Showing posts with label Watergate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Watergate. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Creators: The Presidential Pardon as a Tool of Political Repression

Matthew T. Mangino
CREATORS
June 3, 2025

American presidents are empowered by Article II, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution, "to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States." The clemency power can refer to multiple forms of presidential mercy:

  • Pardons to forgive past crimes and restore civil rights.
  • Commutations completely or partially reduce sentences for people in prison or on community supervision.
  • Remissions reduce financial penalties associated with convictions.
  • Respites are temporary reprieves usually granted to inmates for medical reasons.

All presidents have exercised their constitutional authority to grant mercy to those serving a sentence or relieving those of the burden of a criminal record.

According to the New York Times, "President Trump is employing the vast power of his office to redefine criminality to suit his needs — using pardons to inoculate criminals he happens to like, downplaying corruption and fraud as crimes, and seeking to stigmatize political opponents by labeling them criminals."

President Donald Trump has used his pardon power, "to assert personal dominance over processes generally, if not always, governed by established ethical and institutional guardrails." He professes to be tough-on-crime, "but has often shown a willingness to do so only when he defines the rules and the laws."

This week, he justified pardoning Scott Jenkins, the former sheriff of Culpeper County, Va., and a political ally sentenced to 10 years for bribery, saying Mr. Jenkins had been "dragged through HELL by a Corrupt and Weaponized" DOJ during the Biden administration. In fact, Mr. Jenkins was convicted after evidence showed that he had taken $75,000 in bribes in exchange for making wealthy business owners auxiliary deputy sheriffs in his department.

Trump's mercy extended to the son of a political fund-raiser who happened to be a confessed tax cheat. Then there is the donor to Trump's 2016 campaign who was convicted of campaign fiance fraud. Trump also pardoned a former Republican congressman from Staten Island who invoked Trump's name in his unsuccessful effort to defend himself against tax charges.

The list goes on, Trump pardoned a Long Island labor leader who failed to report $300,000 in gifts; Todd and Julie Chrisley, the reality TV couple known for "Chrisley Knows Best," after they were found guilty of a $36 million fraud and tax evasion; and the co-founder of Death Row Records, who, according to the Times, had endorsed Trump while serving a hefty sentence for conspiracy to commit murder.

Ed Martin, the former nominee for U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., and current Department of Justice pardon attorney, coined the phrase, "No MAGA left behind." Martin has suggested that the DOJ should investigate Trump's adversaries.

"If they can be charged, we'll charge them," Martin told The New York Times, "But if they can't be charged, we will name them. And we will name them, and in a culture that respects shame, they should be people that are ashamed."

During Trump's first term, he drew criticism for granting clemency to many people who had a "personal or political connection to the president," and he often circumvented the formal process for considering clemency requests, according to analyses by the Lawfare blog. According to The Pew Research, President Joe Biden also circumvented the process at times, including when he pardoned his son, Hunter.

Former President Bill Clinton drew bipartisan condemnation for pardoning a fugitive commodities trader, Marc Rich, on his last day in office in 2001. And Clinton, like Biden, also pardoned a family member. On the same day he pardoned Rich, he pardoned his half-brother Roger Clinton, who had been convicted of selling cocaine, reported Pew.

The most famous act of clemency in U.S. history was the pardon of a former president. On Sept. 8, 1974, in the wake of the Watergate scandal, former President Gerald Ford preemptively pardoned former President Richard Nixon for any federal crimes he "committed or may have committed."

Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book The Executioner's Toll, 2010 was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino

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Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Trott: SCOTUS presidential immunity ruling has left us 'a kingdom within our republic'

Stephen S. Trott a senior judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit and Reagan appointee, writing in the Washington Post:

Under the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on presidential immunity, could President Richard M. Nixon have legally ordered his Plumbers to burgle the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist? Might they all have gotten away with it?

It certainly looks that way to me, and I have a particular interest in this matter. As a young lawyer in the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office in 1971, I oversaw the burglary indictment of senior White House officials and White House operatives for breaking into the Beverly Hills office of Dr. Lewis Fielding. In my assessment, if Trump v. U.S. had been on the books then, the president’s agents responsible for the Fielding burglary and related crimes, instead of going to prison, would have escaped prosecution and punishment entirely.

