President Donald Trump look to the
media as he walks to Marine One across the South Lawn of the White House
in Washington, Saturday, April 28, 2018, for the short trip to Andrews
Air Force Base en route to Michigan. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
(Copyright 2018 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved.)
Before the Senate debates a bill to
protect Special Counsel Robert Mueller from being fired by President
Trump, it should consider this: Mueller’s use of a subpoena to require
testimony by the president would violate the separation of powers in the
Constitution and is an abuse of the grand jury process.
In addition, Mueller’s proposed
questions for President Trump in the special counsel’s wide-ranging
investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election
would violate Article II of the Constitution and executive privilege.
Here’s a simple fact that Mueller chooses to ignore:
A sitting president cannot be indicted. This fact cuts the legs out from under Mueller’s efforts to require testimony by President Trump.
In the wake of Watergate, a Republican Justice
Department Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) in 1973 thoroughly discussed
whether a president could be subject to criminal prosecution. Because
the president is “selected in a highly complex nationwide effort,” the
OLC found it would be “incongruous” to “bring him down … by a jury of
twelve, selected by chance ‘off the street.’”
Action by the House and Senate, via impeachment, is the
appropriate process for “such a crucial task, made unavoidably
political by the nature of the ‘defendant,’” the OLC said.
The OLC observed that the “modern Presidency” has had
to “assume a leadership role undreamed of” in earlier years. It added:
“The spectacle of an indicted President still trying to serve as Chief
Executive boggles the imagination.”
In 2000, because of three U.S. Supreme Court cases, a
Democratic Justice Department OLC revisited the issue of presidential
immunity from criminal prosecution.
Two cases concerned President Richard Nixon, the most
well-known involving the “Nixon tapes.” After indicting Nixon aides, the
special prosecutor in the case subpoenaed the Nixon tapes (recordings
of the president’s conversations with his aides) for evidence at trial.
The Supreme Court upheld the subpoena with specific limitations
requiring
in camera review (a legal term meaning privately, not
in open court) and said only relevant and material information needed to
be produced.
The other Nixon case held that the president was immune from civil liability for “official acts.”
In the third case, involving Paula Jones (who claimed
Bill Clinton sexually harassed her), the Supreme Court held that Clinton
was not immune from civil liability involving matters occurring before
he took office, since such matters were not official presidential acts.
(President Clinton waived challenging his grand jury subpoena from
Independent Counsel Ken Starr, so that case was not discussed.)
The OLC determined that none of the Supreme Court’s
rulings altered the 1973 opinion finding the president “uniquely immune”
from criminal process.
In dealing with the Nixon tapes, the high court
balanced the president’s “generalized interest in confidentiality” with
the requirement of “the fair administration” of a criminal trial. Thus,
the ruling had no bearing on whether a president could be indicted. The
other two cases were civil.
The OLC noted that criminal prosecutions are different
from civil litigation, requiring personal attention and imposing
“physical disabilities.” Therefore, “criminal proceedings against a
President in office should not go beyond a point where they could result
in so serious a physical interference with the President’s performance
of his official duties that it would amount to an incapacitation.”
If Mueller cannot indict President Trump, what possible
use can he make of any presidential testimony? The only option is that
he will provide it to Congress for consideration of articles of
impeachment.
But referring President Trump’s testimony to Congress
would abuse the grand jury process, which is only to be used for a
criminal proceeding. According to the U.S. Attorneys’ Manual, which
Special Counsel Mueller is obligated to follow: “A grand jury has but
two functions – to indict or, in the alternative, to return a no bill.”
Providing the legislature with testimony obtained from
an executive branch grand jury subpoena also violates the Constitution’s
separation of powers.
Mueller reports to Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein, an executive branch official. Impeachment is purely a
legislative function. The executive cannot utilize its awesome power to
compel grand jury testimony for the purpose of providing it to another
governmental branch.
If Congress finds the president’s refusal to testify an impeachable offense, it can allege so in articles of impeachment.
The substance of the recently leaked list of questions
that Special Counsel Mueller outlined for President Trump’s counsel is
also in violation of the Constitution and executive privilege. Not one
of the questions passes requirements mandated by the Constitution and
case law defining executive privilege.
Any question about firing FBI Director James Comey or
obtaining National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s resignation violates
the president’s Article II authority to have vested in him “all
executive power.”
The president had unfettered authority to fire both
officials for any reason, for multiple reasons, or for no reason.
Incidentally, if the firing of Comey can be construed as obstruction of
justice, then Rosenstein – who discussed such a firing with the
president and wrote a scathing memo recommending that Comey be fired –
is a co-conspirator. Yet, he is supervising the Mueller investigation.
Numerous questions deal with the deliberative process,
such as how were the decisions made to request the resignation of Flynn
and to fire Comey. Some request information about the president’s
discussions with White House Counsel Don McGahn.
The answers to these questions all involve the decision-making process and, as such, are clearly covered by executive privilege.
The president is not readily available to be
interviewed under established case law. There must be a “demonstrated,
specific need for evidence in a pending criminal trial,” which courts
have defined as evidence that is material to the matter at issue and not
available elsewhere with due diligence.
Ignoring the obvious – that there is no criminal trial
pending as in the Nixon tapes case – not one Mueller question can meet
the standard that would require executive privilege to be waived.
Unless, of course, you count the numerous questions
asking what the president “thought” in response to various situations.
These include Comey’s Jan. 6, 2017 briefing to President-elect Trump;
Comey’s March 20, 2017 testimony before the House Intelligence
Committee; the appointment of a special counsel and other issues.
It is correct that only the president can state what he
“thought” of the listed occasions. Yet, I recall the Catholic
confessional as the only place where I have been penalized three Hail
Marys after admitting to sinful thoughts. A president’s thoughts are not
– and cannot be – the basis for any governmental inquiry.
Mueller has over a dozen experienced lawyers on his
team. They are all veterans of the federal criminal justice system. They
know very well that as executive branch personnel they must follow
OLC’s opinions that a president cannot be indicted.
And these lawyers know very well that
no court has ever ruled that a president may be subpoenaed to testify in a criminal proceeding involving his own conduct.
The lawyers on Mueller’s team also know that the grand
jury cannot be used to obtain evidence except for the criminal process.
And yet, Special Counsel Mueller has threatened the president with a
grand jury subpoena.
The Senate needs to pass a bill to protect the
constitutional authority of the presidency, not the bad faith conduct of
the special counsel.