Fresh Air - Implications Of The DOJ Targeting The President’s Critics
Episode Date: October 1, 2025President Trump is pressuring the Department of Justice to pursue his political enemies, like former FBI director James Comey. Legal scholar (and former U.S. attorney) Barbara McQuade explains how thi...s damages the rule of law.Follow Fresh Air on instagram @nprfreshair, and subscribe to our weekly newsletter for gems from the Fresh Air archive, staff recommendations, and a peek behind the scenes. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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RWJF is a national philanthropy, working toward a future where health is no longer a privilege but a right.
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This is fresh air. I'm Tanya Mosley.
President Donald Trump's campaign against his political enemies is intensifying.
This week, the Justice Department ordered federal prosecutors in at least seven states to draft plans.
to investigate billionaire George Soros' open society foundations
on potential charges ranging from racketeering to support for terrorism.
The Foundation's president, Binaifer Nowoji, responded in her first interview
since becoming a target by saying,
this is not about George Soros, she told NPR.
This is about the United States slowly losing its democracy bit by bit
in ways that we've seen elsewhere in the world.
The DOJ directive follows last.
week's indictment of former FBI director James Comey on charges of making false statements and obstruction
related to his 2020 congressional testimony about the Russia investigation.
Despite career prosecutors arguing that there wasn't enough evidence, the president pushed for
prosecution. And when U.S. attorney Eric Siebert refused, the president fired him and installed
one of his personal lawyers, Lindsey Halligan, who quickly secured an indictment. Here's President
Trump last Friday, answering a reporter who asked him, now that James Comey has been indicted,
who is the next person on your list?
It's not a list, but I think there'll be others. I mean, they're corrupt.
These were corrupt, radical left Democrats.
Because Comey essentially was a... He's worse than a Democrat.
I would say the Democrats are better than Comey.
But, no, there'll be others. Look, it was... That's my opinion.
they weaponized the Justice Department like nobody in history.
What they've done is terrible.
And so I hope there are, frankly, I hope there are this because you can't let this happen to a country.
The president is also pushing for charges against Senator Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Letitia James.
Legal scholars warn, this represents a fundamental break from decades of precedent, meant to
insulate the Justice Department from political interference.
Inside the Justice Department, attorneys are resigning in protest.
My guest today is legal scholar Barbara McQuaid.
In 2017, she was among the U.S. attorneys forced to resign under the Trump administration.
Today, she's a professor at the University of Michigan Law School, an author of Attack from Within,
how disinformation is sabotaging America, and the forthcoming book, The Fix, Saving America, Saving America from the Corruption,
of mob-style government.
Barbara McQuaid, welcome to fresh air.
Thanks very much, Tanya.
Glad to be here with you.
Barbara, I want to play something
from this past Friday on Fox News.
It's from U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi.
She was on Sean Hannity's show.
And in this exchange that I'm about to play,
she lays out who could be targeted
for investigation under this administration.
Let's listen.
Whether you're a former FBI director,
whether you're a former head of an intel community,
Whether you are a current state or local elected official, whether you're a billionaire funding organizations to try to keep Donald Trump out of office.
Everything is on the table.
We will investigate you and we will end the weaponization.
No longer will there be a two-tier system of justice.
And we are working hand-in-hand, Director Patel and I, Todd Blanche, with our incredible intel community, Tulsi Gabbard John Radcliffe, going nonstop.
around the clock, people will be held accountable.
That was U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi talking to Sean Hannity.
And as we heard her say, everything is on the table.
She framed it as ending weaponization.
But Barbara, what she's describing is the Justice Department being used to go after political enemies.
I'll start there by asking you, as a legal scholar, what is your reaction to her statements?
It is so profoundly wrong, and it makes me not only upset and angry, but very sad.
I spent almost 20 years of my life working for the Department of Justice during a time when it was the North Star that you do not use federal prosecution to go after political rivals.
There is a provision in the Justice Department manual that says prosecutors may never consider parties.
partisan politics, political association, political party, political office in making a charging
decision.
And it seems that Pam Bondi is turning that on its head.
Now, it's a norm.
It's not a law.
But since Watergate, it has been crystal clear that that is the way that prosecutors conduct
themselves.