Let me explain why. In its June ruling, the Supreme Court held for the first time that a former president cannot be prosecuted for any acts undertaken while in office if those acts fall within the core constitutional powers of the presidency even if they constitute prima facie crimes under the federal criminal code. Other official acts outside that core responsibility, the court said, are at least presumptively immune.

The court grounded its decision on the perceived need to insulate the president from chilling and debilitating worry about possible legal jeopardy and to preserve the separation and balance of powers among the three branches of government.

To understand the court’s holding in Trump v. U.S., consider the Ellsberg case. Ellsberg was on trial in Los Angeles for having released to the New York Times and The Washington Post the “Pentagon Papers,” classified as top secret. That 7,000-page report about the Vietnam War, which Ellsberg had assisted in producing, had been prepared by the Defense Department  and contained a candid and embarrassing review of the government’s mismanagement of the conflict.

Convinced by the papers that the Vietnam War was unjust and could not be won, and that the government was lying to the public about it, Ellsberg brought the report to the attention of several influential senators, trying unsuccessfully to persuade them to release it. Frustrated by their negative response, he decided to release the report himself, explaining that, as a “responsible American citizen, he could no longer cooperate in concealing them.”

In response to Ellsberg’s unauthorized release, an angry Nixon created a high-level White House team under the direction of his domestic policy adviser, John Ehrlichman. The team’s goal was to prevent further leaks of sensitive national-security information about the ongoing conflict. Hence the name: “the Plumbers.”

In pursuit of Nixon’s goal, Cuban American operatives working for the Plumbers burglarized the Beverly Hills office of Fielding on Sept. 3, 1971, nine months before the Watergate break-in in D.C. Ehrlichman had approved the burglary on the Plumbers’ assurance that it would not be traceable. The Plumbers’ nefarious purpose was to steal the contents of Fielding’s file on Ellsberg and to release the doctor’s notes and records to the press. Their ultimate objectives were to discredit Ellsberg publicly as clinically disturbed and to discredit the media’s portrayal of him as a patriot.

Directed against Ellsberg, Nixon’s orders to his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, were “Don’t worry about his trial. Just get everything out. Try him in the press. Try him in the press.” Ironically, the Plumbers came up dry: Fielding kept no records about his patient’s mental condition, only appointment information for billing purposes. Although reported to the police, the burglary was not linked to the Plumbers and the White House until 1974, during the Watergate trials in D.C. There is no doubt that had they found something derogatory about Ellsberg, Charles Colson, Nixon’s special counsel, would have found a way to disseminate it to the public anonymously.

When the Fielding burglary came to light during the Watergate trials, I was a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles. Our office had jurisdiction over crimes committed in Beverly Hills. When we found out about the Fielding burglary, we called Henry Petersen, then the assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division in D.C. We wanted to know what the DOJ planned to do about this obvious federal crime. Surprisingly, Petersen’s answer was “nothing.” Years later I found out he was under orders from Nixon to steer clear of the Fielding case because it was a matter of “national security.”

Given Petersen’s answer, we convened a state grand jury in Los Angeles and secured an indictment charging burglary. The defendants were Ehrlichman and Colson, and Plumbers David Young, Egil Krogh and Gordon Liddy, all White House operatives. Shortly thereafter, Archibald Cox, recently appointed the Justice Department’s Watergate special prosecutor, secured federal indictments against all but Young, who was granted immunity. Eventually the federal defendants were convicted of, and sentenced to prison for, a conspiracy to obstruct justice, as well as other federal crimes.

Colson, once characterized by Haldeman as “Nixon’s hit man,” pleaded guilty to attempting to obstruct justice by interfering with the Ellsberg trial. By agreement with the special prosecutor, I dismissed our state case. By then, Judge Matthew Byrne had dismissed the federal case against Ellsberg because of governmental misconduct arising from the Fielding burglary, illegal wiretaps targeting the defendant and the Plumbers’ attempt to corrupt his trial.

