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Impeachable Offenses?

~ The Use & Abuse of Impeachment in the 21st Century

Impeachable Offenses?

Author Archives: impeachableoffenses

The Russian collusion investigation: Bumbling grifters & the risks of keeping it all in the family

12 Sunday Nov 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

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Carter Page, Donald Trump Jr., emoluments, George Papodopoulos, Hope Hicks, J.D. Gordon, jared kushner, Jeff Sessions, Lewandowski, Manafort, Michael Flynn, nepotism, Putin, Robert Mueller, Sam Clovis, scheme of peculation, Stephen Miller

Earlier this week, I had the pleasure of doing an interview with Canada’s CTV network on developments in, and speculations about, the progress of the Mueller investigation.  The anchor wanted to talk about the testimony of  former Trump campaign foreign policy advisor, Carter Page, to the House Select Committee on Intelligence, Attorney General Session’s upcoming appearance before the House Judiciary Committee, and the rumor that an indictment of former Trump National Security Advisor Michael Flynn (and possibly his son) will soon be forthcoming.

I can’t say that I had anything particularly novel to tell Canada’s TV audience about any of these subjects, but reflecting on the interview has provoked a couple of observations.

First, as I have had occasion to observe before, passionate opponents of Mr. Trump who confidently expect (or even fervently hope) that the Mueller investigation of Russia-Trump campaign collusion in the recent election will produce some smoking gun that will lead naturally to articles of impeachment should moderate their expectations.  So far, at least, the picture is not one of sophisticated, nefarious, high-level Trump operatives working hand-in-glove with agents of the Russian government, but of something altogether murkier and more ambiguous.

To be sure, there exists nearly irrefutable evidence that the Kremlin was working hard through every means at its disposal to harm the Clinton campaign and help Mr. Trump. Mr. Putin’s repeated denials that Russia was meddling and Mr. Trump’s on-again–off-again acceptance of those denials may convince his endlessly credulous base, but outside those blinkered precincts it merely prolongs the bizarre spectacle of an American president siding with the dictator of a hostile foreign power against the conclusions of his own intelligence agencies.

(As an aside, when I began drafting this post, Mr. Trump had just said that he accepted as sincere Putin’s denial of meddling.  Mere hours later, Trump straddled the question, saying that he accepts both the findings of U.S. intelligence and Putin’s sincerity.  This waffling is either: (a) Yet another example of Mr. Trump’s persistent tendency to say whatever he thinks will please the audience immediately in front of him, with no thought for either truth or how today’s effort to ingratiate will affect his own or the country’s interests tomorrow; (b) Yet another example of Mr. Trump’s seeming inability to engage in rudimentary critical thinking — the idea that the Russian government could engage in a wide-ranging effort to influence the American presidential election without the knowledge or approval of Vladimir Putin is laughable, and thus it is impossible for U.S. intelligence to be right and for Putin to be sincere; or (c) Just another manifestation of Mr. Trump’s knee-jerk rejection of any fact, however firmly established, that might suggest his election victory was due to anything other than his own personal merits. My best guess is that all three factors were at work.)

But it is not a crime or an impeachable offense merely to be the unwitting beneficiary of foreign efforts to damage one’s political adversaries.  What must be shown to prove a crime is that affiliates of the Trump campaign consciously aided or sought to aid the Russians’ subversion and violated some statute in the process.  What must be shown for any of this to amount to an impeachable offense is that Mr. Trump himself approved, was aware of and failed to stop, or later tried to cover up culpable conduct by his subordinates.

It is too early to assess the ultimate question about whether culpable collusion occurred.  But the emerging (though far from complete) evidence suggests at least three points about the Trump campaign’s Russian contacts:

  • Repeated claims by Mr. Trump and his subordinates that there were no contacts between persons associated with the Trump campaign and Russian officials or agents were simply untrue.  As the Chicago Tribune summarizes, at least nine people in the Trump orbit had Russian contacts during the campaign or transition.
  • At least some of those contacts involved persons high up in the campaign hierarchy or personally close to Mr. Trump, people like Donald Trump, Jr., Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort, and Jeff Sessions.  Others, like George Papadopoulos and Carter Page, had impressive-sounding titles like “foreign policy adviser,” but  were in reality on the fringes of what was always a barely coherent campaign organization. Nonetheless, it is now clear that campaign higher-ups, like Senator Sessions, Stephen Miller, Hope Hicks, J.D. Gordon, campaign manager Cory Lewandowski, and national campaign co-chair Sam Clovis, knew about the Page and/or Papadopolous contacts.
  • Whether contacts between Trump surrogates and Russian actors ever produced concrete results, such as the direct transfer to the Trump campaign of negative information about Secretary Clinton or her team, remains unclear … and frankly seems doubtful.  What is clear is that multiple members of the Trump entourage were willing and eager to receive that kind of material — even when it was plain that the source would have to have been Russian intelligence services, and that the means employed to obtain the material would likely have involved violations of American law. The first proof of their eagerness was the now-famous Donald Trump Jr. – Kushner – Manafort meeting with the Russian lawyer.  Now Mr. Papodopoulos admits to having received a purported Russian offer of “dirt” on Secretary Clinton in the form of emails, and to have passed the offer along to Trump campaign officials.
  • If, in the end, Trumpists and Russian emissaries never quite did a deal that produced active cooperation or transmission of opposition research “deliverables,” efforts to cover up all the active flirtation could nonetheless amount to criminal obstruction of justice and even impeachable conduct.  That’s the thing to watch for in coming months.

Second, the overriding impression, reinforced by each new revelation, is that both the inner circle of the Trump campaign and the outer rings of staff, consultants, and advisers consisted primarily of pathetically ill-informed amateurs like the Trump children and in-laws, eccentrics like Carter Page, desperate wanna-be‘s like George Papodopoulos, or outright scoundrels like Paul Manafort.  Even those with long government resumes and conventional credentials, like Trump’s short-tenured National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and Senator Jeff Sessions, gravitated to Trump because, in Flynn’s case, he had been expelled from the circles of power for persistent bad judgment, and in Sessions’ case, he was a fringe player in the Senate, with views on many subjects too extreme even for for a caucus edging steadily to the right, and no path to any meaningful leadership role.

Moreover, the one character trait common to virtually all of this ill-assorted crew is greedy opportunism. The Trump family, from the paterfamilias on down, has profited by skating on or over the edge of legality for decades and has been monetizing its connection to the presidency ever since the election.  Manafort’s long career as apologist for thugs and dictators should have disqualified him from a role in any American presidential campaign, and predictably has both embroiled Trump in controversy and produced an indictment founded in part on money laundering and tax evasion. Page reportedly combined his Russian overtures for Trump with efforts to secure private deals for himself.  Michael Flynn is under investigation for an array of dodgy, but potentially lucrative, deals, as well as illegal failures to report work on behalf of authoritarian regimes like that of ascendant Turkish dictator Recip Erdogan.

The mix of incompetence, bad judgment, blithe disregard of normal legal and ethical boundaries, and personal greed in the Trump campaign is both a gift and an impediment to any effort to impeach Mr. Trump.

On the one hand, it is increasingly obvious that people high and low in the Trump campaign were trying quite hard to collude with a hostile foreign power to win a presidential election.  On the other hand, it may prove that the Russians simply didn’t trust these escapees from the Island of Misfit Toys enough to enter into any active collaboration, preferring to feed toxic misinformation to the American electorate indirectly through Wikileaks and directly through social media.  Now that Mr. Trump has shed virtually all of the primary actors in the Russian contacts — with the notable exceptions of his family members — he can disavow former staffers’ conduct as the inconsequential bumbling of fringe nobodies.

BUT — having foolishly chosen to ignore settled norms against nepotism in the White House, Mr. Trump is probably stuck with whatever the kids have done or may yet do. Even an ordinary father would shrink from throwing his children overboard and into the clutches of waiting prosecutors, but in Mr. Trump’s case, ordinary considerations of paternal affection are infinitely complicated by the fact that the Trump campaign was, and the Trump Organization remains, a family business … and the kids, notably including son-in-law Jared Kushner, are privy to their secrets.  Perhaps Ivanka or Don Jr. might be willing to take a fall for dear old dad.  Were I Mr. Trump, I would not bet that, at the last extremity, young Mr. Kushner would do the same.

Thus, Mr. Trump will never be able to make a clean break from the Russian meddling investigation. Some of its central figures will remain close to him.  He will continue defending them.  And as in Watergate, it may prove that the cover-up, rather than the original wrong, will be his undoing.

Finally, it would be easy to dismiss the near-universal obsession of those around the Trumps with self-enrichment through politics as a side issue.  For two reasons, it’s not.

First, as Mr. Manafort recently discovered, the United States has a web of laws that regulate, and often criminalize, aspects of the “deals” he and his ilk are so eager to make.  Those laws are a tool box for Robert Mueller’s prosecutors, and the questionable financial motives and maneuvers of those involved in contacts with Russian representatives will provide legitimate grounds for inquiring deeply into financial matters the Trumps would surely prefer remain hidden.

Second, to the extent Mr. Mueller’s investigation or other sources reveal that Mr. Trump and family have used the presidency for personal profit, such disclosures implicate at least two grounds for impeachment.  The most obvious of these is violation of the emoluments clauses.  But I would go a bit further.  I do not believe that a technical violation of, for example, the foreign emoluments clause of Article I, Section 9, is required to make out an impeachable offense if it could be shown that, as James Madison put it, the president “pervert[s] his administration into a scheme of peculation.”

I will expand on this latter point in later posts.  Stay tuned.

Frank Bowman

 

 

 

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Impeachment and the Power of Propaganda

05 Sunday Nov 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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politics of impeachment, propaganda

Several days ago, I was pleased to have Slate publish my post on this blog asserting that Mr. Trump’s efforts to induce federal law enforcement agencies to investigate his political enemies constitute an impeachable offense. One of the most fascinating aspects of those occasions when this blog’s content gets a national audience is getting a blast of feedback from reader comments.

Sometimes, astute readers will point to apparent gaps in an argument or flaws in reasoning. That keeps me honest and can inspire further, and I hope better, analysis.  I think that was the case following my article on the pardon of Sheriff Arpaio, where reader comments led to a string of additional posts on particular aspects of that problem.

Other times, however, reader comments can drive me nearly to despair about the prospects for American democracy. At a minimum, they often highlight what may be an insuperable obstacle to any effort to remove Mr. Trump.  One comment posted directly to this blog this morning illustrates the problem starkly. To summarize, the reader made three points:

(1) He said that “by your [meaning Bowman’s] logic,” Bill and Hillary Clinton, President Obama, and Bob Mueller should be “investigated and charged with treason for the Uranium One deal,” the Clintons should be hung, and Mr. Mueller should be imprisoned for life as their “bag man.”

(2) He said, “And you mentioned Benghazi and the culpability of Ms. Clinton and Obama and others” for the deaths of several U.S. Embassy employees.

