Wednesday, January 08, 2025

Only One President is a Felon

 


Note from Barb: Only One President is a Felon

By Barbara McQuade

Dear Reader,

When I was in about third grade, my classroom at school had a poster with the images of every president of the United States.

One oddity that I noticed was that the poster showed duplicate pictures of Grover Cleveland. I asked my teacher about what appeared to me to be an error, and she explained that Cleveland had actually been elected twice, though not back-to-back, the only president in U.S. history to serve two non-consecutive terms.

Until now.

Donald Trump, of course, will be our nation’s 45th and 47th president. But that’s not the only unusual feature about Trump. He is also the only president with a mug shot.

On Friday, Trump will appear in a Manhattan court to be sentenced for his 34 convictions for falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments to influence the 2016 election. After several delays, Judge Juan Merchan has scheduled a hearing to bring closure to a case that has raised novel legal issues regarding the prosecution of a president-elect. Trump tried to stop the sentencing from going forward, but Merchan denied his request and seems prepared to impose judgment.

In an opinion issued last week, Merchan upheld Trump’s conviction. Merchan also stated that he does not intend to impose a sentence of incarceration, and, in fact, is likely to give Trump what is known as an “unconditional discharge.” In other words, he gets off free – hardly a measure of justice in a nation where no one is supposed to be above the law. Trump will even be permitted to appear for his sentencing virtually, saving him a trip to New York. Turns out, that under the law, the presidency puts you a little bit above everyone else.

Merchan’s opinion is likely to anger both Trump’s supporters and his critics. But, in my view, Merchan’s opinion takes a thoughtful approach. The judge explained that he was attempting to balance three important values – the ability of the president to carry out the duties he was elected to perform, respect for the rule of law, and deference to the “sanctity” of the jury’s verdict.

First, it’s obvious that a president cannot lead the free world from a prison cell. By electing Trump, the majority of American voters have signaled their desire to return him to the Oval Office, despite his criminal convictions. Putting him in prison would hamper his ability to fulfill his duties as our nation’s chief executive and commander in chief. Of course, Merchan could hit Trump with a hefty fine, or even delay the sentencing until Trump leaves office in 2029, but he wrote that it was important to avoid tainting the president-elect with the stigma that those outcomes would bring so that he could lead the country unencumbered by penalties hanging over his head.

Second, Merchan wrote that the rule of law required him to uphold Trump’s 34 convictions. The judge rejected Trump’s argument that his case should be overturned just because he’s the president-elect. In July, after the verdict in Trump’s case, the U.S. Supreme Court held that former presidents are immune from prosecution for alleged crimes based on their official conduct. That decision came in the context of the federal prosecution against Trump for interfering with the 2020 election while in office seeking re-election. But prosecution for official conduct is not at issue here. Trump committed the crimes in this case while he was a private citizen in 2016, even before he was elected the first time, leaving his illegal conduct unprotected by any potential claim of presidential immunity. Trump’s election in November 2024 does nothing to change that result. Merchan denied Trump’s effort to use a sort of “retroactive” immunity to wipe clean his convictions by virtue of his subsequent election as president. Presidential immunity is not a lifetime get-out-of-jail-free card.

Finally, Merchan wrote that it was critical to our system of justice to honor the unanimous decision of the twelve jurors who found Trump guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The judge wrote that the significance of the jury’s verdict “cannot be overstated.” Respecting jury verdicts, Merchan wrote, is “a bedrock principle in our Nation’s jurisprudence” and “a hallmark of our judicial system.”

And so, Merchan reached a decision that provides sort of half a loaf of justice. If all goes as Merchan lays out, on Friday, Trump will walk free. But, unless an appellate court intervenes, his conviction will remain in the history books.

I imagine that future generations of school children will look at posters like the one I saw in third grade. Those kids will see two presidents depicted twice, Cleveland and Trump.

But only one will be a felon.

Stay Informed,

Barb

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