Now, think about what would have happened if Trump v. U.S. had been on the books in 1971.

First, Nixon was acting as commander in chief, a core constitutional power, when he launched the Plumbers’ mission, which he considered a matter of national security. The mission arose during the Vietnam War from an unauthorized release of Defense Department classified information about the hostilities. Accordingly, the Plumbers’ activities, including the burglary, would have fallen squarely within the president’s unreviewable, conclusive and preclusive core constitutional authority. The men convicted and sent to prison would have been entitled to immunity, because as the president’s agents acting within the scope of his express constitutional authority, they, too, would have been cloaked with his absolute immunity. The president’s and the Plumbers’ corrupt intent and criminal purpose would have been considered immaterial.

Second, the Supreme Court held that “the Constitution vests the entirety of the power of the executive branch in the President,” giving him exclusive authority over the investigative and prosecutorial function of the Justice Department. In that capacity the president has “absolute discretion” to decide which crimes to investigate and prosecute. Even if the president makes those decisions and pursues them with a corrupt motive and criminal intent, it is now beyond debate that those determinations cannot be formally questioned.

Nixon would not have permitted the Justice Department to investigate himself and the Plumbers for any of their acts pursuant to his orders. The appointment of a special prosecutor to do so would have been out of the question. Moreover, any official resisting the president’s orders could have been fired on the spot.

The same fate would have befallen the entire mission of Cox and his successor, Leon Jaworski. After the Watergate break-in by White House burglars on June 17, 1972, Cox assembled a crack team of prosecutors to assist him. By the time the dust had settled, the Watergate Special Prosecution Force, operating within the Justice Department, had secured 40 felony convictions of government officials, including John Mitchell, Nixon’s former attorney general. If Nixon had known he had the unreviewable power to fire the special prosecutors and refuse to investigate and prosecute anyone related to the Watergate scandal, no one would have had to pay the price for their crimes.

Presumably, the president has the same bulletproof authority over the Treasury Department and the IRS. Nixon kept a political “enemies list.” In 1972, White House Counsel John Dean urged the IRS to investigate 575 people on that list. Dean’s objective on behalf of the president was “to use the available machinery [of government] to screw our political enemies.” Presumably, that gross abuse of executive power would also have been unreviewable and entitled to immunity? As an aside, where does the court’s imprecise language leave the jurisdiction of federal inspectors general and congressional oversight of the executive branch?

This is not how previous courts have understood the powers of the presidency. In 1882, the Supreme Court declared that “No man in this country is so high that he is above the law. No officer of the law may [defy] that law with immunity. All the officers of the government, from the highest to the lowest, are creatures of the law and bound to obey it.”

Are we to believe that in 1882 the court silently intended to exclude the president from this unequivocal statement of principle? The Trump ruling is irreconcilable with this long-standing postulate, a precept understood by all since 1788 until now, that ours is a government of laws, not of the officials who enforce it.

The court majority’s convoluted answer to the charge that they have unjustifiably placed the president above the law is that the president is not above the law because it is the law itself that says he is above it. No matter how cleverly articulated, the result is the same: The president and his agents are free to break the laws that apply to every other person in the nation. This newly minted imperial power is difficult to reconcile with an explicit presidential responsibility in Article II of the Constitution to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.”

The court’s paradoxical holding is that the person we choose every four years to faithfully enforce our laws does not have to follow them. Why? Because if he must comply with our laws, it might render him fearful and cautious in office to the detriment of the responsibilities of the executive branch. The court cited no evidence or examples to support this concern. As Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson observed in dissent, this unsupported, counterintuitive holding allows a president to do whatever he wants as long as he uses his official powers to do so. The court has uprooted the principle that it is the law that is supreme, not our officeholders.

There is a conspicuous flaw in the court’s constitutional analysis. Although the Constitution provides impeachment as a method to remove a person from office for criminal behavior, the framers of the Constitution did not consider the remedy of removal alone to be sufficient. It provides that a person removed from office by impeachment “shall nevertheless be liable and subject to indictment, trial, judgment and punishment according to law.” The Trump majority evades the plain meaning of this text by noting that the clause “does not indicate whether a former president may, consistent with the separation of powers, be prosecuted for his official conduct in particular.” The court’s reasoning is unconvincing.