(3) He concluded that my argument for the impeachability of Mr. Trump for attempting to use law enforcement agencies against his enemies demonstrated “why our children that attend institutions of ‘higher’ learning come out indoctrinated in Marxism and Maoisum [sic].”

Of course, it goes without saying that nothing in my article implied that the Uranium One affair has any substance or that the Clintons, President Obama, or Mr. Mueller have any culpability, legal or otherwise in connection with it.  Indeed, my piece contained multiple links to authorities carefully explaining why the Uranium One affair is an invented non-story.  The reader made no reference to those sources and no attempt to rebut the facts they lay out.  Moreover, the reader had obviously made no effort to reflect on the sheer absurdity of what he was saying.  Leaving the mountain of other impossibilities in the Uranium One conspiracy theory to one side, the idea that Bob Mueller — decorated Marine veteran, career federal prosecutor, former FBI Director appointed by George W. Bush, and lifelong Republican — is a “bagman” for the Clintons is just daft.

More revealingly, the reader claims that I “mentioned Benghazi” when, of course, there is no reference whatever to Benghazi in my article, and in any event, whatever happened in Benghazi is utterly irrelevant to my thesis.  And, perhaps inevitably, the reader concluded with the assertion that, because I am a professor, I am part of the grand conspiracy in higher education to indoctrinate America’s youth into communism.

It is easy to sneer derisively at this sort of thing and to dismiss the reader as a “wing nut.”  But that is the exact reverse of my point.  The reader is plainly a person of some intelligence and politically aware enough to follow current news and read and comment on articles like mine.  Yet he has so far surrendered his own critical faculties to the echo chamber of the segment of the media he consumes that he is apparently unable, or at least unwilling, to make independent judgments.  If he allowed himself to think independently, to analyze critically the information he’s getting, he’d see for himself the manifest weakness of the claims he’s making. Again, this a pretty smart person.   Yet his response to an article suggesting that Mr. Trump has violated basic American political norms is almost Pavlovian — Uranium One, Benghazi, professors are Commies.

I do not mean to suggest that if this reader, and the millions of others with similar habits of thought, adopted a more critical stance to what they hear and read that they would all become happy liberal Democrats.  That’s silly.  What the country desperately needs is not a uniformly liberal electorate, but a uniformly literate and reflective electorate.  We need intelligent, independent, critical thinkers on the right every bit as much as we need them on the left and in the center.

It is hardly a novel observation that American voters are increasingly isolated in their own information echo chambers.  This is deeply unhealthy for our democracy.  And this phenomenon has particular implications in the context of possible impeachment of Mr. Trump.  The success of the impeachment investigation that led to the resignation of Richard Nixon was possible only because the majority of Republicans, both elected officials and ordinary citizens, were finally convinced that their president had misbehaved badly enough that he had to go.  The slow conversion of millions of reliable Republican partisans was possible only because Americans of all political persuasions shared norms of acceptable and unacceptable political behavior, and because almost everyone trusted institutions like the major organs of the press, the courts, and the Justice Department as fair arbiters of truth and falsity.

We no longer inhabit that world. Mr. Trump daily challenges the norms that support democratic governance, but they have been under assault for a long time.  And people on both sides of the political divide have slowly migrated into information silos that armor them against critical thought.  That said, the information silo effect is notably worse on the right.  As I have observed repeatedly here, Mr. Trump himself lies pervasively and obsessively, and an entire segment of the media has perverted itself to excuse or amplify even his most nonsensical claims.  The success of this effort is sadly evident in my reader’s comments, which exemplify the views of a large, and politically critical, segment of Republican voters.

In the end, if the seemingly impermeable information barrier around the Republican base cannot be breached, it will not matter what Mr. Mueller uncovers or how egregiously Mr. Trump abuses his office. Regardless of the objective facts, even if Democrats capture the House in 2018, neither impeachment, nor indeed healthy politics of any kind, are in our immediate future.

Frank Bowman

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Trump commits another impeachable offense: Siccing federal criminal investigators on his enemies

03 Friday Nov 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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corrupting criminal justice, enemies list, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, Nixon impeachment, take care clause

On July 27, 1974, the House Judiciary Committee approved three articles of impeachment against Richard M. Nixon. The second article charged that President Nixon abused the powers of the presidency either by using or trying to use federal investigative agencies against his political enemies or by interfering or trying to interfere with lawful investigations by those agencies into his own wrongdoing or that of his subordinates.  He tried to get dirt on his opponents through the IRS. He ordered the FBI to conduct investigations of actual or suspected enemies in and outside of government. He sought to suppress investigations into the growing Watergate scandal. As the fifth specification of the article of impeachment put it:

In disregard of the rule of law, he knowingly misused the executive power by interfering with agencies of the executive branch, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Criminal Division, and the Office of Watergate Special Prosecution Force, of the Department of Justice, and the Central Intelligence Agency, in violation of his duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed.

In short, the House Judiciary Committee voted to impeach Richard Nixon because he sought to turn the immense power of the Justice Department and federal criminal investigative agencies against his political adversaries. Although this article of impeachment was never approved by the full House of Representatives because Nixon resigned before a vote could be taken, it received more votes in committee than any other proposed article. No respectable scholar of the constitution doubts that directing the criminal justice and intelligence systems of the United States against political opponents for purposes unrelated to the impartial enforcement of the law or preservation of legitimate national security interests is among the impeachable “high Crimes & Misdemeanors” of Article II, Section 4.

This morning, Friday, November 3, Mr. Trump sent out a series of Tweets in which he explicitly urged the Justice Department and the FBI to investigate Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party for a grab bag of supposed offenses — e-mails deleted from Secretary Clinton’s private server, the Russia-uranium kerfluffle, activities by Tony Podesta (lobbyist and brother of Secretary Clinton’s campaign manager), and the allegation that officials at the Democratic National Committee worked with Secretary Clinton’s campaign to give it a boost over that of Senator Bernie Sanders.

The Trump Tweet-string included these classics:

Everybody is asking why the Justice Department (and FBI) isn’t looking into all of the dishonesty going on with Crooked Hillary & the Dems..

….People are angry. At some point the Justice Department, and the FBI, must do what is right and proper. The American public deserves it!

Mr. Trump followed up these Tweets with statements to the press in which he said he is “disappointed” with the Justice Department and would not rule out firing Attorney General Sessions if Sessions won’t investigate Democrats.

In my view, Mr. Trump’s tweets tiptoed right up to the line of an impeachable offense.  His subsequent statements to the press stepped firmly over it.

Using the Nixon precedent as a template, in order to show that Mr. Trump’s behavior is impeachable, several requirements must be met:

First, he must be seeking to employ the criminal investigative powers of the federal government against his political opponents.  That is unquestionably the case.

Second, he must be acting, in the words of the Nixon impeachment article, “for purposes unrelated to national security, the enforcement of laws, or any other lawful function of his office.”  Although his most devoted adherents may claim otherwise, it is impossible to divine any legitimate, non-political, purpose in his call for action by the Justice Department.

  • Although it is doubtless a matter of intense interest for members of Democratic Party, whether the DNC did or didn’t favor Secretary Clinton can by no stretch be translated into a violation of law, and still less a fit subject for a criminal investigation by a Justice Department controlled by the opposing party.
  • The Clinton e-mail matter has already been investigated by the Justice Department, even if extreme Republican partisans may not have liked the outcome.
  • Tony Podesta’s activities are already the subject of inquiries by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, which is why Podesta just resigned from his own lobbying firm.  So Trump’s inclusion of Podesta in his broadside manifested either a scarcely credible ignorance of the state of play of an investigation with which Mr. Trump is plainly obsessed or a willful attempt to deflect attention from Mueller’s focus on Trump campaign affiliates.
  • And, as multiple credible observers have explained, the Russia-uranium-Clinton connection is an invented non-story. Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear materials and non-proliferation expert, observed in Newsweek, “I have to say that this is one of those things where reasonable people cannot disagree: There just aren’t two sides.”

In short, every item on the laundry list of things for which Mr. Trump wants the Justice Department to investigate his political opponents is either not a crime, has already been or is being investigated, or, in the case of the Clinton-uranium “scandal,” is an invented storyline promoted by Mr. Trump and his supporters to divert attention from the Mueller investigation.

Third, it is not necessary to establish impeachable misconduct that a president succeed in bending law enforcement agencies to his corrupting purpose. While some of the law enforcement and intelligence officials Nixon tried to enlist in his illegal schemes cooperated, many refused or ignored his orders, the IRS, the CIA, and important elements of the FBI among them. His failed attempts to misuse federal agencies were nonetheless integral components of the impeachment case against him.

This is a key point in the present case. If pressed, Mr. Trump will no doubt claim that he didn’t order anybody to do anything and that his Tweets are, at worst, expressions of dismay at the established norm that bars presidents from direct involvement in Justice Department decisions. This is, of course, transparent eyewash.  When a President of the United States publicly proclaims that he wants an executive branch agency to do something and will be deeply displeased if it doesn’t, that’s tantamount to an order.

Even if it were not, Mr. Trump took the next and fateful step this morning when he expressed disappointment in the Justice Department for its inaction and held open the option of firing the Attorney General if his wishes were not honored.  That is as close to a direct order as a president can give without putting it in writing.  Any way you slice it, Mr. Trump is telling the Justice Department and the FBI that he wants them to engage in legally baseless, politically motivated criminal investigations.

Finally, it is not, cannot be, an excuse if Mr. Trump were to say, “Well, even though the uranium story and all the rest prove to be baseless, I didn’t know that. As I so often do, I was just responding to what ‘people are saying.'” As the Nixon articles of impeachment observed, a president has the solemn constitutional obligation to “take care that the laws shall be faithfully executed.”  If this duty means anything in the criminal justice setting, it means that presidents shoulder an obligation even more binding than that assumed by their subordinates not to unleash on any citizen the intrusive, life-altering power of federal investigative agencies absent credible evidence that a real crime may have been committed.

Let us be absolutely clear here. No matter how far Mr. Trump has warped our collective sense of what is normal or even minimally acceptable in an American president, it is not acceptable for a president either to employ, or threaten to employ, the agents and ministers of the criminal law of the United States against his enemies for political gain.  A president who does so engages in precisely the class of misconduct perilous to the maintenance of republican government for which the founders designed the remedy of impeachment.

When and if the political season is ever ripe for enumerating Mr. Trump’s “high Crimes & Misdemeanors” in articles of impeachment, his attempts to corrupt the American justice system should be among those articles.

Frank Bowman

 

 

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Brief reflections about the Papadopoulos guilty plea

31 Tuesday Oct 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Manafort, Manafort indictment, Mueller, Papadopoulos

In addition to the indictment of Paul Manafort and his associate Rick Gates, yesterday brought news of the guilty plea of George Papadopoulos, a former foreign policy advisor to the Trump campaign.  Some commentators have suggested that the Papadopoulos plea presents a bigger potential risk to Mr. Trump than the Manafort indictment.  I’m not sure that will ultimately prove to be true, partly because I suspect the real risk to Mr. Trump and his coterie of retainers and hangers-on lies in inquiries Mr. Mueller is, or may yet be, making into their finances.

