnew resigned as vice
president as part of a plea bargain in a corruption case.
The closest
a former president came to indictment was after Richard M. Nixon resigned in
the Watergate scandal in 1974, but his successor, Gerald R. Ford,
short-circuited the investigation by preemptively pardoning him, reasoning that
the country had to move on. Mr. Clinton, to avoid perjury charges after leaving
office, agreed on his last full day in the White House to a deal with Mr. Ray
in which he admitted giving false testimony under oath about his affair with
Monica S. Lewinsky, temporarily surrendered his law license and paid a $25,000
fine.
Should the
Justice Department indict Mr. Trump, a trial would be vastly different from
House hearings in ways that affect the scope and pace of any inquiry.
Investigators would have to scour thousands of hours of video footage and the
full contents of devices and online accounts they have accessed for evidence
bolstering their case, as well as anything that a defense lawyer could use to
knock it down. Federal prosecutors would probably also have to convince appeals
court judges and a majority of Supreme Court justices of the validity of their
case.
For all of
the pressure that the House committee has put on the Justice Department to act,
it has resisted sharing information. In April, the department asked the
committee for transcripts of witness interviews, but the panel has not agreed
to turn over the documents because its work is continuing.
Although
critics have faulted Mr. Garland, attorneys general do not generally drive the
day-to-day work of investigations. Mr. Garland is briefed nearly every day on
the inquiry’s progress, but it is being led by Matthew M. Graves, the U.S.
attorney in Washington, who is working with national security and criminal
division officials. Lisa O. Monaco, the deputy attorney general, broadly
oversees the investigation.
“Whether
fair or not, Garland’s tenure will be defined by whether or not he indicts
Trump,” Mr. Miller said. “The Justice Department may not indict Trump.
Prosecutors may not believe they have the evidence to secure a conviction. But
that will now be interpreted as a choice by Garland, not as a reality that was
forced upon him by the facts of the investigation.”
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the last five presidents
for The Times and The Washington Post. He also is the author of six books, most
recently "The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker
III." @peterbakernyt • Facebook
Katie
Benner covers the Justice Department. She was part of a team that won a Pulitzer
Prize in 2018 for public service for reporting on workplace sexual harassment
issues. @ktbenner


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