Alexander Hamilton participated in drafting the Constitution. In 1788 and before ratification, he and James Madison wrote a series of essays in the Federalist, articles designed to explain the workings of the new government and to quell critics’ fears about its various provisions. One major objection was that the president of the new nation would resemble the king of Great Britain in his unfettered powers. Not so, wrote Hamilton. Unlike a hereditary monarch, the president would serve a term of only four years, after which he would have to stand for reelection or rejection. More to the point, he elaborated on the generic judgment impeachment clause as it would apply to the president himself.

Hamilton wrote: “The President of the United States would be liable to be impeached, tried, and, upon conviction of treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors, removed from office, and would afterward be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law. The person of the King of Great Britain [by comparison] is sacred and inviolable; there is no constitutional tribunal to which he is amenable; no punishment to which he can be subject without involving the crisis of a national revolution.”

We learned from Watergate that Nixon’s coverup was as serious as the crimes he was attempting to conceal. Now, the court has given the president the constitutional tools to accomplish the equivalent of a successful coverup in plain sight: a safe harbor against justice. The court’s decision will embolden the president because he will no longer have anything to fear from the law. The court’s holding that the president has “unreviewable and absolute discretion” over prosecutorial decisions means that if Donald Trump is reelected president, he can and most likely will dismiss all federal charges against himself. One seriously doubts that such a corrupt and egotistical act is what the framers had in mind when they called for an “energetic independent Executive.”

Will the public on whose support our institutions depend accept one set of rules for the president and his agents but another for themselves — a constitutional double standard?

As the dissenting justices acknowledged, it is one thing — and entirely appropriate — to protect a president from criminal prosecution for the good-faith exercise of his or her legitimate power, even when the president is mistaken. The same considerations do not apply, however, when the evidence shows that the president intentionally violated clearly established criminal law, not in good faith, not to serve the nation, but to benefit himself.

As the dissenters in the case explain, it is neither necessary, wise nor appropriate to resort to the extreme of removing the president from the reach of the justice system when a less drastic prophylactic would do. It is sufficient to give former presidents the protection of an adequate defense to criminal charges, a defense that honors the special and important responsibilities of the office. Without getting into details, such defense would include an “as applied” constitutional challenge to the application of a statute to the activity at issue, a defense of “public authority” to do what is in question, and having acted on authoritative advice of counsel. In conjunction with the robust procedural safeguards that every suspect and defendant enjoys, these defenses would accomplish the majority justices’ objectives. The final safeguards, of course, would be the criminal law’s burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt and a jury trial by the former president’s peers.

It would seem to come down to this consideration: Either we trust our justice system to resolve challenging cases and controversies appropriately, or we do not.

Nowhere in the Constitution or the Federalist is there any provision, suggestion, or hint that the president can with impunity commit crimes against the state or lawlessly abuse citizens without recourse. But that is what the Supreme Court has left us: a kingdom within our republic.

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Sunday, June 5, 2022

John Dean: 'Richard Nixon had a conscience'--something nearly absent from current politics

“You can’t look at Watergate today without looking through the lens or at least a filter of the Trump presidency,” John Dean told the Los Angeles Times. Dean was White Counsel during the presidency of Richard Nixon. He is part of four-part CNN documentary series “Watergate: Blueprint for a Scandal.” 

Trump’s demands for unyielding loyalty from staff and statements such as asking Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” 11,780 votes that would overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election in the state rival what was heard on Nixon’s tapes, but were delivered with far less discretion.

While Nixon had a dangerous lust for power, Dean still believes the 37th president and the only one to ever resign still compares favorably to Trump.

“I think Richard Nixon had a conscience,” said Dean. “He could be embarrassed. Was he hard-nosed and tough? Yeah. But I think he could experience shame. I don’t think it’s an emotion that Donald Trump could ever muster.”

