One Tough Question For DOJ If Biden Is Elected: Whether To Prosecute Trump

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Former Vice President Joe Biden leaves a campaign event last month in Wilmington, Del. If Biden wins the election, he may face political pressure over what to do about President Trump.

Andrew Harnik/AP


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Andrew Harnik/AP


Elections
WATCH: Biden Says He Wouldn’t Stand In The Way Of A Trump Prosecution

Instead, Obama told ABC News at the time, his instinct was to make sure those practices never happened again.

«I don’t believe that anybody is above the law,» he said, «On the other hand, I also have a belief that we need to look forward, as opposed to looking backwards.»

A presidential desire to «look forward» and move ahead is what prompted President Gerald Ford to pardon his predecessor, President Richard Nixon, after the revelations about Nixon’s abuse of power in Watergate.

In Obama’s case, the Justice Department ultimately convicted only one person, a government contractor, for abusing a detainee who later died. But Biden could have a harder time drawing those kinds of lines today.

Trump is an unusual case

«It’s not at all clear that looking forward and not looking backward is an available option,» Harvard Law School Professor Jack Goldsmith said.

Goldsmith said most people aren’t talking about how a Biden Justice Department might handle Trump but said he thinks they should be.

Congress and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. have open investigations into Trump and his company. Federal prosecutors have looked at his campaign payments in 2016 and his inaugural committee.


The NPR Politics Podcast
Harris: Justice Dept. ‘Would Have No Choice’ But To Prosecute Trump After Presidency

Former Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller made clear that his investigation did not clear Trump of potential lawbreaking in connection with the president’s attempts to quash the Russia investigation. Democrats and some former prosecutors hostile to Trump called his actions obstruction of justice.

But the Justice Department twice has opined that prosecutors can’t seek an indictment against a sitting president. That’s left open the question about whether he might face prosecution once he leaves office.

It’s never happened before, and it’s a political time bomb. Bringing a criminal case against a former president could widen the divide in the country.

«Whether that’s good for the country is a very hard question that’s going to be very messy,» Goldsmith said. «Whether it’s good for the Biden administration, whether it wants to be, you know, absorbed in being the first administration to ever prosecute a prior president — those are very hard questions.»

The political dimensions

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Sen. Kamala Harris, the Democrats’ pending nominee for vice president, has suggested that Trump should be prosecuted once he is out of office.

Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP


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Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP


Politics
Barr Is Investigating The Investigators: Will He Find Wrongdoing Or Political Fuel?

The prospect for post-election prosecutions has become part of campaign politicking.

Trump, when he ran in 2016, called his opponent, Hillary Clinton, «crooked» and ate it up when crowds called for Clinton to be incarcerated. Retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn joined the audience in cheers onstage four years ago at the Republican National Convention.

«Lock her up,» Flynn exclaimed after the crowd began to chant. «That’s right. Yeah, that’s right. Lock her up.»

Ultimately, the Trump administration has brought no charges against Clinton. But it has launched investigations into former FBI Director Jim Comey, his deputy Andrew McCabe and the intelligence gathering process in 2016. And the president has extended the theme to Biden and Obama, including with an attempt to brand what he calls a scandal «Obamagate.»

Trump frequently mentions those investigations on Twitter or in public comments.

In a recent interview on Fox News, Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, lamented how the justice system has become a political weapon.

«I think all political sides have gotten into the habit in this country of just sort of saying that their political opponents have done something terrible,» Barr said. «They think it’s terrible. You know, ‘It’s enough for me to conclude he is terrible. Why isn’t he in prison?’ «

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