And so to see it used as a weapon in response to false claims of weaponization is deeply
disturbing not only because of, you know, my devotion of my career there, but what it could do
to Americans who might disagree with this president. I want to ask you about some of the things
that the Trump administration is alleging, not only with Comey and with other folks that he
perceives as his political enemies, but also the Searle's foundations. I want to give some
backstory here. The New York Times reports that the Justice Department instructed prosecutors to
cases against the foundations. This organization, just to give some backstory here, has spent
the last few decades funding democracy work worldwide. It's also been the subject of conspiracy theories.
There are theories claiming that Soros orchestrated events like Charlottesville and secretly funds
Black Lives Matter. What exactly does it mean when the DOJ orders multiple U.S.
attorney's offices to draw up investigative plans targeting someone, and specifically what
potential charges are being discussed and what does this moment actually mean for the rule of law?
This is such a bastardization of the rule of law. You know, there's a famous speech that Robert
Jackson gave in the Great Hall of the Department of Justice in 1940. He at the time was
the Attorney General of the United States. He, of course, would go on to become a Supreme Court
Justice and Chief Prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials. But one of the things he said in this speech
entitled The Prosecutor, which is posted on the wall of many U.S. Attorney's offices,
is the importance of not targeting individuals, but of targeting crimes.
And so if a crime occurs, you investigate and you charge the people responsible.
But if you instead choose a person and then try to dig up whatever dirt you can on them,
that is the opposite of the way the tool is supposed to work.
it is a way that it can be weaponized and a way that power can be abused.
That seems to be what is happening in the case of George Soros.
He obviously is a very powerful, wealthy individual.
He funds candidates and programs that support Democrats and progressives.
And so it's understandable why a Republican president might want to try to upend those efforts.
But one of the things that has been part of,
the post-Watergate norms is an FBI manual referred to colloquially as the
diag, which stands for Domestic Investigations Operations Guide. And one of the provisions in
that diag, one of the main and first provisions, is the need to have predication before you can
start an investigation. Predication means that we have some factual allegation that we've received
and in good faith we are going to open an investigation. It is a good faith allegation of a crime
or a threat to the national security. So it would be improper, for example, for me to say,
I want to look at everybody on the board of governors of the Federal Reserve and I'm going to
dig into their backgrounds until I find something they've done wrong. And then I'm going to use that
to prosecute them. Instead, what you're supposed to do is find an allegation of a crime.
Perhaps a bank reaches out with a suspicious activity report.
says, here is an irregularity in a mortgage application. We want to share that with you for
potential investigation. That would be appropriate predication. That recording you just played
of Pam Bondi, which she alleges that George Soros is responsible for doing is being a billionaire
funding campaigns to remove President Trump from power. Well, is that not exactly what Elon Musk
did in reverse? I mean, yes, that is currently how our campaign finance system works.
Barbara, it's really interesting what you just share with us about this FBI manual and the guide of factual allegations because one of the other things that's interesting about this Soros investigation, they're talking about ideas from the fringe.
Many of these allegations are conspiracy theories. Have we ever been here before where conspiracy theories also make their way into government and actually become the basis for prosecution?
Boy, I don't know if we've ever been here. I suppose there may.
may have been other examples where we have seen that, but it is contrary to this idea of
predication, which is designed to eliminate all that sort of stuff. I can remember when I was serving
as U.S. attorney, we would frequently get calls from supporters of political campaigns who wanted
to share dirt on their rivals. They just wanted us to open an investigation so that then there could be
a headline. They'd even say to us in the call, so my rival did X, Y, and Z, are you going to open
investigation because then they would be the leak in a newspaper report that their arrival was
under investigation because that's all they really wanted was the specter of an investigation.
And that concept is so consistent with some of the things we've seen from Donald Trump.
Remember when he had the exchange with Vladimir Zelensky back in the subject of the first
impeachment where he said, all I want you to do is go on CNN and announce that the Biden family
is under investigation.
And then remember when the 2020 election, he was claiming fraud, and he asked his Justice Department, just say there was fraud and leave the rest to me and Republicans in Congress.
What it seems to me he really wants is let's just announce this thing because that will dirty them up.
In some ways, it feels like that's what's happening to Jim Comey right now.