If the Watergate scandal happened today, Dean believes Fox News and other conservative outlets would give more oxygen to Nixon’s defenders and perhaps enable the disgraced president to at least finish out his term instead of resigning.

Former Trump officials have been criticized for waiting to express their misgivings over what was happening in the White House until after they left and made book deals. But Dean understands how it’s not so easy to walk away from the center of power.

“If it was a county sheriff they wouldn’t [stay],” Dean said. “It’s the White House in the remarkable city at the top of the government. It’s a fascinating place to see what’s going on.”

Dean tried to leave the White House in September 1971, a year after he arrived and well before the Watergate break-in. But he was told by his immediate boss, John Ehrlichman, that his post-White House career would be difficult if he left.

“I had some unsolicited offers that I really wanted to explore. Ehrlichman said, ‘If you leave, you’ll be persona non grata with this administration, so don’t take a job where you need any connections to us.’ Of course, the jobs did want me to have relationships with the Nixon White House. Ehrlichman said, ‘John, you’ll have better job offers after Nixon gets reelected.’ Yeah, making license plates.”

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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

The Attorney General of the United States is coordinating political activities with the White House

In recent days, the Justice Department has declassified or disclosed sensitive materials related to each of these proceedings that, on the surface, have little to do with each other. Yet within hours, President Donald Trump had weaponized each to boost his reelection campaign, reported Politico.

The Justice Department under William Barr is coordinating political activities with the White House in a way not seen since John Mitchell and Watergate, say veteran prosecutors and other Washington insiders, even in the 60-day period before an election when “political'' cases and investigations used to be placed on hold to avoid the appearance of partisanship. 

We all know where John Mitchell ended up--prison.

“These actions are not typical,” said William Jeffress, a veteran defense lawyer who represented former President Richard Nixon after he left the White House. “Tradition is that politically sensitive actions by DOJ go dark at least 60 days before an election.”

Jeffress called the Justice Department’s unusual press release last week regarding a handful of discarded military ballots in Luzerne County — a crucial area of a crucial state that swung to Trump in 2016 — “particularly striking.”

“The attorney general is working hand in glove with the White House and the Trump reelection campaign,” said Gene Rossi, a former federal prosecutor from Virginia turned white collar defense lawyer. “We have not seen that level of unseemly coordination since Attorney General John Mitchell.”

Justice Department officials insist there is no basis to suggest that politics have infected the work of the department. Still, at the heart of these new disclosures is a common thread: They all support narratives that Trump has been pushing in recent months and deploying against his rival, Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Democrats have increasingly sounded the alarm about how they say the machinery of the federal government has been mobilized to back Trump’s reelection. They also cite recent evidence that the Treasury Department helped supply explosive information to Senate Republicans that was released last week in a report about Biden’s son Hunter’s business relationships, along with examples at other agencies that suggest Trump is successfully harnessing the power of the state to serve his election needs.

But they’re most alarmed about what they say is a Justice Department effort to aid Trump politically.

For example, Trump has baselessly asserted a widespread campaign of voter fraud that calls the legitimacy of the 2020 election into doubt — a claim that has been rejected by lawmakers of both parties, intelligence officials and his own hand-picked FBI director. Yet on Thursday, a U.S. attorney from Pennsylvania issued an unusual letter that revealed a newly opened investigation into a handful of mishandled ballots in a Pennsylvania election office.

Though local officials have indicated the episode was likely a technical error, the U.S. attorney, David Freed, revealed that the affected ballots were cast for Trump — a detail that has become a fixture of Trump public comments in the days since. Other media outlets reported that Attorney General William Barr personally flagged the news to the president, who proceeded to tease the discovery in a radio interview before it was publicly announced.

To DOJ veterans, this disclosure was as egregious a breach as any in Barr’s 17-month tenure.

“This is not something that the attorney general should even be telling Trump or they should be announcing in any fashion,” said Nick Akerman, who served as a prosecutor during the Watergate-era investigation of Nixon.

The pattern so perturbed one current assistant U.S. attorney — veteran Massachusetts-based prosecutor James Herbert — that he issued a stinging broadside against Barr in the pages of the Boston Globe over the weekend.

