Trump's Trials - The Supreme Court's immunity ruling complicates all the cases against Trump
Episode Date: July 6, 2024For this episode of Trump's Trials, host Domenico Montanaro speaks with former deputy assistant attorney general Harry Litman. The Supreme Court's landmark decision on presidential immunity is complic...ating all of the pending legal cases against former President Donald Trump. Even the hush money trial where he was already convicted is getting a second look to determine what, if any, evidence violates the Supreme Court's ruling. Topics include:- Reaction to immunity decision- How decision affects Trump's legal casesFollow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for new episodes each Saturday.Sign up for sponsor-free episodes and support NPR's political journalism at plus.npr.org/trumpstrials.Email the show at trumpstrials@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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A big win for Trump at the Supreme Court.
From NPR, this is Trump's Trials on Domenico Montanaro.
This is a persecution.
He actually just stormed out of the courtroom.
Innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Former President Donald Trump scored a major victory with the Supreme Court's ruling granting
him broad immunity, and it stunned many legal and government experts.
This is a watershed moment.
This decision was written as if America has never had a corrupt president.
This is not America.
This seems to me to be protection and cover.
This opens the door to abuses of power.
It's quite unlikely that any future former presidents could be held responsible for criminal
acts committed during their presence.
And no outcry was more powerful than from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who wrote this in
her dissent.
What if a president orders the Navy's SEAL Team 6 to assassinate a political rival, immune,
organizes a military coup to hold onto power, immune, takes a bribe in exchange for a pardon, immune, immune, organizes a military coup to hold on to power, immune, takes a bribe in exchange
for a pardon, immune, immune, immune.
That's CNN's Dana Bash reading from Sotomayor's dissent, which the justice closed by saying
with fear for our democracy, I dissent.
With this decision, the Supreme Court has all but ensured the federal election interference
case will not go to trial before the November election.
When we come back, we'll get into how this affects Trump's legal cases with former U.S. Attorney Harry but do his teenaged kids like his songs? So we listened to it in the kitchen and, and it,
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And we're back with former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Harry Littman. Harry also
clerked for two Supreme Court justices, Justice Thurgood Marshall and Justice Anthony Kennedy.
Quite the resume. Good to have you with us.
Thanks, Semeniko. Good to be here.
Well, first, Harry, what's your reaction to this immunity decision?
I was horrified by it. I think it is fair to say it was way more expansive and I think pernicious than I anticipated
and I'd anticipated something problematic.
So it's an opinion that just gets worse in the rereading.
And it seems to me to restructure and reconfigure the whole relationship between the executive
branch and the other branches more than any case in the court's history except Marbury
versus Madison.
Well, there's going to be a lot of people who might not know what the differences are
here and there.
So maybe we can define some things in this court decision.
The court found presidents have absolute immunity for core constitutional powers. But what did they say is a core constitutional power?
You know, and all of these things, they just gave illustrations. So we think every illustration
they gave is for something listed in Article 2, which sets out the president's powers.
But some of those like that take care clause are very broad. Some like
giving of pardons are pretty specific, but that's at least the paradigm and
maybe the whole category of the exclusive presidential powers that can't
be made to be a crime no matter what. I see. You know, they said that there's some
presumption of immunity too, as opposed to absolute immunity
for other, quote, official acts.
Of course, we don't exactly know what an official act is or an unofficial act.
The lower court is now going to have to sort of decide some of that within this Trump case.
But broadly speaking, and maybe giving us some clues from what Justice Roberts had said
and others, what is an official act that doesn't fall under the core constitutional power but Broadly speaking, and maybe giving us some clues from what Justice Roberts had said and
others, what is an official act that doesn't fall under the core constitutional power but
may get some presumed immunity?
Right.
Well, it's slippery and it either gets presumed immunity or it doesn't, but they say no more
than it is an official act.
And you can imagine things that the president does every day that aren't
part of the Article 2 powers, have press conferences and all kinds of things that are broader.
And we know that from other previous court opinions. The real problem is trying to distinguish between an official act that isn't in the core of Article 2 and
an unofficial act because that's the line that when you draw it, there is the possibility
of making something criminal. But the court is pretty cryptic here about saying what counts
and there seems to be an argument that you can make for almost anything that it's an official
Act and if it is an official act the government has to prove has the burden of showing that it would not
Impinge on the president's authority to make it a crime
So, uh, we're left with a lot of open questions in the wake of the opinion
So what then do you think is clearly unofficial act?