Let's talk a little bit about the James Comey case.
The president has referred to him as a bad guy.
you just wrote an analysis of the indictment.
You called it Amateur Hour in the Eastern District of Virginia.
Walk us through what you saw in that indictment that make you describe it that way.
Well, you know, it would be laughable if it weren't so dangerous, but I do think that there are a number of things that are red flags.
I mean, first, the process of it all, right?
We've got a Trump-appointed interim U.S. attorney nominated for the permanent position, 15-year career prosecutor who, by all
accounts is a solid award-winning public servant declines. The prosecution says, no, there's just
no evidence here. He gets fired and replaced with a White House loyalist, Lindsey Halligan,
an insurance lawyer, someone who's represented Donald Trump in the past, working as an aide at
the White House whose job it is at the moment to scrub the Smithsonian from woke ideology. That's the
person he installs as the new U.S. attorney. And within four days, despite a memo from the line
prosecutors arguing that there's no probable cause in this case, she says, I'll charge that
case. But it is not some line prosecutor in the office who goes in and does the work, as is often
the case, almost always the case, to present the case to the grand jury, to sign off in the
indictment. She and she alone is the one who goes into the grand jury room. And she and she alone
is the one who signs the indictment. During the eight years I served as a U.S. attorney, do you know
how many indictments I signed? Zero. That's because there are line prosecutors steeped in the
details of those cases who are the ones who present the case and sign the indictment. It is
very telling to me that instead we had Lindsay Halligan doing all of this work. You write about
something that's a little bit confusing in the heart of this indictment. So Senator Ted Cruz
asked Comey about testimony in 2017, but Cruz apparently misspoke. And he said, Clinton administration
when he meant Clinton investigation, mixing up questioning about Hillary
Clinton's email server, not the former president, Bill Clinton's administration.
Barbara, can you untangle this for us?
Yeah, I'll try.
So Cruz was asking Comey about testimony he gave in 2017 in response to a question from
Senator Chuck Grassley.
And so when Grassley asked the question, he asked if Comey had ever authorized someone else
at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the
Clinton investigation. Now, it's a little unclear what was being discussed when he talked
about Clinton investigation. Was that the email server or was that the Clinton Foundation?
So that alone makes it tricky. But Cruz botches it in 2020 because he doesn't say Clinton
investigation. He says Clinton administration. My guess is, is this tangle that is caused
causing other prosecutors to say, this case is a mess and can't be charged.
Let's play a little bit of that testimony.
On May 3rd, 2017, in this committee, Chairman Grassley asked you point blank, quote,
have you ever been an anonymous source and news reports about matters relating to the Trump
investigation or the Clinton investigation?
You responded under oath, quote, never.
He then asked you, quote, have you ever authorized someone else at the FBI?
to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton administration.
You responded again under oath. No. Now, as you know, Mr. McCabe, who works for you,
has publicly and repeatedly stated that he leaked information to the Wall Street Journal
and that you were directly aware of it and that you directly authorized it.
Now, what Mr. McCabe is saying and what you testify to this committee cannot both be true,
one or the other is false.
Who's telling the truth?
I can only speak to my testimony.
I stand by what the testimony you summarized that I gave in May of 2017.
And that was a clip from testimony from 2020.
Cruz misspeaks.
And I think as a result, it really clutters a case where a jury is going to be asked to find unanimously guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
So the other flaw with this case is, as you said,
Cruz is going back to 2017 and asking about a question that was asked by Senator Chuck Grassley at that time.
And the reason I imagine they use the 2020 restatement as opposed to the 2017 statement is because the statute of limitations is only five years.
And so it's too late to charge for the 2017 thing. So instead, you're stuck with what Ted Cruz says.
You feel like this case is probably destined for acquittal. But you also write.
that the indictment itself has a variance problem? And can you explain what that means and
why Comey might actually prefer to let this go to trial than get it dismissed early?
Yeah, it's an interesting concept. So a variance is a legal term of art, and that is you charge
one crime, but you proved another. And that is fatal to an indictment. So for example, say,
I charged you, Tanya, with robbing a bank, the first bank of America on July 1st. But at trial,
the evidence I prove is that you robbed the second Bank of America on August 1st.