“While I am a federal prosecutor, I am writing to express my own views, clearly not those of the department, on a matter that should concern all citizens: the unprecedented politicization of the office of the attorney general,” Herbert wrote, citing Barr’s handling of special counsel Mueller’s report, his involvement in cases like Flynn’s and his echoing of Trump’s baseless allegations about mail-in ballots. “The attorney general acts as though his job is to serve only the political interests of Donald J. Trump. This is a dangerous abuse of power.”

A Justice Department official rejected the suggestion of any impropriety in revealing the ballot investigation. It was an issue that local media had begun to chase, which the local U.S. attorney’s office had discovered was likely to be the subject of news reports. Freed had been considering a statement on the matter independently before Trump jumped to the front of the line and disclosed the investigation during a Fox & Friends Radio interview, this official said.

How did Trump know? The DOJ official said Barr, aware of the local media buzz, had mentioned to the president that the department was going to be examining the issue.

David Weinstein, a former assistant U.S. attorney in Florida, said the disclosures related to the Pennsylvania ballots probe were “inappropriate, both in their content and timing.”

“When I was an [assistant U.S. attorney], you would never reveal anything about your ongoing investigation,” he said. “It could compromise the investigation itself and potentially [impugn] the reputation of any subjects of the investigation who never became targets.”

Regardless of DOJ’s intent, Trump has clearly sought to exact political benefit from the disclosure, raising it in political rallies, press conferences and other appearances over the weekend, to fuel his continued claims of large-scale voter fraud.

“If you look at the ballots — you know, they found ballots in a garbage can, and they had the name ‘Trump’ on them,” the president told reporters Saturday evening. “They were cast for Trump, and they found them in a garbage can.” 

He reacted similarly after the FBI declassified — and Barr delivered to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on Thursday — new details about the creation of an anti-Trump dossier by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele, which was used by the FBI in 2016 to obtain a warrant to surveil Carter Page a former Trump campaign aide suspected of ties to Russia.

The disclosure from the FBI indicated that Steele’s primary subsource for the dossier was once the subject of a counterintelligence investigation as a possible Russian agent, a probe that was closed in 2011. The existence of that investigation was noted by the Justice Department’s inspector general in a redacted footnote from his scathing 2019 report describing abuses and omissions by the FBI in obtaining the Page warrant.

Though the watchdog didn’t include the existence of this probe among the many omissions he attributed to the FBI, Trump quickly pointed to the now-public revelation as proof that he was targeted by a witch hunt.

 “Bill Barr can go down as the greatest attorney general in the history of our country, or he can go down as an average guy," he told Fox Business’s Maria Bartiromo recently. "It depends on what’s going to happen."

To read more CLICK HERE

Saturday, November 30, 2019

GateHouse: Where have all the heroes gone?