Nonetheless, the Papadopoulos plea does suggest several points:

First, the Statement of the Offense accompanying the plea is chock full of assertions which, if true, give the lie (yet again) to the initial claims of Mr. Trump and associates that there were no contacts between the campaign and Russian interests.  It is undoubtedly correct that Papadopoulos himself was an insignificant figure in the Trump campaign universe and a complete nobody in the real world of foreign affaits.  (Indeed, the fact that the Trump campaign brought on such an utter neophyte as one of five foreign policy advisors is a shocking testament to the unwillingness of anyone of substance to associate with the campaign.)

BUT, it appears Papadopoulos was in contact with people who had genuine, if slightly attenuated, Russian government connections, people who were expressing interest not only in making general connections with Trump and his campaign, but were offering “dirt” on Hillary Clinton.  And the dangled dirt allegedly included emails which any reasonable person would have to have inferred had been obtained clandestinely and probably illegally.  Critically, Papadopoulos apparently passed all this along to very significant people in the Trump campaign – people such as Sam Clovis, the campaign national co-chair, and Corey Lewandowski, the one-time campaign manager.  If the Statement of Offense is accurate, these higher-ups encouraged Papadopoulos’s efforts, even those that obviously involved very questionable dealings with a traditionally hostile foreign power.

Second, even if everything in the Statement of the Offense is true, none of the Trump campaign’s senior officials may have committed any crime.  It is not a crime for senior members of a presidential campaign to talk with representatives of foreign governments. Indeed, if the point of the talks is to introduce the candidate and those around him to significant foreign actors and to learn about international issues relevant to the campaign and to American foreign policy, they can be laudable.  Even seeking opposition research that would appear to emanate from Russian intelligence services might not itself be criminal, even if (at least in a rational world) it would be politically poisonous if the Russian intelligence connection were revealed.  If it should ever be shown that such material was delivered, and used, more difficult legal questions would arise.  But nothing so far revealed suggests that the Papadopoulos overtures produced anything concrete.

Third, nonetheless, Mr. Papadopoulos’s fate illustrates the risk facing all the current and former Trump insiders.  They are under immense pressure from Mr. Trump and others around him to deny or minimize the extent of Russian contacts. The pressure may stem purely from Mr. Trump’s aversion to political embarrassment, rather than any fear of overt criminal liability.  But with the Papadopoulos case, Mueller’s team has served notice that it will not be lied to.  They want the whole truth, with no fudging, or felony charges will be forthcoming.

If those who haven’t yet talked to Mueller are getting, and taking to heart, competent legal advice, they will tell absolutely everything they know.  If they don’t, we can confidently expect more indictments akin to that of Mr. Papadopoulos.  The result should be that Mueller will get to the bottom of the Russian connection story.  If he does, I wouldn’t necessarily bet that the bottom line will be exposure of treasonous collusion.  The more likely outcome will be a continued slow exposure, bit by bit, of farcical bungling by unprincipled foreign policy naifs who would have committed crimes if they could, but were baulked by either their own incompetence or Russian unwillingness to deal directly with such boobs.

That said, I would not be surprised to see a significant number of Trump World inhabitants unwilling to come clean, even in the face of the Papadopoulos example. In which case more of them will go down.  And, as has so often proven the case over the years, it won’t be the underlying criminality of their flirtations with Moscow that gets them, but the cover-up.

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The Manafort Indictment & Impeachment

30 Monday Oct 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Gates, Manafort, Manafort indictment, money laundering, Mueller, Papadopoulos, Robert Mueller

The internet is buzzing with the news that former Trump campaign manager, Paul Manafort, and his associate, Rick Gates, have been indicted for conspiracy to defraud the United States, money laundering, and a variety of other federal crimes. Of perhaps equal significance, former Trump campaign foreign policy advisor, George Papadopoulos, pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI in denying contacts with Russian agents.

It is natural to wonder what effect these developments might have on a potential impeachment case against Mr. Trump.  Nonetheless, perhaps the main point to keep firmly in mind is that it is far too early even to make informed speculations on that ultimate point.  For the moment, I’d offer only these tentative observations:

First, as a former federal fraud prosecutor, I am impressed with the speed at which the Mueller investigation is moving.  The Manafort / Gates indictment describes a very complex set of international and domestic transactions.  Cases like this commonly take years to put together.  Mueller’s team sewed up this first indictment in five months.

Second, I’m also impressed with the apparent solidity of the case against Manafort and Gates.  Defense counsel will have their say, but on the face of it, this is a stout case.  It is very hard to see how Manafort and Gates beat this.

Third, the charges are very serious.  Manafort in particular is facing serious prison time.  It is, of course, a fool’s game to predict what sentence a white collar defendant will ultimately receive, but the Federal Sentencing Guidelines provide at least a yardstick for the kind of sentence a judge would consider upon conviction.

A reasonable guesstimate of the guidelines calculation for Manafort would put him at over ten years in prison.  A glance at the indictment suggests that the money laundering guideline would probably drive the calculation.  That guideline, 2S1.1, is notoriously tricky, but one could reasonably, if not certainly, assume a base offense level of 8  + 20 levels from 2B1.1 for $18 million laundered.  If you add 2 for 3C1.1 obstruction (false statements) and 4 for aggravating role under 3B1.1, that yields an offense level of 34.  Which equates to a guideline range of 151-188 months, or 12 ½ to 15 ½ years.  There are a variety of other factors that could push this number up or down considerably, and judges are not obliged to sentence within the guideline range, but as I say, Mr. Manafort and his attorneys will certainly have to take the guidelines as a serious benchmark of the kind of sentence an ill-disposed judge could impose.

Fourth, many commentators have observed that the point of indicting Manafort and Gates first is to pressure them into cooperation against others, potentially including Mr. Trump. Without presuming to read the minds of Mr. Mueller and his colleagues, this seems a reasonable hypothesis.  That said, it is interesting that Manafort and Gates let themselves be indicted rather than working out a pre-indictment plea agreement as Mr. Papadopoulos apparently did.  This is not to say that Manafort and Gates will never “flip,” but it does mean that they are resisting for now, and could persist in refusing cooperation no matter what happens.  At a minimum, Mueller may have to go to trial and convict one or the other or both before they agree to cooperate.  Which could take a long time.

Fifth, the subject matter of the Manafort / Gates indictment is not collusion of the Trump campaign with Russia. Rather, it is Mr. Manafort’s sleazy, but very lucrative, relationship with corrupt Ukranian politicians. Of course, Mr. Trump and his supporters have already been quick to note the absence of a “collusion” angle in this indictment.  But what I find interesting, and very suggestive, is that the indictment makes a point of describing the Ukranian group paying Manafort as pro-Russian.  Legally, that point is irrelevant.  Politically, it has two obvious points: It helps rebut any claim that, in indicting Manafort, Mr. Mueller’s team is going beyond the scope of its charge, which is to investigate Russian efforts to influence the American election and any collusion by the Trump campaign with those efforts.  If challenged, Mueller can point out that Manafort, Trump’s campaign manager, had a long history of dodgy, and in some respects criminal, connections with a pro-Russian party in a former Soviet republic, a point plainly relevant to the larger investigation.

My second, and far more speculative, reaction to the indictment’s pointed insistence on the Russian connection is that it is a direct signal to those around Mr. Trump who have Russian connections, but have not yet faced indictment — don’t get comfortable, we’re coming for you.

Finally, the other message in this indictment that I suspect is sending chills down the spines of Mr. Trump and many of his associates and family members stems from the nature of the charges themselves.  This indictment demonstrates both the incredibly broad reach of the federal criminal law in the area of financial crime and the professional competence of Mueller’s team.  Mr. Trump, his family, and retainers may not have engaged in the precise forms of financial shenanigans revealed in this indictment, but given Mr. Trump’s long history of skating on or over the edge of legality, it would be surprising indeed if at least some had not infringed on federal criminal law in analogous ways.

With the Manafort indictment, Mueller and his team have sent a blunt warning.  If the Trumps have financial skeletons, they will be found.

Frank Bowman

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Foreign Emoluments, the President & Professor Tillman

27 Friday Oct 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Alexander Hamilton, Edmund Randolph, emoluments, foreign emoluments, George Mason, Gouverneur Morris, Shugerman, Tillman

By Frank Bowman

Impeachment aficionados will be aware that a group calling itself Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) has filed suit in the Southern District of New York seeking a declaration that Mr. Trump’s copious and lucrative business transactions with foreign governments and entities violate the Foreign Emoluments Clause of Article I, Section 9, which reads as follows:

No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince or foreign State.

Leaving to one side the question of whether the CREW plaintiffs have standing to bring the action, the central dispute is whether money paid to a president as a result of commercial transactions is a prohibited emolument.

As discussed on this site earlier in the year, Seth Barrett Tillman, an industrious professor from the National University of Ireland – Maynooth, has opened a second front in the emoluments battle with his claim that the foreign emoluments clause doesn’t apply to the president, or indeed to any elected federal official such the vice-president or members of congress.  In recent weeks, Professor Tillman has won two victories, one minor and another potentially less so.

His petit coup, recounted in a recent New York Times article, involved a dispute over the provenance of certain documents allegedly signed by Alexander Hamilton.  To make a long story short, in 1792, the Senate asked Hamilton, then the Secretary of the Treasury, to provide a list of all salaries and emoluments of “civil offices under the United States.” In a letter, Hamilton provided a list that included executive branch appointees, but not the president or vice president. Prof. Tillman contends that this letter is proof that Hamilton believed that the president is not a “person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under [the United States]” for purposes of the foreign emoluments clause.

You may think that this is a pretty thin argument (and as discussed below, it is), but a group of distinguished legal historians led by Professor Jed Shugerman who rejected Tillman’s interpretation in their amicus brief made an embarrassing mistake.  They pointed to a later 1793 document in government archives which does list the president and vice-president as holding civil offices under the United States and which appears to bear Alexander Hamilton’s signature.  They trumpeted this second document as conclusive disproof of an important prong of the Tillman position, only to have Tillman show that the second document almost certainly was not signed by Hamilton, but by some anonymous government functionary. Red faces abounded.  And the legal historians (very graciously) issued apologies for impugning the integrity of Tillman’s archival research.

Professor Tillman’s potentially more significant victory came in a letter from the Department of Justice to the judge in the CREW lawsuit in which DOJ stated that it is not conceding that the Foreign Emoluments Clause applies to the president.  This is notable because the Department’s position has traditionally been to the contrary, as most recently embodied in a 2009 memo from the Office of Legal Counsel opining that the president is “surely” covered by the clause.  So far, the Department has not reversed its 2009 opinion or affirmatively pressed the claim of presidential exemption, but the letter opens that possibility.

So does Tillman have a good argument?

In a word, no.

Tillman’s claim that the Foreign Emoluments Clause doesn’t include the president is based on two doubtful premises.