I may have proved out a crime, but it's not that crime. And that would be a variance from the
indictment in violation of your due process rights because a defendant is entitled to fair
notice of that with which he is charged so that he can mount a defense and share an alibi
if he can say I was somewhere else on August 1st of this year. And so for that reason,
you know, a false statement pertaining to the Clinton administration is
different from a false statement pertaining to the Clinton investigation. That's about the email
server, not about the Clinton administration. And in addition, there is some argument that it isn't
about either of those things, but it's about the Clinton Foundation. And that was what they were
investigating. So they have to have a solid theory of prosecution. They have to provide Jim Comey with
notice of that. To date, they haven't really done that. But as you say, maybe Comey just wants to
strategically say, let's have a trial. I'm ready. I want to assert my right to a speedy trial.
I have a right to a trial within 70 days. And that sometimes can trip up prosecutors because
they don't have anybody ready to go within 70 days. In this case, that might be a very good
strategy. Because if the only one at the Eastern District of Virginia's office who's willing to take
this case is Lindsay Halligan, she does not seem ready for prime time with the skills required
and experience required to handle a federal criminal case. I want to play.
a clip. Actually, Comey gave a statement about all of this on Instagram right after the announcement.
Let's listen.
My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump.
But we couldn't imagine ourselves living any other way. We will not live on our knees.
And you shouldn't either. Somebody that I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool of a tyrant.
And she's right.
but I'm not afraid
and I hope you're not either
I hope instead you are engaged
you are paying attention
and you will vote
like your beloved country
depends upon it
which it does
my heart is broken
for the Department of Justice
but I have great confidence
in the federal judicial system
and I'm innocent
so let's have a trial
and keep the faith
that was James Comey
himself expressing faith in the judicial system to vindicate him. You know, even if he's ultimately
acquitted, Comey's now facing a lot of legal proceedings, years possibly, massive legal bills,
the stress of federal indictment. His family is also tangled. His daughter Maureen was
fired from her position as a federal prosecutor in July. His son-in-law, who was also a federal
prosecutor, has resigned. Is that part of the point that the process itself becomes the punishment?
So prosecutors are required to take great care not to charge people just to put them through the ringer.
And so this to me feels like an abuse of those principles, an abuse of that process.
One of the things that was instilled in me as a U.S. attorney in making these kinds of charging decisions was just because you have the power to do something doesn't mean it is wise to do so.
So could they get a grand jury indictment here?
Yeah, I guess they were able to muster sufficient probable cause, at least for two out of three of the charges, although we know from reporting that only 14 out of the 23 grand jurors voted to indict.
That is astonishing because now at trial, you've got to convince 12 jurors and all 12 of jurors unanimously have a much higher standard guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
And so even though you can charge someone just with the bare bones minimum of probable cause and just if you can convince a majority of the grand jurors, it's unethical to do that unless you believe that the evidence is sufficient to obtain a conviction at trial.
Now, you don't need a slam dunk, but it needs to be probable that, yeah, I think I got it.
Of course, there's always the chance of a holdout juror or the evidence doesn't come in the way you expected it to.
But you have to believe, like, it's likely I'm going to get a conviction at trial.
I just can't believe anybody looks at this case and thinks that's true.
Let's take a short break. Our guest today is legal scholar Barbara McQuaid.
We'll be right back after a short break. I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is fresh air.
Support for NPR, and the following message comes from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
RWJF is a national philanthropy working toward a future where health is no longer a privilege but a right.
Learn more at our wjjf.org.
Barbara, you were a U.S. attorney when Trump forced you to resign in 2017, along with dozens of other federal prosecutors.
Can you briefly share what happened to you?
Yes.
So it is not unusual for a president to replace U.S. attorneys.
It's pretty typical and even expected.
I had actually planned to leave myself at the end of April to come work at the University of Michigan.
again by that time. But it was a very abrupt way to end the tenure of, I think it was something like
47 remaining U.S. attorneys who had been appointed by President Obama. And to me, that was just
not good government. On a Friday afternoon in March of that year, I started hearing from colleagues
around the country that they had been fired. Our public affairs officer came into my office and told me
how sorry she was. And I said, what are you talking about? And she said, oh, they've just announced
The Justice Department has just announced that all of the Obama U.S. attorneys have been asked to resign.