Matthew T. Mangino
GateHouse Media
November 29, 2019
William D. Ruckelshaus died this week. In 2015, President Barack Obama presented Ruckelshaus with the nation’s highest civilian honor - the Medal of Freedom.
Ruckelshaus was recognized for his dedicated service in fighting pollution and serving as the first leader of the Environmental Protection Agency. Tucked away in the White House statement announcing his award was the following passage, “During the Watergate crisis, Ruckelshaus and Attorney General Elliot Richardson chose to resign rather than fire the Watergate special prosecutor. Their principled stance was a pivotal moment for the Justice Department and galvanized public opinion for upholding the rule of law.”
In 1972, five men hired by the committee to re-elect President Richard Nixon broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate Building in Washington D.C.
About a year later, Archibald Cox was appointed to investigate the matter.
Cox demanded that the White House turn over 10 hours of secret Oval Office recordings, some of which could implicate the president in covering-up the break-in.
Later that year, Nixon, feeling the investigation closing in on him, demanded the Department of Justice fire Cox for refusing to obey the president’s order to abandon his demand for the “White House tapes.”
Attorney General Elliot Richardson resigned rather than dismiss Cox. Nixon then turned to Ruckelshaus, his Deputy Attorney General, to fire Cox. Ruckelshaus chose to resign as well. The incident became known as the “Saturday Night Massacre.”
Robert Bork, the solicitor general, became acting attorney general and fired Cox. Within minutes, the White House sent the FBI to seal the offices of the Special Prosecutor, Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General.
Under enormous public pressure, Nixon appointed a new special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski. He eventually obtained the missing tapes and Nixon resigned the following year.
Ruckelshaus is certainly not a household name, but he was a true American hero. He told The New York Times years later, “I thought what the president was doing was fundamentally wrong - I was convinced that Cox had only been doing what he had the authority to do; what was really of concern to the president and the White House was that he was too close. He hadn’t engaged in any extraordinary improprieties, quite the contrary.”
Ruckelshaus took a principled stand and was willing to put it all on the line for what he believed in - the rule of law. The conduct of our current president reveals just how few American heroes we have today.
Ruckelshaus displayed, as Ernest Hemingway coined it, “grace under fire.”
In his letter of resignation, reprinted at the time by The New York Times, Ruckelshaus politely thanked President Nixon for the opportunity to serve and wished him well, but admonished that “my conscious will not permit me to carry out your instructions to discharge Archibald Cox. My disagreement with that action at this time is too fundamental to permit me to act otherwise.”
Compare Ruckelshaus’ statement with that of recently fired Secretary of the Navy Richard Spencer, who lashed out at President Donald Trump writing in the Washington Post, ”(T)he president has very little understanding of what it means to be in the military, to fight ethically or to be governed by a uniform set of rules and practices.”
In 2018, Ruckelshaus wrote in the Washington Post, the “Saturday Night Massacre” was not only the beginning of the end for Nixon, “but it also accelerated the growing wave of political cynicism and distrust in our government we are still living with today. One manifestation of that legacy: a president who will never admit he uttered a falsehood and a Congress too often pursuing only a partisan version of the truth.”
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter at @MatthewTMangino.
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Sunday, October 13, 2019

Watergate prosecutors call for impeachment of President Trump

The following are all former members of the Justice Department’s special prosecutor team that investigated the Watergate scandal, who signed the following letter to the Washington Post calling for the impeachment of President Trump:
Nick Akerman, former assistant U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York
Richard Ben-Veniste, former member of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
Richard J. Davis, former assistant secretary of the treasury for enforcement and operations
Carl B. Feldbaum, former inspector general for Defense Intelligence, former assistant to the energy secretary and former chief of staff to Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter
George T. Frampton Jr., former assistant secretary of the Interior and former chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality
Kenneth S. Geller, formerly deputy U.S. solicitor general
Gerald Goldman, former clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan
Stephen E. Haberfeld, former U.S. magistrate judge in the Central District of California
Larry Hammond, former first deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel
Henry Hecht, lecturer in residence at University of California at Berkeley School of Law
Paul R. Hoeber, lawyer in private practice
Philip Allen Lacovara, former deputy solicitor general of the United States; former special counsel to the House Ethics Committee; and former president of the D.C. Bar
Paul R. Michel, former chief judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and former associate deputy attorney general of the United States
Robert L. Palmer, lawyer in private practice
Richard Weinberg, former assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York
Jill Wine-Banks, former general counsel of the U.S. Army; former solicitor general and deputy attorney general of the state of Illinois; and former chief operating officer of the American Bar Association
Roger Witten, lawyer in private practice