First, he contends that the phrase “office of profit or trust under [the United States]” doesn’t include the president because, he says, in English practice, the phrase “office under the Crown” referred not to the King or to elected offices, but only to appointed offices whose authority derived from the appointing hereditary sovereign.  But in the United States, the sovereign is not the president, but the people as a whole, or if one wants to take a strongly federalist view of the matter, the union of states represented by the elected central government.  All American officeholders — including the president — hold office “under the United States” because they derive authority from, and are not the sources of, the general government’s democratically legitimated sovereign power.

And even if this were not self-evidently the case, there is no plausible founding-era evidence that the drafters or ratifiers of the constitution viewed the phrase “office of profit or trust under” the United States in Professor Tillman’s peculiarly Anglophile sense.  Indeed, as the legal historians noted, the only direct expression of opinion by constitutional founders expressly endorses the view that the president is covered by the Foreign Emoluments Clause. During the Virginia ratifying convention, Edmund Randolph and George Mason plainly stated that presidents are bound by the clause, and Randolph, who would become Washington’s attorney general, went further to declare that a president who received foreign emoluments could be impeached for doing so.

The sole statement from a founding-era figure to which Tillman can point is the Hamilton response to the Senate inquiry.  But, as the legal historians convincingly explain, the Senate was asking for an accounting of “civil offices” and their salaries for a particular reason.

The request came in 1792, at the end of President Washington’s first term and towards the close of the second session of Congress. The term “civil offices” is distinct from the phrase in the Foreign Emoluments Clause (“office of profit or trust under [the United States]”), but matches the language of Article I, Section 6:

No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil Office under the Authority of the United States, which shall have been created, or the Emoluments whereof shall have been encreased during such time; and no Person holding any Office under the United States, shall be a Member of either House during his Continuance in Office.

The most plausible explanation for the Senate request is that the Senate wanted to know which “civil offices” federal legislators would be barred from accepting, and which offices those standing for election to Congress for the first time in 1792 would be obliged to surrender if elected.  The presidency, being elective rather than appointive and thus irrelevant to the point of the inquiry, Hamilton did not include it.  What we can be absolutely sure of is that the Senate did not ask for, and Hamilton did not give, an opinion on whether the president is covered by the Foreign Emoluments Clause.

Before moving to Tillman’s next point, it is worth pausing on Article I, Section 6, to consider one of the many unpalatable implications of his theory.  If he is right and the phrase “office under the United States” does not include the president, then Article I, Section 6, does not bar the president from serving as a member of Congress while also serving as president. Which is ridiculous inasmuch as it would utterly destroy the constitution’s separation of powers.  But it is the unavoidable implication of Tillman’s argument that the framers used “office under the United States” as a term of art excluding the president.

Second, and this is the real meat of Tillman’s argument, he points to a handful of incidents in which early American presidents accepted ceremonial gifts from foreign governments or their representatives.  Washington accepted a key to the Bastille from the Marquis de Lafayette and from Louis XVI a portrait of that ill-fated monarch. Jefferson accepted a bust of Czar Alexander I.  Madison accepted a pair of pistols from a South American revolutionary, which he apparently passed on to his successor, James Monroe.  Tillman argues that these gifts prove that Washington, Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe all believed that the Foreign Emoluments Clause didn’t apply to the president, and he contends that these early incidents outweigh the roughly two centuries of subsequent practice in which both presidents and congress expressly recognized the applicability of the clause to the presidency.

Professor Tillman is deadly earnest in professing the interpretive importance of these incidents, but the moment one takes a deep breath and steps back to gain perspective, it’s plain that there’s little substance to the argument.  In the first place, as I wrote several months ago:

After all, the point of the [Foreign Emoluments] clause was to prevent foreign powers from seducing American officials away from their proper loyalties with valuable bribes.  The idea that anyone gave a moment’s thought to the idea that Washington or Jefferson would sell out the country because of a rusty old key or the marble visage of a member of the notoriously unattractive Russian royal line is just silly.  Accordingly, it is entirely unsurprising that Washington and Jefferson accepted the objects as a matter of courtesy and quite unlikely that anyone even thought about constitutional ramifications of doing so.

But the more important, and I think dispositive, point is this: If Tillman is right, then the framers wrote into the constitution a provision that would prohibit, say, the U.S. ambassador to France from accepting a jeweled snuff box from the French government, but would allow the King of France to award the President of the United States a title of nobility accompanied by a grant of land and revenues.  According to Tillman, King Louis XVI, rather than sending George Washington a portrait, could have tried to secure U.S. opposition to the Revolution of 1789 by declaring Washington the Duc de Haiti entitled to a percentage of the French crown’s revenues from that rich, sugar-producing colony.  Or George III of England could have begun the process of seducing America back into the British orbit by bestowing on Vice President Aaron Burr (a man notoriously open to extra-curricular peculation) the title of Baron of Barbados, with ownership of several large and lucrative sugar plantations.

These hypotheticals sound absurd to modern ears, but the problem of divided loyalties and overt corruption created by awards of foreign titles, lands, and revenue to heads of state and powerful notables was endemic to Europe from the Middle Ages through the 18th Century and would have been intimately familiar to the framers.

For centuries, English kings held French titles of nobility which, depending on the period, gave them French lands, which they held as feudatories of the French king, or even claims on the French crown.  Untold thousands of Englishmen and Frenchmen died in the wars fought over those territorial and dynastic claims. George III, the boogieman of the revolutionary generation, was simultaneously King of England, King of Ireland, and Duke and prince-elector of Hanover. And English critics were always troubled by the disposition of kings of the Hanoverian line to be drawn into German intramural squabbles. Phillip II was at various points King of Spain, Portugal, Naples, and Sicily, and Duke of Milan and lord of the seventeen provinces of the Netherlands. His far-flung dynastic commitments and devout Catholicism were the impetus for decades of near-constant warfare.  Endless additional examples could be cited, but the point is that the last thing the American framers would have wanted is an elected chief executive whose judgment might be distorted by enjoyment of an hereditary title or estate granted by a foreign power.

The even more acute problem that plainly concerned the founding generation was the seduction of both heads of state and lesser notables by rewards (or bribes, depending on your point of view) from foreign powers.  The practice was such a common aspect of European diplomacy as to scarcely merit remark on that side of the Atlantic. For example, the English Duke of Marlborough, Winston Churchill’s famous ancestor, was rewarded for his military successes with the title of Prince of the Holy Roman Empire and Prince of Mindelheim (a German principality). The entire European ruling class was entangled in a web of conflicting loyalties.

The American founders not only rejected hereditary aristocracy as a feature of the American future, but recoiled from the prospect of royal briberies.  In their brief, the legal historians note that Gouverneur Morris expressly cited the secret 1670 Treaty of Dover in which the King of England was induced to join France in its war against Holland both by providing him with a French mistress and paying him large sums to eliminate his debts.  Said Morris:

Our Executive was not like a Magistrate having a life interest, much less like one having an hereditary interest in his office. He may be bribed by a greater interest to betray his trust; and no one would say that we ought to expose ourselves to the danger of seeing the first Magistrate in foreign pay, without being able to guard agst. it by displacing him. One would think the King of England well secured agst. bribery. He has as it were a fee simple in the whole Kingdom. Yet Charles II was bribed by Louis XIV.

Morris was not discussing the foreign emoluments clause, but the passage reveals the founders’ acute awareness of the dangers of foreign payments to a head of state.  And it casts a revealing light on Professor Tillman’s primary defense against the practical absurdity of his position.  Tillman contends that it would have made sense to the framers to exclude the president from the foreign emoluments clause because a failure to do so would subject the country to diplomatic embarrassments attendant upon a constitutionally-mandated policy against the common European practice of accepting token diplomatic gifts.  But the whole point of the Foreign Emoluments Clause was to set the United States on a new path, free of the endemic corruption of European practices of the time.  To suggest that a fear of transitory diplomatic embarrassment would move them to gut this objective by permitting the most powerful officers of the United States to accept foreign titles and money is, frankly, absurd.

In the end, Professor Tillman deserves the respect due a diligent and inventive controversialist.  But his argument cannot stand up to serious examination.

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Senators Corker & Flake and the meaning of “high Crimes & Misdemeanors”

26 Thursday Oct 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Corker, Flake, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, Politics

I begin this post with apologies to the regular readership for my prolonged absence from the blog.  For the past several weeks, I’ve been away receiving and recovering from a surgery that has knocked me sideways a bit. My invaluable research assistant and blog co-editor, Sam Crosby, has been filling in, doing yeoman service posting articles and developments of interest, for which I can’t thank him enough.  But I’m back at the old stand and ready to pick up where I left off.

For the politically attuned, among the biggest stories of the last few weeks has been the open break between Mr. Trump and Senators Jeff Flake (R. Ariz.) and Bob Corker (R. Tenn.).  In the endless, bewildering swirl of abnormality our national life has become since Inauguration Day, it is easy to underestimate the utter uniqueness of what Flake and Corker have done.  It is not merely that they have criticized a president of their own party.  Sharp, even bitter, senatorial criticism is hardly unheard of.  Senator Ted Kennedy’s feud with President Jimmy Carter was acrimonious and personal.

But Flake and Corker have gone far beyond even the most heated disagreement on policy or political strategy.  Both of them have said, about as plainly as it is possible to say, that Donald Trump is unfit for the presidency and represents an immediate danger to American national security.  Neither man is either a hothead or politically estranged from mainstream conservative Republicanism.  Neither has so far voted against any legislative priority of the Trump Administration.  Indeed, at any point in the previous thirty years, either might have been held up as the very beau ideal of the solidly conservative Republican lawmaker. And yet both have said that the Republican president is an active danger to the Republic. If there is a historical parallel, I don’t know of it.

A number of commentators have taken the two apostate senators to task for failing to take any concrete action in opposition to Mr. Trump, noting that they have been and largely continue to be reliable supporters of Mr. Trump’s legislative priorities. Other commentators have suggested that the two should be pressing for legal constraints on Trump’s impulsivity, such as requiring congressional approval of a nuclear first strike.  In the end, I think such criticisms miss the mark.

Senators Corker and Flake can hardly be criticized for failing to oppose a legislative agenda with which they largely agree.  And perhaps they should be actively exploring legislative means of fencing in Mr. Trump’s wilder urges.  But the real shortcoming of their admirably forthright denunciations of Mr. Trump is that they fail to follow their own premises to the only logical conclusion — if, as they passionately claim, the White House is occupied by a man who presents a clear and present danger to the country, then the only effective remedy is removal of that man from office.  In short, impeachment.

It is hardly surprising that neither senator has been willing to go so far.  But it may be worth considering why they have not.  The most obvious, and most likely, reasons are that neither man feels that so seemingly radical a step would have any chance of success and both doubtless believe that calling for it would make them pariahs in their own party.  That said, I suspect that they are also forestalled by the conventional wisdom that “merely” being unfit and behaving in ways that are dangerously unsuitable for the office of the presidency is not an impeachable offense.  Absent concrete proof of a discrete “crime” intuitively recognizable as a “high Crime or Misdemeanor,” the senators may see no constitutional path forward.