So, but we had just days before been told by the new Attorney General Jeffrey Sessions that we would be allowed to leave when our successors were named so as to promote an orderly transition of power.
And suddenly something irked President Trump.
I know Prit Barrara, the U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York, thinks it was his failure to return his phone calls that got him angry and got him fired.
and got him fired and then and all the rest of them too. So I don't know how that happened,
but it just struck me as an example of putting public spite ahead of what was in the best
interest of the American people. You know, what's interesting about that, I actually do want to
clarify something, the lead prosecutor for the Comey case, Eric Siebert. It's used interchangeably
that he was fired by the president, but then that he resigned. Do you know exactly how it went?
I mean, what you're saying is kind of, they kind of both happen sort of in tandem where someone resigns after they hear that they're being fired potentially.
Yeah, it's not uncommon for somebody to be told, you must resign.
And I suppose in some ways that's a face-saving way out to resign.
It also protects the leader from criticism that they fired this person while they resigned.
What else could I do?
I think the facts when the Eric Siebert departure from the U.S. Attorney's Office are a little murky.
He said that he was resigning, but then President Trump took credit in a truth social post a few days later to say, you know, he was a woke rhino who was never going to do the job.
He didn't resign.
I fired him.
So I don't know what the facts are there.
But I think it's fair to say he was forced to leave over his decision.
And it may be the Comey case.
It may be the Letitia James case.
But over some of these decisions where President Trump was urging.
criminal charges and a, you know, seasoned professional prosecutor declined to do so.
Barbara, can you give us a brief history of the key reforms that were put in place after
Watergate?
Sure.
So after Watergate, when we saw President Nixon abuse his authority in a couple of ways, I mean,
one certainly was in an effort to stop the FBI's investigation into his own involvement
in the Watergate break-in, he directed that the FBI be told that the CIA was investigating
and that they needed to stand down. And so that kind of meddling by the president was seen
as politically based and inappropriate. Now, norms were put in place to prevent that kind of thing.
One is a limit on communications between the White House and the Justice Department. They are not
supposed to talk about cases. There is an exception for people at the highest level, the
attorney general, White House counsel, but that is to make sure that the nation's interests are
being protected. So if, for example, the Justice Department is about to unseal an indictment
against the president of Iran or the head of a terrorist organization, you might get the state
department in the room, you might get the White House in the room to make sure this is not going
to disrupt some diplomatic negotiations that are going on at the moment. So that kind of coordination
occurs. But what's never supposed to happen is the president directing who should be charged
or not charged. That is a post-watergate norm. Were there other norms that were also put in
place after Watergate? Yes. So among them are some of the things we've already talked about.
One is this idea that you neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation. And, you know,
that is to protect the reputation of someone who's investigated who might never be charged with
a crime. Another of these principles of federal prosecution, which provide a number of factors
that prosecutors should consider when deciding whether to exercise their discretion to bring a
case. What is the public safety benefit of the charges? What is the deterrent effect on other
would-be criminals? What is the public safety goal here? What is
the likely sentence that will be achieved. If the only outcome here is going to be probation,
then maybe that's not a good use of our resources. But there are also prohibited factors like
race, religion, and political association. So those are things we're seeing violated. The other thing
that came along was control over the way the president uses surveillance powers. So because we knew
that in the Nixon administration and in the FBI of J. Edgar Hoover,
surveillance powers were used to monitor political enemies like Martin Luther King or Vietnam
protesters or other civil rights leaders. We saw the enactment of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act that made it clear that the president can only monitor and surveil and
wiretap people under certain circumstances. They have to either use the FISA court, which
requires review by a court before you can monitor foreign intelligence targets, or that
Title III, the wiretap law, is required for other investigations. All of that leaves some areas
of gray about what's permitted in the in between. We know that arguments have made in the past
that the president has inherent authority to protect the national security and to engage in
surveillance. But it was considered a grand bargain at the time between the White House and Congress
that this would be the only way that surveillance would be conducted.
However, the White House, as from time to time, notably in the Bush administration,
made the argument that the president has inherent authority even beyond those two tools to collect surveillance.