Well, we can sure posit it.
For example, there's talk now about what happens in Manhattan. Well in that case Trump got convicted for
before he was even in office paying off a woman he'd had a tryst with in order to
keep the facts from the American people.
And he's not even president, so you can't perform an official act until you're president.
On the other hand, he followed that up with signing personal checks in the Oval Office, that also seems to be
an unofficial act. What could be more personal than that, that's not listed anywhere in the
president's kind of constitutional or other duties. But one big problem here is the court
has said when you're deciding, even if it's an unofficial act, you cannot take into account any evidence of conduct
that would be an official act.
So back in Manhattan, there were a few things
that the DA introduced, a conversation with Hope Hicks
when he was president, other tweets that he could argue
have some official kind of function. And so it gets pretty murky.
And when you determine that something could be potentially within the president's official
act, the outer reaches of it, then there's a whole other responsibility that the prosecution has to undertake of showing
this wouldn't impinge on the authority of a president.
All a long-winded way of saying that even things that seem very clearly unofficial could
be hard to prove that they are and could always give rise to an argument that they are not.
Because of the timeline here, this case is basically way pushed off beyond November's
election.
There's not going to be a verdict for people to consider when they go to the ballot box.
I want to talk a little bit though about the fact that this case is going to be continuing
to a point, but what does this do to Jack Smith's case?
For Smith, he's got two cases, right? The one from January 6th, I'd say it guts, if not completely nullifying.
So there's big parts of the case that the court had made clear just go away.
For instance, everything involving his scheming with the DOJ to send false information to
Georgia saying, hey, you guys have some fraud problems in
your election.
That's a flat out fraud scheme, but because it falls into the category of something that's
core, at least the way the court put it, talking with the DOJ, he's got a free pass.
Then there are other things that the courts say you'll have to see one way or another. The most likely
to survive seems to be the state electors schemes where he tries with a lot of actors to have
fraudulent certificates used on January 6. Maybe that survives. And then on Mar-a-Lago,
you know, his action was after he was out of the
White House, except he's claimed that when he was in the White House he made
these certificates or other national security papers. He declassified them
and it's hard to know how Jack Smith rebutts that given what the court has
said. So for Jack Smith's two cases, they're
hurt and but not certainly dead. And of course that's only if Trump were to lose
because if he wins he just gives the command, drop these cases and that
command will happen. How hard is it going to be you think for Jack Smith to overcome
the presumption of immunity in this January 6th case as he tries to make this case going forward?
That's a really good question and one we just don't know the answer to because they gave such sketchy guidance.
I think it'll be pretty easy for Trump to put it in that category, which sounds like a pretty non-official action, he can proffer reasons to say at least this ought to be presumed
immune and presumptions have weight in the criminal law and often things are decided
based on them alone.
So what kind of showing Jack Smith is going to have to make to convince a court that this
wouldn't intrude on the authority of a president and is it just this action in particular or the whole class of such actions?
It's a really murky part of the opinion.
So I want to read a little excerpt from Chief Justice John Roberts' opinion.
And he said, because the president cannot be prosecuted for conduct within his exclusive
constitutional authority, Trump is absolutely immune from prosecution for the alleged conduct involving his discussions with Justice Department officials.
I think for a lot of us, that raised our eyebrows tremendously.
I'm sure it did for you too.
I mean, reading this right, does this mean that the evidence of Trump pressuring the
DOJ into validating his false claims that there was fraud in the election is now out
because of those conversations fall under immunity? I mean what does it mean
for Smith's case that this evidence would be out if it is? That's exactly
what it means and it sure makes me puzzled as much as you. It's what the
lawyers would call a non sequitur. Okay, so you're worried about that. Why then should you not even be able to probe the most rampant criminal conduct?
Consider the Nixon case where that's what happened and the verdict of history certainly
is that that was improper, possibly criminal.
That's now off the table.
What does it mean for Smith's case?
That part of Smith's case that has to do with conversations with
DOJ, even though they seem completely beyond the pale, they're just gone. They just vaporize.
And the Chief Justice, in his opinion, said it flat out because it involves those conversations
as wicked and as criminal and as far from what you think a president should be doing
as you can conceptualize them, they are all off the table.