I’ve been giving a good deal of thought to this problem in recent weeks.  I have concluded that the conventional wisdom is wrong.  I believe that it would be perfectly appropriate, and consistent with both originalist and more progressive approaches to constitutional interpretation, to impeach and remove a president if, by temperament and conduct, he proves himself unfit for office.  Sometime over the next few days, I hope to lay out the case for this view.

Stay tuned.

Frank Bowman

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Lying as an impeachable offense – Part III: Chronic or pervasive falsehood

08 Sunday Oct 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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High Crimes and Misdemeanors, lying as impeachable offense

In previous posts, I have considered two types of presidential lie as impeachable offenses: criminally indictable falsehoods and unindictable official falsehoods.  Here I address a third category — lies that are neither indictable nor, strictly speaking, official, but that are so frequent as to amount to a pattern of chronic or pervasive falsehood.

This third category is both the easiest and hardest for those who would like to see Mr. Trump impeached.  On the one hand, as I said in the first post in this series, “The simple fact is that Mr. Trump lies all the time.  Ceaselessly.  Unrepentantly.  About pretty much everything. Big things.  Little things.  Public matters and private ones.”  Both the New York Times and the Washington Post have published lengthy lists of Mr. Trump’s falsehoods. The New Yorker has an entire series devoted to debunking his more notable prevarications. Thus, proof of the factual basis would seem easy (though as discussed below, it may prove harder than it appears).

On the other hand, the proposition that a president can be impeached, not for one specific criminal or official lie, but for being a liar, is not only novel, but would obviously be subject to abuse unless well grounded in constitutional theory and carefully limited in scope.

Let’s begin by considering how executive lies might fit into the history and function of impeachment in the American constitutional scheme.

English impeachment

“Impeachment” in the American constitution is a lineal descendant of a weapon first employed by English parliaments in the long struggle over whether the monarchy would be absolutist or would govern in tandem with hereditary, ecclesiastical, and economic elites represented in the legislature.  A parliament that disapproved of the king’s policies could frustrate those policies to some degree by, for example, refusing to fund unpopular royal projects.  But, the monarchy being hereditary, if the king forged ahead despite parliamentary opposition, he could not be removed absent a genuine, and possibly quite bloody, revolution.

Hence, those opposed to the policies of the king’s government indulged the fiction that it was not the king who was at fault; rather, he was being misled by incompetent or malicious ministers who could be removed as a signal of parliamentary displeasure.

The two procedural vehicles most often used to remove offending ministers of the Crown were bills of attainder and impeachment (though bills of attainder could be, and often were urged by the Crown to punish the king’s enemies). Both bills of attainder and impeachment could carry very severe penalties, extending beyond removal from office to fines, forfeitures, prison, or even death. One customary distinction between the two was that a bill of attainder could be unapologetically retrospective — meaning that Parliament could pass a bill of attainder punishing someone for behavior that violated no previously enacted law — while impeachment came to be thought of as possible only if the defendant’s acts were contrary to law, or at least well-settled norms, when committed.

The drafters of the American constitution disapproved of bills of attainder, both because of their historical employment as instruments of royal oppression and because they offended a foundational principle of the rule of law — nulla poena sine lege — there should be no punishment for something not already prohibited by law.  This disapproval manifested itself in Article I, Sections 9 and 10, which prohibit both Congress and state governments from enacting ex post facto laws or bills of attainder.

But the founders, after much debate, concluded that some mechanism was needed to remove a misbehaving president, as well as judges and subordinate executive officers.  Hence, the impeachment clauses in Articles I and II.

The Founders and the relation of public virtue to presidential impeachment

The impeachment process installed in our constitution was plainly influenced by the founders understanding of English precedents, but in its details it is a uniquely American creation.  English influence is obvious in the choice to echo parliamentary practice by giving the “lower” or “more democratic” legislative chamber the power of initiating an impeachment and the power to try impeachments to the “upper” chamber.  On the other hand, the founders were keen to avoid the bloody example of some English impeachments by specifying that impeachment is strictly a political remedy limited to removal of the offender from office.  Article I, Section 3, specifies that:

Judgement in Cases of Impeachment shall not extend further than to removal from Office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any Office of honor, Trust or Profit under the United States: but the Party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgement and Punishment, according to Law.

Officers who are impeached and removed for conduct otherwise criminal can be charged and punished for such conduct, but only in a separate proceeding in regular courts.

The decision to restrict the consequence of impeachment to loss of office tells us something about the kinds of conduct the framers meant to be impeachable.  They adopted the famously enigmatic phrase “high crimes and misdemeanors” as the standard for executive impeachability.  I think it is fair to conclude that the framers were content with this imprecise and rather elastic definition of impeachable offenses precisely because they designed impeachment as a political tool that excised dangerous officials from office, but did not expose them to death, imprisonment, or financial ruin.

High Crimes & Misdemeanors:  Throughout the constitutional convention, various formulations were proffered to define the scope of impeachable conduct. The final modification occurred in a famous exchange between George Mason and James Madison.  Mason suggested “treason, bribery, or maladministration.” Madison objected that, “So vague a term will be equivalent to a tenure at the pleasure of the Senate.” Mason withdrew “maladministration” and substituted “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” The framers and ratifiers seem to have interpreted this formulation to mean that a president should not be impeached for honest mistakes of policy, or indeed for pursuing in good faith courses with which a majority of the legislature heartily disagreed. For example, Edmund Randolph observed at the Virginia ratifying convention that a man should not be impeached “for an opinion.”

That said, the framers plainly thought of impeachment as a vital shield against executive misconduct. James Madison in Federalist 39 lists the impeachability of the president as among the guarantees of republican government. Alexander Hamilton makes the same point in Federalist 77.  It is also plain that the framers conceived of impeachment as reaching beyond ordinary crimes to a range of misbehavior and abuses of power. In Federalist 65, Hamilton described impeachment as “a method of NATIONAL INQUEST into the conduct of public men,” and famously described impeachable offenses as being “of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL.” In Federalist 66, Hamilton characterized impeachment “as an essential check in the hands of [congress] upon the encroachments of the executive.” Although Madison’s objection to “maladministration” as overly broad led to Mason’s alternative of “high crimes and misdemeanors,” Madison believed impeachment necessary because he  “thought it indispensable that some provision should be made for defending the community against the incapacity, negligence, or perfidy of the chief magistrate.”

The use of the term “perfidy” is suggestive because concern with the fundamental honesty of the president resonates with the statements and values of other founders. Theirs was a generation that placed great stock in the virtue of public men.  Indeed, their choice of an electoral college as the means of electing presidents was based in large measure on their faith that a group of the “best” men drawn from the ruling elites of the several states would provide a wiser and more informed judgment of the character of a prospective president than the unmediated assessment of ordinary voters, who might be swayed by the arts of the demagogue.  They were not naive, of course, and as practical politicians would have had no foolish expectation that every word from an elected official’s mouth would be 100% true.  Still, I suspect they would view habitual public dishonesty on subjects relating to the exercise of presidential power as disqualifying in a candidate and impeachable in an incumbent.  As Edmund Randolph said of the president, if “he be honest, he will do what is right, if dishonest, the representatives of the people will have the power of impeaching him.”

In the end, the evil against which the impeachment remedy was aimed was presidential conduct that undermines the constitutional order. George Mason’s insistence that the range of impeachable offenses should extend beyond treason was grounded in the recognition that, “Attempts to subvert the Constitution may not be treason.”  If, therefore, a pathologically dishonest chief executive undermines constitutional order, then impeachment on that ground would be consistent with the views of the founding generation.

Chronic, but non-criminal, lying 

Given this historical background, should chronic or pervasive, but non-criminal, lying be an impeachable offense?  We begin by recapping the conclusions of the two previous posts on impeachable lies.

First, some, but apparently not all, indictable lies are impeachable offenses.  That at least some criminal lies would also be ground for impeachment is consistent with the English understanding that impeachment, as distinct from bills of attainder, should be based on conduct previously understood to be an offense. However, the Clinton case teaches us that, in the United States, even indictable lies may not be impeachable if they involve essentially private matters or are told in a highly politicized, and perhaps legally compelled, setting like the civil and criminal litigation that arose out of Paula Jones’ sexual harassment suit against President Clinton.

Second, it is fairly plain (though the precedent is sparser) that non-criminal lies told to congress or other government actors for the purpose of affecting government policies or decisions can be impeachable.  This assertion is at least superficially in tension with the English idea that impeachment should be based on conduct previously understood to be a grave offense. But the apparent tension arises from the mistaken notion that an offense for impeachment purposes is the same thing as a statutorily defined crime.  In England, officials were not uncommonly impeached for conduct that, while understood to be wrongful for one in office, would not be chargeable as a crime in ordinary criminal courts. See, e.g., Raoul Berger, Impeachment: The Constitutional Problems 67-69 (Harvard Univ. Press 1973). In the United States, the conclusion that official, but non-criminal, lies to congress are impeachable finds support in both founding-era statements by luminaries such as James Iredell and the concrete example of the fifth of the proposed articles of impeachment of Richard Nixon (regarding lies about the bombing of  Cambodia).

The course of the Clinton impeachment and the evidence favoring the impeachability of lies to congress strongly imply that a lie – or pattern of lying – is most likely to be considered impeachable if the subject is public matters and if the falsehood is uttered in connection with the president’s official duties for the purpose of affecting decisions by government actors. This inference is also consistent with Hamilton’s characterization of impeachable offenses as political in character.

Hence, Clinton’s lies, badly as they reflected on his personal character, did not lead to conviction because they did not directly affect the course of any public issue.  By contrast, Justice Iredell was focused on the hypothetical case of a president who lied to the senate to secure ratification of a treaty, and the Nixon article of impeachment addressed the very real case of a president who lied to congress and the public about military actions in a neutral country in order to frustrate congressional oversight of the Vietnam War.  In both the latter cases, the lies, hypothetical and real, were limited to a particular topic and causally related to identifiable action or inaction on the part of the national legislature. In both cases, it is easy to see that, but for the lie, congress would, or at least might have, acted differently.  The lie becomes an impeachable offense because it was designed to distort the deliberative function of another coordinate branch of government.

Mr. Trump’s habitual prevarication presents an unprecedented problem.  The issue is not how to view one or a related series of falsehoods about one particular topic, but that Mr. Trump lies constantly about virtually all topics. Some of his untruths relate directly to particular public policy issues or proposals.  Examples include claims made in connection with the debate over the future of the Affordable Care Act that “millions of people” lost insurance coverage under the ACA and that all or portions of certain states had no insurance carrier for the ACA exchanges. Likewise, he has falsely claimed that 3 million illegal aliens voted in the last election and that the Obama Administration tapped his telephone lines in Trump Tower. And in the midst of growing tensions with North Korea, he claimed he was sending an “armada” toward Korea when in fact the carrier group in question was steaming in the opposite direction.  But many of his lies are about subjects  — the size of his inaugural crowd or whether the head of the Boy Scouts or the President of Mexico called him — that in themselves are inconsequential.  The question is whether numerous unrelated falsehoods, none of which would be impeachable standing alone, can be aggregated into an offense meriting removal from office.