Do we know whether Cash Patel has asserted that authority and is using surveillance against Trump's political enemies?
I don't know, but I think the fact that President Trump has said,
I'm going to do what I believe I can do, not what I should do. I worry about whether that they are
using surveillance tools against the rest of us to blow through those norms that were put in place
after Watergate. Let's take a short break. If you're just joining us, my guest is Barbara
McQuaid, a former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan and professor at the University
of Michigan Law School. This is fresh air. Let's talk about the next targets or potential targets.
You mentioned Letitia James, New York's Attorney General.
Her 2018 campaign, she pledged to investigate Trump.
And in 2022, she brought civil fraud charges against him.
States are supposed to be able to hold powerful people accountable.
Even the president without fear of federal retaliation.
Now Trump has turned the Justice Department on her right after she won her case.
And prosecutors refused to bring charges were fired.
What happens to the balance of power if presidents can prosecute state officials who challenge them?
You raise a really important point and that one that Republicans in particular have always made, which is the importance in our federal system of states' rights.
Our system of comity, C-O-M-I-T-Y, is that we respect the rights of states and local government to do their work.
And so an attorney general or a Manhattan district attorney who is doing their work and then find themselves targeted by the Justice Department for their work is a very disturbing use of federal power to squash state and local power.
And I think that is something that should concern all of us.
You know, there were times when the tables were turned and we saw Democrats who favored the use of federal power.
and it was Republicans who supported state power.
But if you were to ask the framers of our Constitution, their view of this, they would say,
well, the 10th Amendment reserved powers for the states.
That is what they are supposed to do.
And so this is a violation of our constitutional separation of powers, not just among the three federal branches of government,
but between the allocation of power between the federal government and state governments.
The people of New York elected Letitia James to be their attorney general,
the people of Manhattan elected Alvin Bragg to be their district attorney. And so to attack them for
their work is a very dangerous thing to that balance of power. What is the potential chilling
effect here? If you're a state attorney general right now, you're watching all of this unfold,
how does that change your calculations about investigating federal officials or the president?
Yeah, one would hope that a person with integrity and who is doing the job they were elected to do
would move forward without fear or favor. That's a phrase prosecutors are fond of using, right,
without fear or favor. But when you see your colleagues around the country, not just criticized,
but targeted for criminal investigation and in the case of Jim Comey indicted, wow, that makes you think
twice, right? Because nobody ever gets in trouble for something they don't do. And so I remember
that hearing one of the greatest criticisms you could hear of one FBI agent of another was to say he
follows the principle of he who does nothing, does nothing wrong. That's not the job. The job is
to hold people accountable when they violate the law. And you have to be brave. You have to have
the courage to do these kinds of things. But I can imagine the chilling effect that happens
when there is a prosecutor in a state AG's office or a county DA's office. And they see what's
happening to others around the country. And you just say, this one's hard. Let's skip this.
one and move on to something else that's more low level so that I don't have to worry about the
consequences. Barbara, I want to also ask you about Senator Adam Schiff and the allegations
against him, just to remind people, he led Trump's first impeachment. Trump is accusing Schiff
of mortgage fraud, the claim that Schiff falsely declared his Maryland House as his primary
residents to get better loan terms. First off, what is the merit of that charge? How do you assess
it? So mortgage fraud is a crime that gets charged with some frequency. It was charged in my
former office a great deal, especially after the 2008 financial meltdown. But it requires
more than conflicting statement. So it appears that Adam Schiff may have checked the box on two
different properties to say they would be as primary residence. And logic tells us that a person
cannot have more than one primary residence. So on its face, it's a red flag, and it might
merit further investigation. But that alone is not evidence of mortgage fraud. Mortgage fraud requires
that a person make a false statement. That could be false. But they do so knowingly, so not a mistake,
not an error, that they do so willfully. That is, I knew it was illegal and I did it anyway. And that the
statement is material. That means it mattered. The person got either better loan terms or they
qualified for a loan that otherwise would have been rejected. So it requires a great deal of
investigation before that happens. Most of the time when you get a referral for these things,
they come from a bank that says we've noticed this false statement in these documents and we are
referring it to the FBI for further investigation. That's the predication that we talked about
earlier that's required in the Diag, the Domestic Investigations
Operations Guide. What appears to have happened here is the process in reverse, to reverse
engineer these cases. So who are Trump's enemies? And let's dig through all of their records
and see if we can find anything we can pin on them. Yeah, I was also wondering that with this
charge isn't like maintaining homes in both a district that a sitting senators from and near
the capital is something that often happens. Yes, certainly. And so it may be that Adam Schiff
did think of both of these places as his primary residence, right? You have to show not only that
they knowingly made this statement, right, so I didn't check the box in error as I was filling out
this form. And if you've ever, you know, closed on a mortgage, you know that they put a big
stack of papers in front of you and say, sign here. I don't even know that it was Schiff himself
who checked the box or some lawyer or real estate agent. He just signed all the documents at the
bottom. You have to show that they knew that they were making this false statement, but also
that they did it willfully, which means they knew it was illegal at the time they signed it.
