OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
Should Trump Be Sentenced to Prison? Two Opposing
Views.
By New York
Times Opinion
June 2,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/02/opinion/trump-prison-time-sentencing.html
Now that Donald Trump has been convicted on 34 felony
counts, his sentencing hearing looms on July 11. Below are two legal experts
weighing in on the critical question of whether Mr. Trump ought to receive a
prison sentence.
The Case for Prison Time for Trump
By Norman
Eisen
Having
witnessed every day of Donald Trump’s criminal trial for falsifying business
records to conceal a sex scandal that threatened his presidential campaign, I
strongly believe the former president should be sentenced to incarceration.
I am a
lawyer, not a judge, but I have practiced criminal law for over three decades.
Under New York law, sentencing should be based on the gravity of the crime —
and the 34 offenses on which Mr. Trump has now been convicted are profoundly
serious. To find him guilty of felony business record falsification, the jury
had to determine that he intended to commit, aid or conceal a second crime by
making or causing false entries.
Jurors were
given only one option for that second offense. That was the payment of hush
money to hide damaging information, “a criminal scheme to corrupt the 2016
presidential election” under New York’s criminal code. Joshua Steinglass, one
of the prosecutors, underscored the significance of that in his closing
argument, telling jurors, “Democracy gives people the right to elect their
leaders, but that rests on the premise that the voters have access to accurate
information about the candidates.” Mr. Trump sought “to deny that access, to
manipulate and defraud the voters, to pull the wool over their eyes in a
coordinated fashion,” Mr. Steinglass said.
Because the
legitimacy of our entire system of government rests on free and fair elections,
this offense is deserving of punishment.
Sentences
should take into account outcomes in comparable cases. When Justice Juan
Merchan sentences Mr. Trump, he will do so against a backdrop of many other
defendants who have been convicted of this felony. My research for a book about
the case, “Trying Trump: A Guide to His First Election Interference Criminal
Trial,” included examining almost 10,000 prosecutions for falsifying business
records in New York since 2015. In the most serious of these cases, about 10
percent of the total, incarceration was imposed. Mr. Trump’s assault on our
democracy is as serious as or more serious than any of those others. My
research also showed that first-time offenders like Mr. Trump are not exempt
from sentences of incarceration, nor should they be if, like the former
president, their offense is serious enough.
Moreover,
Mr. Trump has shown absolutely no contrition. On the contrary, he has been
defiant in the extreme. Almost every day, he left the courtroom to stand before
a gathering of reporters in the courthouse and spew disinformation about the
case as well as vilify the judge; the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg;
and others in the most outrageous and inflammatory terms. On 10 occasions, Mr.
Trump defied the gag order that the judge imposed to protect witnesses and
jurors. Under New York law, all of that can and should weigh in favor of
imposing a prison sentence on Mr. Trump.
The court
may also take account of the defamation, sexual assault and civil fraud
verdicts that have already been levied against him. This is allowed under the
principle that the defendant’s history and character bear upon his sentence,
and this abhorrent history suggests prison time is warranted.
Finally,
sentencing is about not only accountability but also deterrence. A prison
sentence would send a message to Mr. Trump and his followers that you cannot
get away with conspiracies to interfere with an election. Because we know that
Mr. Trump faces charges related to attempted election interference in 2020 —
the election he still claims he won — and is once more seeking the presidency,
a criminal sentence and the deterrence it may bring is singularly important to
justice and as an alarm bell to the American people.
Norman
Eisen was special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee for the first
impeachment and trial of Donald Trump.
The Case Against Prison Time for Trump
By Nancy
Gertner
Donald
Trump was convicted of a serious felony — 34 counts of falsifying business
records with the intent to unlawfully influence the 2016 election. While the
statute under which he was convicted permits imprisonment, I would not send him
to prison.
I do not
have the information that Justice Juan Merchan will have at sentencing — the
presentencing report about Mr. Trump prepared by probation officers and the
arguments from the prosecution and defense. My conclusions are based on the
public record, my years of experience as a federal judge and a criminal defense
lawyer and my decades teaching courses on sentencing at Yale and Harvard Law
Schools.
Because
falsification of business records in the first degree is a Class E felony under
New York law, the possible sentence for each count ranges from probation to up
to four years in state prison, a fine or a period of supervised probation that
ends with the charges being dismissed as long as Mr. Trump has fully complied
with the terms of the probation. New York judges have discretion to pick a
punishment within the statutory limits.
One
starting point in considering the sentence is looking at treatment other
defendants have received who were convicted of the same or similar offenses.
While defendants convicted of this offense can be sentenced to some prison
time, most are not, especially first offenders, as Mr. Trump is. To be sure,
this case is unique. It involved more than falsification; it was about efforts
to interfere with an election.
Some have
pointed to the fact that Mr. Trump showed no remorse after the verdict. Anyone
who has a pending appeal — as he will have after he is sentenced — cannot admit
to the charges. His admissions would make it impossible for him to defend
himself in a second trial, were this conviction overturned.
But not
expressing remorse for the crime is one thing. Attacking the jury is another.
Prosecutors, like Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, are elected
officials who exercise discretion in bringing charges. They are fair targets
for a defendant. Still, his decision was tested by a jury, 12 neutral citizens
who spent six weeks of their lives listening to the evidence, against a
standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, in an adversary system in which
Mr. Trump had virtually unlimited resources to hire lawyers. There is no
question that his attacks reflect a fundamental lack of respect for the rule of
law, which points to imprisonment.
I would
also consider Justice Merchan’s contempt findings. Mr. Trump willfully ignored
the court’s rules — behavior that strongly suggests that he will not follow
other laws.
As far as
other pending criminal charges in the District of Columbia and in Georgia
relating to the Jan. 6 insurrection and the Florida charges concerning the
unlawful retention of classified information, I would not rely on them. Federal
law, like New York State law, permits but does not require judges to consider
charges that were never adjudicated by a jury. I chose not to consider pending
charges while I was on the bench. I believed that it was unfair. Justice Arthur
F. Engoron’s civil ruling in February that Mr. Trump engaged in repeated and
persistent business fraud is a closer question because it was a civil case with
a lower standard of proof, though it reflected conduct similar to what he was
convicted of in this criminal case.
But the
bottom line is this: The factors pointing to imprisonment are outweighed by Mr.
Trump’s unique position. Justice Merchan pulled his punches in imposing fines,
not detention, for Mr. Trump’s repeated violations of his court orders. Anyone
else would have been jailed. Mr. Trump no doubt will be treated differently —
that is, less harshly — than other criminal defendants in our extraordinarily
punitive criminal legal system. But we shouldn’t equalize the treatment of
defendants by ramping up everyone’s punishment. Our criminal legal system is
far too retributive and leans too heavily on imprisonment, no matter what the
crime. Besides, Mr. Trump is different, because he was president and could
become president again.
Nancy
Gertner, a retired Federal District Court judge, is a senior lecturer in law at
Harvard Law School
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