Answering this question requires some reflection on the nature, purpose, and effect of presidential lies.  For an ordinary president, a particular lie may be intended to affect a decision by congress or a court or an agency or a foreign government or the electorate itself.  But, for an ordinary president, what makes the lie both effective and culpable is the background assumption that presidents customarily tell the truth on important matters, and particularly in official communications.  Only thus can the lie truly deceive. But what if the president lies constantly, demonstrably, and unashamedly, on such a broad array of topics that no sensible person — including his nominal political allies — accepts anything he says as true without independent corroboration?

In one sense, the lies of a known chronic liar may be less damaging in a particular case precisely because the liar is less likely to be believed.  But if the chronic liar is the president, his mendacity arguably undermines the operation of the government as a whole.

Chronic lying may be a political offense in the Hamiltonian sense insofar as it cripples the liar in the performance of his presidential duties. During the Clinton impeachment, it was often argued that the American president, who serves as both the operational head of government and the ceremonial and symbolic head of state, cannot function without a minimum of moral authority which is forfeit once he is proven to be a perjurer. As I wrote back then:

Presidential leadership depends in significant part on the exercise of moral authority, some inherent in the office of the presidency and some deriving from the character of its occupant. Presidential leadership also requires integrity, at least insofar as both a President’s friends and foes must have reasonable confidence that, at least most of the time, the President speaks the truth and keeps promises. Furthermore, presidential leadership demands at least some modicum of virtue, at least to the degree that the President must not violate the basic social norms embodied in the law’s proscriptions against very serious criminal offenses. Without some indefinable minimum of these characteristics of moral authority, integrity, and personal virtue, a President cannot govern.

Nonetheless, the apparent lesson of the Clinton affair is that lies about a single private matter, even if perjurious, are not enough for impeachment. The question presented by Mr. Trump is whether persistent mendacity on multiple subjects of public consequence so undermines a president’s authority that lying becomes sufficient for impeachment without an accompanying criminal violation.

I am persuaded that the answer is yes by considering that chronic presidential lies do not merely render the president himself ineffectual, but also damage every other branch and function of American government.

If the president’s subordinates in the executive branch cannot believe their boss, they will be hampered both in understanding what the president’s policies are and in executing them.  If the legislature cannot believe what the president says, it can neither legislate with confidence that it is acting based on accurate information nor be confident that its directives will be honestly executed once enacted. If the judiciary becomes convinced that the president cannot be trusted, it will be less disposed to accept government lawyers’ explanations of executive actions and more inclined to meddle in matters in which it has traditionally deferred to executive branch discretion.  If foreign governments come to believe that the American president is a liar, the confidence in the fundamental reliability of the United States that is the true foundation of a sound and effective foreign policy will begin to unravel.  If the American people conclude that the president is a congenital liar, their cynicism about government – already sadly advanced – will increase, making the successful operation of participatory democracy even more doubtful.

In sum, pervasive lying by a president tends to undermine the entire constitutional order. Accordingly, I have little hesitation in concluding that, in theory, pervasive presidential lies can properly constitute an impeachable offense.

And yet…

That said, the practical and political obstacles to impeaching a president for his mendacity alone are formidable.

First, one would have to decide which falsehoods and prevarications should count. For example, should we count only statements made after a president’s inauguration?  Or, since the point is to prove a pattern of lying, should statements made prior to assumption of office, for example during the presidential campaign, be considered?

Likewise, one would have to decide how to define the statements includable in the pattern of falsehood.  Should we include only statements that would qualify as perjury if made under oath — that is, statements of present or past fact that are wholly false and known by the speaker to be so when made?  Or could notable exaggerations be included?

What would be the required mental state? Would one have to show that the president was consciously aware of the absolute falsity of a statement when made?  Or would it be sufficient to show that the president made a statement without making any effort to determine its truth?  In short, could a president be impeached for a pattern of reckless disregard for the truth?

Since the essence of the offense would be a pattern of lies, how many lies of what type would be required to make a pattern?

How consequential would any particular statement have to be to be included in the pattern?  Could one include, for example, a lie about whether the president received a phone call from the head of the Boy Scouts about the reception of his speech to the Boy Scout Jamboree?  Or would a lie have to be about a subject directly related to an issue of public policy? If the latter, how consequential would the statement have to be?

Moreover, sometimes presidents must lie for the public good. To be entirely candid about, say, pending military operations might be unforgivable, not laudable.  How would one distinguish between the necessary and culpable lies?

Second, given that all presidents lie at least sometimes, there would have to be some comparative standard or every president would be impeachable for dishonesty.  How would one set such a comparative standard?

Third, the proof problems would be formidable and the process of collecting evidence would necessarily involve massive intrusions into the ordinary operations of the White House.  Proving that the president either knew that a particular statement was untrue or was reckless about its falsity would require discovery of all his own personal investigations into the matter and all the information and advice provided to him on the subject.  Recall the extraordinarily protracted process of investigating the single question of whether President Clinton lied about sex with Monica Lewinsky and multiply that by the dozens of alleged falsehoods that would be necessary to establish a pattern of presidential lying.

Finally, any impeachment is a fool’s errand unless the overwhelming majority of the public – including a solid majority of a president’s own political party – can be convinced that the allegedly impeachable offense occurred and is a legitimate basis for removing a president.  Mr. Trump occupies the White House today as both beneficiary and inciter of a culture of distrust of “establishment” institutions and disbelief in the very existence of objective truth.  To a distressing degree, many, perhaps most, people who are at all politically aware tend to receive their information from sources broadly congenial to their own settled views and tend to disbelieve information from sources they associate with “the other side.” There are few, if any, widely recognized neutral arbiters of public fact.

This manifests itself directly in the electorate’s views of Mr. Trump’s honesty.  In one recent poll, only 37% of all respondents said Mr. Trump is honest. But the partisan breakdown of this view is stark. Only 5% of Democrats found him honest. Among independents, 35% did so. But on September 27, 2017, after nine months of his presidency, 79% of Republicans said they viewed Mr. Trump as honest. Moreover, so cynical have we become about all elected officials past and present, that a significant fraction of the population do not believe that Mr. Trump is materially more or less honest than his predecessors.

Leaving to one side the sociological and psychological explanations for these astounding figures, they mean that any effort to impeach Mr. Trump for dishonesty alone would inevitably be viewed by many, perhaps most, Republican voters as an unsubstantiated, purely partisan endeavor.  And that, in turn, means that Republican legislators – however dishonest they personally know Mr. Trump to be – would cooperate with such an effort only at the certain peril of losing their offices.

In the end, therefore, although I am convinced that impeachment exclusively on the ground of pervasive dishonesty would be entirely constitutional, I am unconvinced that any such project is practical, politically feasible, or indeed desirable.  However, I am convinced (a) that Mr. Trump’s dishonesty may prove to be a significant feature of other impeachable offenses, and (b) that, if more concrete grounds for impeachment should ever be advanced by the House, an additional, carefully considered and crafted, count for pervasive dishonesty should at least be explored.

 

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Kneeling linebackers and the path to impeachment

25 Monday Sep 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Curry, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, Lebron, NFL, politics of impeachment

Most of my writing on this site is devoted to the technical legal issues raised by Mr. Trump’s misadventures and the constitutional riddle of what constitutes an impeachable offense.  I hope readers find these discussions useful.  Nonetheless, Mr. Trump’s vulgar, tawdry, racially incendiary feud with protesting NFL players is a reminder that the path to impeachment, if it exists at all, will be opened by public sentiment, not legal argument.

Any discussion of presidential impeachment is bounded by two apparently contradictory realities. On the one hand, then-congressman Gerald Ford was right that, as a practical matter, “An impeachable offense is whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a given moment in history.” In the other hand, our historical practice has been to read “high Crimes and Misdemeanors” fairly narrowly and to shrink from actually removing presidents from office.

No American president has been both impeached by House and convicted and removed by the Senate. President Nixon resigned rather than face impeachment, but only after the release of the Watergate tapes caused his public support to collapse. President Clinton survived trial in the Senate not, I think, because he was factually innocent of the charges against him. Rather, his public support remained high, indeed grew, during the impeachment controversy, and a majority of the Senate concluded that his removal from office for what most people viewed as unseemly, but not disqualifying, lying about sex, would outrage the electorate.

In Mr. Trump’s case, I have identified one provable impeachable offense — the Arpaio pardon. Others have contended that what is known of Mr. Trump’s financial entanglements and of his efforts to quash the Russia investigation amount to impeachable violations of the emoluments clauses and obstruction of justice statutes.  Evidence of other conduct that could be categorized as impeachable by serious people may well emerge over the coming months. But none of it – none of it — will matter so long as Republicans hold the House and Mr. Trump holds the allegiance of 40-some percent of the electorate as a whole and three-quarters or more of Republican voters.

No majority-Republican House will ever vote to impeach Mr. Trump, or even to investigate the question seriously.  In an earlier era, there might have been enough public-spirited Republicans to open an inquiry, if the facts were egregious enough. But the extreme polarization of the House, and the death grip on the House Republican caucus enjoyed by its right-most fringes would surely foreclose such a development. Even if the Democrats flip the House in 2018 and proceed to impeachment, conviction in the Senate would require a dozen or more Republican votes.  Those votes will never be available as long as Republican senators face a credible threat of primary challenges from the Trumpian right.

Therefore, unless and until Mr. Trump loses the active support of something approaching half of the primary-voting base of the Republican party, his lease on the White House is secure until 2020. It may not be necessary that half of all Republicans openly repudiate him, but close to half must become sufficiently disillusioned that Mr. Trump’s removal would become a matter of relative indifference rather than a cause for tribal fury.  Then, and only then, will he become vulnerable to impeachment.

Which brings us back to the NFL.  There has been a good deal of brow-furrowing analysis of the perverse cleverness of Mr. Trump’s insult campaign against kneeling NFL players.  And I suppose it is clever in the sick sense that he is managing to inflame the latent hostility of fans who obsess over the game, but nonetheless privately, even subconsciously, resent the players’ wealth and status, by reminding the fans that a whole lot of these guys are black.  Trump’s genius is the sadist’s gift of finding every raw nerve, suppressed neurosis, and healing wound in the body politic and poking at it.

Mr. Trump’s sadism secures him the loyalty of the angry and the insecure who constitute a large fraction of his political base. And I’m sure that his NFL tantrum will go down well enough with many of these. But does there come a point when he has simply gone too far?  A point when the loyalty or at least amused patience of tribal Republicans begins to crumble under the weight of the ceaseless tide of insults directed at nearly every admired figure in American life?

I certainly don’t know the answer to this question.  But I can’t help but believe that getting into a fight with Lebron James, Steph Curry, the Golden State Warriors, and the whole NFL establishment is a bad move for a guy whose base is disproportionately made of folks for whom professional sports generally and football in particular are near to religion.  It would be sickly ironic if the mass affinity for Trump that survived his insults to a genuine American hero like John McCain began to crack over a cheap feud with sports stars, but somewhere there must be a straw that will break this pestilent camel’s back.