It's just as if they never happened for purposes of trying to prove a crime.
It's kind of ironic.
Honestly, you know, in August of 1974, 50 years ago, Nixon resigned essentially because
he didn't want to be prosecuted for potential
criminal acts that he directed.
And he was pardoned by Ford when he took office for any potential crimes.
And hasn't this sort of norm come into place all because of Watergate to say that there's
some degree of separation between the president and the Justice Department,
that a president doesn't control the Justice Department.
Isn't that the case?
And what's that going to mean going forward?
Yeah.
So I think that's exactly right.
And Ford even wrote in the pardoning statement that there's some reason to suggest that Nixon
has criminal liability.
And now that would just be a nonsense statement because the new Supreme Court has interpreted
saying that there cannot be.
What does it mean going forward?
Whatever norms are in place and however much they are actually adhered to by some administrations
because it's the right thing to do, there's no power at all to police it and even up to
it including crimes. So I think it's really
clear that Nixon would not have had any criminal exposure under this opinion and
then going forward the very presidents for whom you most need it those are the
ones you just can't get it for. So it's a profound reordering of the relationship
but it's really clear who they are elevating, and that is
the president to a position that I think there's no way of getting around is the single official
in the government who's above the law. Well, like any good lawyer at the Supreme Court,
let's put some hypotheticals to the test because they saw,
you know, obviously strong dissent from Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who said, you
know, talked about the president potentially ordering an assassination of a political rival,
organizing a military coup to hold on to power, taking a bribe in exchange for a pardon. She's
claiming that all of those would be immune. Is that the case? Is that a little hyperbolic or is there some truth there?
There's more than some truth really, you know, in the wake of these decisions there, you
often have these accusations, sometimes accurate of hyperbole, but this is just straightforward
application of what the court said. If you're within the core powers that we talked about at the beginning, you may not be held to
criminal account. Are you within the core powers with pardons? Yes. So if you do it
for a million dollar bribe, that's your motive, but you cannot be charged with a
crime. The inquiry begins and ends with asking, are you acting under your
Article 2 powers? Now you might say that that would be exactly the time when you
would most need criminal penalties because there's no other check on you.
Congress by definition can't tell you what to do there, so it should be the
criminal law that is the ultimate backstop but that backstop goes away and there's none behind it so i think that is just a statement of that from the center my or and i haven't heard any.
Cogent argument to the contrary that you act with these areas of corporate responsibility you have a full pass on criminal conduct.
responsibility, you have a full pass on criminal conduct. Let's talk about just very briefly a couple of the other cases and the potential domino
effect from this case.
Trump was originally supposed to be sentenced for his guilty verdict in the hush money trial
in New York next week on the 11th.
That's been now delayed to September 18th, which happens to be a week after the potential
final presidential debate.
Is there a reality in which the conviction
gets thrown out because of immunity at all as the Trump campaign and Trump himself, Trump
legal team is trying to push for in New York?
So the upshot of this opinion is there's always a reality. I don't think it should happen.
What could be more unofficial conduct than before you are president having a scheme to
pay off someone so they don't reveal a sexual at risk that could influence the American
people. But some of the conduct takes place in the White House. The real challenge here
is with this point about motive, because the court says not only that you can't consider motive
but you can't even offer as evidence something that could be an official act.
And what happened in this case is that some of the evidence I was there for it was testimony of Hope Hicks
when she was his communications director, were certain tweets, and can Trump argue that those were important and official
and they shouldn't have come in and then one more step he'd have to take, which is to say
it mattered, it wasn't harmless error.
To me, I don't think that Justice Mayor Chun will credit those arguments enough to say
there should be a new trial, which is all that there could be a new trial, they wouldn't throw out the case.
But could a higher court up to and including the Supreme Court say, you know, that evidence
was pretty powerful and it was of official acts and we now know from the Trump case,
it shouldn't have come in?
Yeah, that could happen.
We really are in a whole new world where kind of anything could happen in any case.
Whole new world indeed.
Harry Libman, thank you so much for being with us.
I always appreciate your time.
Thanks Domenico.
We'll be back next week with another episode of Trump's Trials.
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Eric Maripodi is NPR's vice president of news programming. I'm Domenico Montanaro. Thanks
for listening to Trump's Trials from NPR.
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