That's a pretty high standard to prove. The way you usually prove it is conflicting statements,
the fact that perhaps they told somebody that I got a loan that I otherwise would not have
qualified for, that they first got rejected and they came back and they made changes. There are a number
of ways to do it. You know, in the case of Lisa Cook, she's another person, a governor of the
Board of the Federal Reserve, who has been accused of mortgage fraud.
This is another one of these things.
No, the referral didn't come from predication through a bank.
It came from Bill Pulte, who is the head of the FHFA, who revealed these red flags, I suppose.
But it's been determined that on other documents, she indicated that the Atlanta property
would be a vacation home.
And so you have to look at the whole context, the totality of the circumstances.
You can't pluck out one red flag and say, therefore, she's.
She's guilty of a crime.
Our guest today is legal scholar Barbara McQuaid.
We'll be right back after a short break.
This is fresh air.
You know, speaking of DOJ norms, I mean, with James Comey during the first round where Trump was elected, he actually disclosed that there was an investigation of Hillary Clinton and her emails.
Yeah.
And I think most of us at the time who worked at the Department of Justice,
realized just how awful that was, what a deep violation of the norms it was. It was an arrogant
act, I think, by James Comey. I think it was a bit of a selfish act. And in my opinion, I think he was
trying to preserve his own reputation among Republicans by castigating Hillary Clinton.
What you may recall is the investigation itself was sort of publicly known because of the use
of the email server. It was a referral by Congress. And so it was pretty well known that it was
happening. Also, Trump's rhetoric where he talked quite a bit about it during the election.
Yes. And so the fact that it was acknowledged didn't bother me too much because I think that was
already in the public domain. I think straight by the book response, however, it would have been
we can neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation. I think that would have been
more appropriate. However, there is an exception when necessary to
to assure the public that the FBI is on the job.
And so maybe I give him a pass there to acknowledge the investigation.
But where I really part ways with the way he handled that was two things that he did.
One, he announced that they were closing the investigation.
That announcement really should have come from the Attorney General, but she had recused
herself by then or the Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates.
And, you know, an Inspector General report has indicated that Comey just called her and said,
I'm making an announcement today, heads up, didn't tell her what it was about and then made this
announcement. And what he said then was, you know, he said the FBI was recommending that no charges
should be filed and the case is closed. I guess that's fine. If it was publicly announced,
I guess you can announce that it's closed. But then he didn't stop there. He went on further
to say that Hillary Clinton had been extremely careless. And he criticized her and talked about
the case and all of the bad things that they had found. That is not how an investigation.
investigation is supposed to work. But then the second sin of Jim Comey came shortly thereafter. So this closing
of the announcement comes in the summer of 2016. So maybe before many voters are paying attention.
But then in October, very shortly before the investigation, Comey announces that the investigation
has been reopened. Now, that's because you may recall this scandal, Anthony Weiner, who was married to
Huma Aberdeen, a close aide of Hillary Clinton, had a laptop seized in an investigation relating
to pornography. And as the FBI is looking at that laptop, which is shared with his wife,
Huma Abidding, they find more of these Hillary Clinton emails that had been sent or received
on her private server. And so Comey sends a letter to Congress, certainly knowing that this
will become public, saying the investigation is open again because we have to look at these
emails that were on the laptop of Anthony Wiener. He says, I don't know how long it's going to
take. I'm not sure it can be completed before the election. So I just wanted everybody to know
that the investigation is open again. Again, this is a violation of the policy to neither
confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation. What Comey said later is, I felt it would be
inappropriate to conceal that we had reopened the investigation since everybody had known
that it was closed. Boy, is that turning this policy on its head?