 

 

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The Arpaio pardon: Dean Chemerinsky’s separation of powers argument is clever, learned … and wrong

24 Sunday Sep 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Arpaio pardon, Chemerinsky, pardon as impeachable offense, pardon power, pardons, separation of powers

I have argued that Mr. Trump’s pardon of Sheriff Joe Arpaio is potentially an impeachable offense. Others have gone further, asserting that Mr. Trump lacked the constitutional power to issue this pardon.  I think these arguments are wrong as a matter of constitutional law, and ill-advised if conceived as part of a larger effort to secure impeachment of Mr. Trump.

I have already addressed the contention that the Arpaio pardon violated the due process clause.  Today, I take up the claim by Dean Erwin Chemerinsky and others that it violates the separation of powers.

Dean Chemerinsky, together with prominent lawyers Michael and Jane Tigar, advances the separation of powers argument in an amicus brief filed with the district court judge who found Sheriff Arpaio in criminal contempt.  The brief is a learned, creative, clever piece of legal work.  It’s also, sadly, a lovely house of cards that collapses at a touch.

To see why requires a quick recap of the proceedings that resulted in Arpaio’s contempt conviction and a review of basic contempt and pardon law.

The Arpaio contempt: In 2007, a group of individuals filed a federal civil rights class action against Arpaio and the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office alleging discriminatory policing and a variety of other misbehavior. The case dragged on for years, with Arpaio resisting every step of the way.  In 2010 and again in 2012, the Department of Justice filed its own civil lawsuits against Arpaio and the county. Both DOJ and the class action litigants secured court orders requiring changes in the behavior of the Sheriff’s Department, but it became evident that the orders were not being complied with.  In 2015, DOJ intervened in (meaning that it became a party in) the civil rights action to coordinate its enforcement efforts with those of the plaintiffs and the court. Arpaio’s resistance to the court’s authority continued.

In May 2016, Judge Murray Snow found Arpaio and others in civil contempt of orders issued in the civil rights action by then being pursued by both private plaintiffs and the Department of Justice. In July 2016, Judge Snow ordered a series of remedies for civil contempt designed to protect the rights of the plaintiff class – such as a monetary compensation scheme for victims and changes in sheriff’s office policies.  On August 19, 2016, he also formally requested the Department of Justice to “prosecute” Sheriff Arpaio and others for “criminal contempt” before a different judge.

A separate criminal case was opened, with a different caption and different case number — United States v. Arpaio, Case No. 2:16-cr-01012.  The only parties were the United States and Sheriff Arpaio, not the individual plaintiffs in the separate civil rights action.  The “cr” in the case number denoted a criminal, rather than a civil, case.  On July 31, 2017, Judge Susan Bolton found Arpaio guilty of criminal contempt in violation of 18 U.S.C. Section 401. On August 25, before Judge Bolton could sentence Arpaio, President Trump issued him a pardon in the criminal contempt case.  He did not pardon Arpaio in the civil contempt case, which at all events he lacked the power to do.

As illustrated by the Arpaio case, contempt can be either civil or criminal.  In civil contempt, the penalties are coercive and often conditional (such as fines that continue to accrue so long as offending party persists in violating the court’s order), and are designed to compel compliance with a court’s order and vindicate the rights of the litigants. In criminal contempt, the penalties are fixed, not conditional on the defendant’s subsequent behavior, and intended to vindicate the authority and dignity of the court.  Criminal contempt penalties may include incarceration and all the collateral consequences of any other criminal conviction, such as disqualification from voting or running for office.

The law of pardons and contempts: Article II, Section 2, of the Constitution states that the president “shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.” When lawyers and judges use the word “offense” as a general term describing a category of legal cases, they mean “crime,” as distinct from a civil wrong.  Thus, the plain language of Article II, Section 2 gives the president the power to pardon crimes, but not the power to void civil judgments against federal litigants.

Criminal contempt “is a crime in the ordinary sense,” a point the Supreme Court has affirmed over and over again.  And a violation of 18 U.S.C. 401 is a felony.

Moreover, the Supreme Court has expressly held that the pardon power extends to criminal contempts. In Ex parte Grossman, a 1925 opinion written by a man who knew about the pardon power from first-hand experience, Chief Justice and former President of the United States, William Howard Taft, the Court addressed exactly the same separation of powers argument Chemerinsky makes and unanimously rejected it.

Chemerinsky tries, as lawyers say, to “distinguish” the Grossman case — which means to argue that Grossman doesn’t count because it decided a different issue than the one presented by the Arpaio pardon.  In a nutshell, Chemerinsky claims that the Arpaio contempt was different that than the Grossman contempt in a way that, for historical reasons, places it outside the president’s pardon power.

The argument is intricate, elegant … and wrong.  It runs something like this:

The Supreme Court in Grossman said that, when creating the president’s constitutional pardon power, the framers thought of it as roughly coextensive with the King’s pardon power in England before the American Revolution.  Therefore, Chemerinsky sets out to find some limitation on the King’s pardon power that, by analogy, would limit a president’s power to pardon the Arpaio contempt.

In Merry Olde England (1300s though the 1600s), there were several avenues of redress for victims of crime.  The first was an ordinary prosecution of the wrongdoer in which the Crown was theoretically the party bringing the case. I say theoretically, because until the 1800s there was no body of public prosecutors, and virtually all criminal cases were brought by the victim, who was commonly called “the prosecutor.” Douglas Hay, et al., Albion’s Fatal Tree 40 (1975). The punishments in such cases were those we would ordinarily think of as criminal – fines, prison, or death – plus some specialties of the period like flogging, the stocks, or transportation to the colonies.  In addition to this customary practice of 18th Century English criminal courts, there was a very old procedure called “appeal of felony” that allowed victims to bring private prosecutions which, if successful, could result in both restitutionary payments to the victim and criminal punishment of the wrongdoer.  Chemerinsky cites several legal treatises, and might have cited others, to the effect that the King could pardon defendants convicted in actions brought by the Crown, but could not pardon defendants convicted in private “appeal of felony” actions.

Chemerinsky argues that the constitution’s founders would have been familiar with the exclusion of “appeal of felony” cases from the King’s pardon power, and thus that they intended to limit a president’s pardon power in any modern case analogous to the old “appeal of felony” mechanism.  As an historical matter, this is deeply unlikely.

In the first place, “appeal of felony” does not seem to have existed in American colonial jurisprudence. Boston Railway v. Dana, 1 Gray  83 (Mass. 1854), in Charles E. Chadman, Chadman’s Cyclopedia of Law, Col. X1 (1906), at 12-16. There is no mention of “appeal of felony” in the records of either the constitutional convention or any of the state ratifying conventions. Moreover, even in England, the mechanism of “appeal of felony” was already falling out of favor by the early 1600s, and there are only a dozen reported cases of its use in all of the 1700s. “By 1800 the appeal was as obsolete as any institution can be that has not been formally abolished.” J.H. Baker, Criminal Courts and Procedure at Common Law 1550-1800, in  J.S. Cockburn, Crime in England 1550-1800, at 18.

In short, it is improbable that, by 1787, even an unusually well-read American lawyer would have any personal acquaintance with a legal mechanism that had effectively been extinct in England for nearly a century.  The likelihood that any significant number of the constitution’s drafters or ratifiers knew about “appeal of felony,” and were aware that it was outside the royal pardon power, and thought that bit of historical arcana relevant to the scope of the pardon power of an American president approaches zero.  As one scholar wrote about a similar issue, “Even in the unreformed common law, there was a distinction between precedents and fossils.” Martha Ziskind, Judicial Tenure in the American Constitution: English and American Precedents,” Supreme Court Review 135, 138 (1969).

But let’s indulge the fiction that the founders knew about “appeal of felony” and the King’s pardon.  If so, the analogy of “appeal of felony” to criminal contempt proves exactly the reverse of what Chemerinsky claims. In England, once the Crown undertook prosecution of a criminal wrong, the King could pardon the resulting conviction. Likewise, the King could, and very often did, issue pardons in cases where private prosecutors filed informations in the name of the Crown. John Langbein, Shaping the Eighteenth-Century Criminal Trial: A View from the Ryder Sources, 50 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1, 21 (1983). In Arpaio’s case, the Department of Justice became a party to the civil rights action and then, in a separate case heard by a different judge, prosecuted and obtained a criminal contempt conviction against Arpaio. Hence, even if this were 1787 and Mr. Trump were His Royal Highness Donald I, once the government entered the case seeking criminal penalties for violation of a criminal contempt statute, the resultant conviction would be pardonable by the Crown.

Finally, and most importantly, Chemerinsky argues that the contempt conviction in Grossman is different  because there the underlying lawsuit was brought by the government to enforce a federal statute, whereas the underlying lawsuit in Arpaio was a civil rights case initially brought by individual plaintiffs. Therefore, he contends, the contempt in Grossman was designed to protect government interests, while the contempt in Arpaio was designed to protect the interests of the individual civil rights plaintiffs in the original lawsuit. But in attempting this distinction, Chemerinsky either ignores or garbles two centuries of American case law on contempt and glosses over the procedural posture of Arpaio’s criminal contempt.

To begin, there is no suggestion in prior cases that the distinction between civil and criminal contempt turns on the identity of the litigants in the lawsuit in which the defendant behaved contemptuously.  Rather, federal courts have held over and over again that the difference between civil and criminal contempt lies in the nature and purpose of the penalties imposed.  As noted above, civil contempt penalties are designed to compel compliance with a court’s order and “vindicate the rights of the litigants.” Putting it another way, the point of civil contempt is either to give the party injured by the contumacious conduct immediate relief in the form of something like monetary compensation or to coerce a recalcitrant person into changing his future behavior by following the court’s orders so that litigants get the relief to which the court has found them entitled.

By contrast, the purpose of the penalty imposed following a criminal contempt is punishment.  It is delivered in the form of a criminal sentence indistinguishable in form and effect from a sentence for any other crime. It is fixed — so many months in prison, such-and-such a fine paid to the government — and cannot be later reduced or altered conditional on the defendant’s subsequent behavior.  (Indeed, under Rule 35(b), Fed. R. Crim. P., fourteen days after any criminal sentence is entered, the district judge loses the power to change it.  So a judge could not issue a conditional sentence in a criminal contempt even if she wanted to.) In short, the point of criminal contempt is not to compensate the injured party or coerce the contemnor into changing his future behavior to comply with the court’s orders.  It is to punish the contemnor for his past behavior in defiance of the authority and dignity of the court.

Of course, the threat of facing a criminal contempt prosecution may have the incidental effect of deterring a recalcitrant party from further defiance of the court’s orders, and an actual criminal contempt conviction may convince the convict to comply with orders he previously resisted.  Thus, a criminal contempt may incidentally benefit litigants harmed by the contemnor’s defiance.  But the object of criminal contempt remains protecting the authority and dignity of the court, not benefiting any party to the case.

