Belz...
Fiend God
I'd say it's pretty weak legal theory.
I think it's actually pretty solid. I disagree with it, mind you. It gives the impression that the President is above the law.
I'd say it's pretty weak legal theory.
I'd say it's pretty weak legal theory. What it is, is the DOJ knowing who their boss is. This policy was written first by the Nixon DOJl. The argument is about practicality not any law. There IS NOTHING in the Constitution or any other legislated law that says a President can't be indicted.
Well, IANAL. Mueller seems to buy into it, at least.It's an untested legal theory.
And it is very shaky.
But if we ask the current SC, we willprovideprobably get an answer we don't like.
EDIT: stupid auto correct.
Well, IANAL. Mueller seems to buy into it, at least.
OK Obstruction, it wasn't that he couldn't charge a sitting President, it's that the President has Constitutional rights to fire anyone in the Department of Justice.
His rights to do that are laid out in the Constitution.
Why would Robert Mueller Charge him with Obstruction, when every court in the land would say that he is Constitutionally empowered to fire the FBI director? Mueller would look like an idiot.
In 1973, in the midst of the Watergate scandal engulfing President Richard Nixon, the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel adopted in an internal memo the position that a sitting president cannot be indicted. Nixon resigned in 1974, with the House of Representatives moving toward impeaching him. “The spectacle of an indicted president still trying to serve as Chief Executive boggles the imagination,” the memo stated.
The department reaffirmed the policy in a 2000 memo, saying court decisions in the intervening years had not changed its conclusion that a sitting president is “constitutionally immune” from indictment and criminal prosecution. It concluded that criminal charges against a president would “violate the constitutional separation of powers” delineating the authority of the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the U.S. government. Link
Some lawyers have argued that the nation’s founders could have included a provision in the Constitution shielding the president from prosecution, but did not do so, suggesting an indictment would be permissible. According to this view, immunity for the president violates the fundamental principle that nobody is above the law.
Ken Starr, who investigated President Bill Clinton in the 1990s in the somewhat different role of independent counsel, in 1998 conducted his own analysis of the question of whether a sitting president can be indicted, indicating he did not consider the 1973 Justice Department memo binding on him. Starr did not indict Clinton in his investigation involving the president’s relationship with a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky, but lawyers in his office concluded he had the authority to do so, according to a once-secret internal memo made public by the New York Times in 2017.
Trump Tweets
(snip) If I wanted to fire Mueller, I didn’t need McGahn to do it, I could have done it myself.
Trump Tweets
As has been incorrectly reported by the Fake News Media, I never told then White House Counsel Don McGahn to fire Robert Mueller...
Page 4, 5 - On June 17, 2017, the President called McGahn at home and directed him to call the Acting Attorney General and say that the Special Counsel had conflicts of interest and must be removed. McGahn did not carry out the direction, however, deciding that he would resign rather than trigger what he regarded as a potential Saturday Night Massacre.
Efforts to have McGahn deny that the President had ordered him to have the Special Counsel removed.
In early 2018, the press reported that the President had directed McGahn to have the Special Counsel removed in June 2017 and that McGahn had threatened to resign rather than carry out the order. The President reacted to the news stories by directing White House officials to tell McGahn to dispute the story and create a record stating he had not been ordered to have the Special Counsel removed. McGahn told those officials that the media reports were accurate in stating that the President had directed McGahn to have the Special Counsel removed. The President then met with McGahn in the Oval Office and again pressured him to deny the reports. In the same meeting, the President also asked McGahn why he had told the Special Counsel about the President' s effort to remove the Special Counsel and why McGahn took notes of his conversations with the President. McGahn refused to back away from what he remembered happening and perceived the President to be testing his mettle. Report link
From what I’ve read, it’s a policy with some strong legal theory behind it. You can’t charge someone and not give them an opportunity to clear their name, usually in criminal court. You can’t tie up the President in criminal court because the President has to be available to perform his duties as President and, anyway, the Constitution gave the power to remove a President to Congress, not the Judiciary.
Therefore, a better approach is to impeach Trump then throw him out of office, or not re-elect him. In either case, Trump would become a private citizen and as such he could be forced to deal with all of the illegal things that he has done while he was the President and/or before he became the President.
Sounds like the Republic of the Philippines or some other state poorly governed by a colonial power and handed back as a half-baked democracy. "Lock him up". You voted for him, and if not you some of your family or friends.
Sounds like the Republic of the Philippines or some other state poorly governed by a colonial power and handed back as a half-baked democracy. "Lock him up". You voted for him, and if not you some of your family or friends.
Sorry, but I really cannot determine just what it is that you are trying to say.
Trump just needs to testify under oath, and this can all be sorted out.