And, of course, now there's another headline, and now it's shortly before the election that says FBI reopens investigation on Hillary Clinton.
So that's another, you know, black mark on her as we approach the election.
It gets closed just a few days later.
They look at these emails.
They see that these are just a few of the same duplicates that they had seen before.
They're able to review them quickly and conclude that there is nothing that is the basis of criminal charges here for, you know, misusing classified information was the basis of that investigation.
So now it's closed. But of course, the headline is still there fresh in people's minds as they cast their balance.
I want to talk a little bit with you, Barbara, about Trump's rhetoric as legal strategy, because what strikes me is that he is creating an incredibly detailed public record.
And I'm just wondering if his own words could actually end up helping the defendants.
I think it's possible. I imagine that Jim Comey's lawyers are at least thinking about.
filing a motion to dismiss this case on the grounds of selective prosecution.
Selective prosecution is a violation of due process rights if a defendant can show that the case was brought for an improper purpose.
Sometimes that could be race. It could be religion. One of the most famous cases of selective prosecution involved charges against operators of laundry services in San Francisco in wooden shops.
So after the great fire in San Francisco, there was a prohibition on running laundry services in wooden buildings because of the danger of fire.
But it turned out that the prosecutions were only brought against Chinese owners of laundry services in wooden buildings and not white operators.
And so they successfully brought a claim of selective prosecution.
You're only going after one race of people in prosecuting this case.
It's difficult to prove this claim, however, because it requires a couple of things.
One is showing that others similarly situated were not charged with crimes.
In the case of the laundry services, it was easy to do that because they could just line up and say,
look, here are all the Chinese owners, here are all the non-Chinese owners.
These were charged.
These weren't charged.
In a case like Jim Comey's, it's hard to prove the negative that somebody else did make a false statement before Congress but wasn't charged.
But what's easy to prove in this case is the second element, that is an intent to discriminate on some improper purpose.
And in addition to race or religion, a political motive is an arbitrary and prohibited basis.
And so here is where Trump's messages could be very valuable to the defense team because you'd have to show an intent to treat someone differently on the basis of politics.
So all these things about Comey's a scumb ball or a slime ball or whatever the words that Trump has used,
I think those could be strong evidence for that other element of intent. Barbara, you're a professor. You're teaching future lawyers right now at the University of Michigan. How do you prepare them for this reality? I mean, what do you tell them about ethics when the government is prosecuting people based on, you know, conspiracy theories and grievances? Yeah. Well, there are a couple things. One is we teach them the norms, right? We teach them the rules of ethics.
We teach them what is in the DOJ's policies and principles of federal prosecution.
These are the expectations.
These are the norms.
And these, as a member of any bar, of any state, are your ethical obligations.
Every state has model rules of professional responsibility based on the American Bar Association's versions, including a rule 3.8 that includes special duties of a prosecutor.
So we teach them those things.
I also have a segment of my class every day where we talk about things in the news, things that appear to be unusual and abnormal.
And although, you know, the president, does he have the power to do these things?
Some are untested.
As I said earlier, however, just because you can do something doesn't mean you should do something.
So I just ask the students to consider whether this use of power is, one, lawful, and two, ethical, and three, an appropriate use of power in a democracy.
And so we discuss those things.
And I think it's important to listen to voices.
Reasonable minds can disagree about what you should do.
But I think when it comes down to the law and ethics, everybody needs to know where those lines are drawn.
Barbara McQuaid, thank you so much for this conversation.
Thank you, Tanya.
Barbara McQuaid is a professor at the University of Michigan Law School.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, Dwayne Johnson once considered switching from wrestling to mixed martial arts.
He never did it, but now he plays a pioneer of M.MA in the new film The Smashing Machine, based on the life of Mark Kerr. Johnson talks about the film, being the rock, and being a third-generation wrestler in his family. I hope you can join us.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
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