Chemerinsky’s brief notes that the Supreme Court’s Grossman opinion alludes to the principle that a pardon in a contempt case is ineffective “to halt or interfere with the remedial part of the court’s order necessary to secure the rights of the injured suitor.”  But that snippet is nothing more than a nod to the fact that, in some prior cases, the same judge may have issued both civil and criminal contempt judgments. The Court is merely clarifying that, in such cases, a presidential pardon could void only the judgment of criminal conviction and any characteristically criminal punishments, but not the characteristically civil remedial components of a contempt order.

There is no danger of any confusion on this point in the Arpaio case.  The civil and criminal contempt judgments against Arpaio were separated by over a year and came in separate actions. The court’s order in the civil contempt case contained nothing but classic remedial measures.  We can’t know what sentence the judge would have imposed in the criminal contempt, but the penalties could only have been those permissible under federal criminal law.

In short, Grossman cannot be distinguished. And in Grossman, the Supreme Court held that a presidential pardon of a criminal contempt does not violate the constitutional principle of separation of powers.

Should Grossman’s holding on separation of powers be reexamined and overturned? 

Of course, even though Grossman is good law and indistinguishable from the Arpaio case, the Supreme Court could change its mind. Dean Chemerinsky argues that it should.  He makes three basic arguments, none of which withstand scrutiny.

First, he contends that aggrieved litigants in federal court have a “right to redress” implied from Article III, of which they would be deprived if judges could not employ criminal contempt sanctions to coerce compliance with their orders.

Second, he argues that the power to compel obedience to the judgments of courts through contempt sanctions is an inherent component of judicial authority that exists independent of any statutory authorization. He reluctantly concedes that Congress can, and has, limited that authority in a variety of ways. But he strongly implies that either removing or significantly limiting the judiciary’s contempt power would violate Article III.

Both of these claims are debatable, at least in the sweeping form advanced by Dean Chemerinsky. A general right to redress does not make constitutionally mandatory every possible means of judicial coercion. Likewise, the existence of an inherent judicial contempt power does not necessarily imply that criminal contempt is a constitutionally mandated attribute of judicial authority.  If, for example, Congress were to repeal Sections 401 and 402 of the criminal code and decree that henceforward federal judges would enjoy only civil contempt authority, it seems doubtful that such an action would be unconstitutional.

But even if we concede that litigants as a class have a constitutional entitlement to redress and that judges have a constitutionally implied power to hold in criminal contempt those who defy judicial orders, neither proposition creates a constitutional argument for voiding the Trump pardon of Arpaio.

The general principle that litigants have a right of redress is, at most, a guide to the kinds of processes that ought to be built into the judicial system as a whole.  It does not imply a rule that every litigant must receive perfect justice or complete satisfaction of all his legal objectives. Nor does it imply that judges are to be the exclusive arbiters of how justice should be apportioned. Once the pains and stigma attendant on criminal conviction enter a case, Anglo-American law has long reserved a place for executive judgments about clemency.

As for the Arpaio pardon in particular, it changed no laws, procedures, or rules of court.  It has no effect on the right of redress of any litigant in any case other than that involving the Maricopa County Sheriff.  And even there, the civil rights plaintiffs sued, won, and secured injunctive relief and monetary compensation. Arpaio and the county resisted the court’s orders, a resistance that begat further court orders, a civil contempt verdict, and additional remedial measures. Arpaio was actually convicted of criminal contempt, even though he escaped punishment for it by virtue of the pardon.  That is a deeply regrettable circumstance and one that reflects on Mr. Trump’s fitness for office precisely because it suggests his personal disregard of both the individual plaintiffs and the sanctity of their constitutional liberties. But it is not an outcome that denied the civil plaintiffs all “redress.”

Likewise, the general power of judges to hold recalcitrant litigants in criminal contempt remains unchanged by the Arpaio pardon. By issuing the pardon, Mr. Trump repealed no statute, promulgated no new Justice Department policy, advocated no new interpretation of Article III, and raised no challenge to the criminal contempt power of judges.  Here, too, his action reflects adversely on his fitness for office because it manifests a personal disregard for the role of an independent judiciary and a disposition to employ the powers of the presidency to distort the rule of law in favor of friends or political allies.  But the baseness of his motives in exercising a power granted the president by the constitution does not deprive judges as a class of their contempt power.

Which brings us to what might be characterized as the third of Dean Chemerinsky’s arguments, which is that the authority to hold persons in criminal contempt for violating court orders is such an indispensable attribute of judicial power that voiding it, even by presidential pardon in a single case, violates the constitutional principle of separation of powers.  With the greatest respect to Dean Chemerinsky, I do not believe that invocation of the phrase “separation of powers” can nullify the plain pardon language of Article II, Section 2 — “The President … shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.”

After all, the constitution nowhere says, “There shall be a separation of powers.” Instead, it creates a structure of three branches of government and specifies how powers are to be distributed  among them.  The separation principle is inferred from the textual power distribution. In cases where the language of the constitution is unclear or fairly open to interpretation, or in cases that plainly could not have been anticipated by the founders, it may be appropriate to employ the inferred separation principle to decide the constitutional propriety of a contested use of power by one of the branches against another.  But, at least absent some extraordinary justification, one cannot use a general principle that is, after all, merely an implication from the structure to void an explicit, unequivocally worded, part of the structure.

Moreover, the inferred separation principle does not mean that the three federal branches occupy three non-intersecting silos of authority.  Rather, as we all learned in high school civics, the Madisonian constitution is one of checks and balances — three co-equal branches, each endowed both with its own characteristic powers and powers to check abuse of power by the others.  The presidential pardon power is a checking power.  It was designed to provide a case-by-case executive branch check on judicial overreach and an avenue of redress for individuals oppressed or misjudged by the courts.

Note that, unlike Professor Martin Redish and others who argued that the Arpaio pardon in particular might be subject to judicial review on its special facts and voidable as a violation of due process, Dean Chemerinsky’s argument is not limited to the Arpaio case. Instead, he is necessarily arguing that no president can ever pardon any criminal contempt, regardless of its circumstances. Judicial power over contempts, he says, is absolute and untouchable by executive clemency.

For this categorical exclusion to succeed in the face of the unequivocal language of Article II, Section 2, would require some powerful reason to believe either that occasional use of the pardon power would subvert judicial authority generally, or that criminal contempt cases are peculiarly immune from the danger of judicial misjudgment, meanness, or malignancy.

But the Arpaio pardon, however repellant one may find it, is not an instance of one branch (the president) preventing another branch (the judiciary) from functioning at all. The judiciary is still in business. Nor does it present an example of one branch preventing another branch from exercising a particular type of power.  Mr. Trump didn’t pardon everyone who has been found guilty of criminal contempt of a federal judge.  Nor did he threaten to do so.  The contempt power remains available to federal judges to enforce their orders, and they do so daily.

Moreover, there is no reason to think that judges are any less prone to misjudgment or injustice in cases of criminal contempt than in any other class of crime.  Indeed, there is every reason to fear that, in cases that necessarily involve defiance of their official authority and may closely touch their own outraged professional dignity, at least some judges may lose perspective.  This risk does not outweigh the imperative requirement of effective means of enforcing judicial orders, but it makes the case for an executive check on particular instances of judicial overreach even stronger than in ordinary criminal cases. Presidents do, and should, have the power to pardon criminal contempts.

The bottom line is that Mr. Trump had the power to pardon Joseph Arpaio.  That does not mean he was right to do so.  Nor does it mean that the country is without remedy if, as I believe, he was egregiously wrong.  But, as I have written repeatedly on this site, the remedies are political — repudiation of Mr. Trump and his party at the polls or impeachment.

The liberal legal intelligentsia and impeachment

In writing about Dean Chemerinsky’s brief on the Arpaio pardon, the almost invariably perspicacious Dahlia Lithwick opined that if the Dean and others succeed in convincing judges that the pardon violated the separation of powers, that would strengthen the case for impeachment.  At least with respect to Dean Chemerinsky’s brief,  I am constrained to disagree.

Dean Chemerinsky does not argue that this particular pardon was a uniquely abusive exercise of presidential authority.  Rather, he asks the court to find that neither Mr. Trump nor any other president can pardon anyone for criminal contempt, regardless of the circumstances. To win, he would have to convince the Supreme Court either to overturn the Grossman case or distinguish it based on a novel, technical, antiquarian basis. But then what?  Arpaio’s contempt conviction would be reinstated, but not because this pardon was a reprehensible abuse of authority, but because the Court reversed itself and decided for the first time that all presidents lack the power to pardon anyone for criminal contempt.  One can hardly impeach a president for failing to anticipate a U-turn by the Supreme Court. The Arpaio pardon is only plausibly an impeachable offense if Mr. Trump either violated a well-established constitutional rule or grossly abused a concededly available presidential power in this particular case.

Which brings me to my final point in this long screed. To be candid, despite my immense respect for Dean Chemerinsky, who is one of the undeniable giants of the American legal academy, his argument for the unconstitutionality of the Arpaio pardon is strikingly weak. It might persuade a district judge understandably angry at Arpaio’s long and inexcusable defiance and at the crassly political interference of a crass and belligerent president.  But it will go nowhere thereafter. And it shouldn’t.  The general rule for which it argues is contrary to the plain text of the constitution, the plain holding of the Supreme Court, sound principles of constitutional interpretation, and simple good sense.

It feels, I am sorry to say, like another example of brilliant legal scholars sponsoring tenuous legal arguments in the service of resisting, and potentially removing, Donald Trump. Heaven knows, I sympathize with the objective. Mr. Trump’s frightening unsuitability for his office becomes more evident by the day.

But if I may be pardoned the solecism of quoting something I wrote several months back:

 

Those who would impeach a president for his disregard of democratic norms must come to the task with clean hands. It will not do to say that, because Trump flaunts some norms, other norms can justifiably be bent or broken to bring him low. If that becomes the stance of Trump’s pursuers, then they become little better than the object of their indignation, and what should be a righteous pursuit will seem no more than partisan vindictiveness. Which will degrade the very standards of conduct we should all be seeking to uphold, and lead, inevitably, to yet another round of bitter political warfare conducted with even fewer restraints and less decency.

If that happens, those who oppose Mr. Trump will have failed utterly, even if they succeed in expelling him from office.

When legal academics enter the fray over Mr. Trump, we must hew tightly to our own cherished norms of intellectual honesty and analytical rigor.  There is nothing wrong, of course, with creativity and even a bit of aggressiveness. Mr. Trump, after all, presents unique challenges to the legal order we seek to uphold and his novel transgressions are fair game for legal innovation.  Still, we ought not be sponsoring arguments against Mr. Trump that, on the same or analogous facts, we would not make against a President Obama or a President Bush. When we yield to that temptation, we weaken whatever authority we have as honest and more-or-less neutral interpreters of the law.  That authority will be needed in the months and years to come, I think.  We should avoid squandering it.

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Frank O. Bowman, III


Curators' Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Floyd R. Gibson Missouri Endowed Prof of Law Emeritus
Univ of Missouri School of Law

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