We, former members of the Watergate special prosecutor force, believe there exists compelling prima facie evidence that President Trump has committed impeachable offenses. This evidence can be accepted as sufficient for impeachment, unless disproved by any contrary evidence that the president may choose to offer.
The ultimate judgment on whether to impeach the president is for members of the House of Representatives to make. The Constitution establishes impeachment as the proper mechanism for addressing these abuses; therefore, the House should proceed with the impeachment process, fairly, openly and promptly. The president’s refusal to cooperate in confirming (or disputing) the facts already on the public record should not delay or frustrate the House’s performance of its constitutional duty.
In reaching these conclusions, we take note of 1) the public statements by Trump himself; 2) the findings of former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation; 3) the readout that the president released of his phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky; 4) the president’s continuing refusal to produce documents or allow testimony by current and former government employees for pending investigations, as well as for oversight matters; and 5) other information now publicly available, including State Department text messages indicating that the release of essential military aid to Ukraine was conditioned on Ukraine’s willingness to commence a criminal investigation designed to further the president’s political interests.
In the 1970s, we investigated serious abuses of presidential power by President Richard M. Nixon, including obstruction of justice, concealment of government records and misuse of government agencies to punish his political enemies. We prosecuted many of Nixon’s aides for their complicity in Nixon’s offenses. Rather than indicting the president, the grand jury named him an unindicted co-conspirator, delivered to the House a “road map” of the evidence implicating him in wrongdoing and deferred to the House’s constitutional responsibility to address such presidential wrongdoing through the impeachment process.
mmittee, fulfilled that responsibility by reviewing the evidence, interviewing witnesses and concluding that the facts warranted adopting three articles of impeachment: one for obstruction, one for abuse of power and one for contempt of Congress. Shortly thereafter, the president resigned rather than face a Senate trial.
In our considered view, the same three articles of impeachment could be specified against Trump, as he has demonstrated serious and persistent abuses of power that, in our view, satisfy the constitutional standard of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” For example:
● Trump conditioned protection of the military security of the United States and of an ally (Ukraine) on actions for his personal political benefit.
● Trump subordinated the integrity of our national electoral process to his own personal political interest by soliciting and encouraging foreign government interference in our electoral process, including by Russia and China. He also appears to have demanded that Ukraine investigate a potential 2020 political opponent and pursue the conspiracy theory that Ukraine had interfered in the 2016 presidential election, despite the unanimous conclusion of the U.S. intelligence community that it was Russia that had interfered.
● According to the evidence laid out in the Mueller report, Trump engaged in multiple acts of obstruction of justice in violation of federal criminal statutes and of his oath of office to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Because Mueller viewed Justice Department policy as precluding him from filing criminal charges against the president, the special counsel appropriately stated that these abuses are for Congress to address.
● Trump obstructed lawful congressional investigations by systematically withholding evidence and by directing government agencies and employees to refuse to cooperate with legitimate oversight by Congress. Most significantly, the president’s blanket refusal to honor requests for relevant information sought by House members conducting an impeachment inquiry constitutes impeachable contempt and obstruction. The public is entitled to know the facts, and Congress is the body our democracy has entrusted with uncovering them.
The Constitution provides for the elected representatives of the people to resort to impeachment in extraordinary circumstances showing that this drastic remedy is necessary to restrain, and possibly remove, a president who has engaged in high crimes and misdemeanors. Proper regard for reestablishing and protecting the rule of law requires firm and resolute action by the House. Lawmakers should not allow any refusal by the president to cooperate in its process to frustrate the performance of its constitutional duties.
If a bill of impeachment comes before the Senate, we urge all members of the Senate to put aside partisan loyalties and carry out their own constitutional duties courageously and honestly. In 1974, it was a group of Republican senators who put national interest over party loyalty and informed Nixon that his conduct was indefensible and would compel conviction by the Senate and removal from office. We hope the current Senate would similarly put honor and integrity above partisanship and personal political interest.
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Sunday, September 29, 2019

The impeachment that wasn't


The House of Representatives has announced an impeachment inquiry into President Trump. Two presidents--Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton--have been impeached. Neither was removed from office.  The only president to leave office as the result of impeachment was never actually impeached.
According to Wikipedia, an impeachment process against Richard Nixon began in the on October 30, 1973, following the "Saturday Night Massacre" episode of the Watergate scandal. The House Judiciary Committee set up an impeachment inquiry staff and began investigations into possible impeachable offenses by Richard Nixon, the 37th President of the United States
The process was formally initiated on February 6, 1974, when the House of Representatives passed a resolution, H.Res. 803, giving the Judiciary Committee authority to investigate whether sufficient grounds existed to impeach Nixon[1] of high crimes and misdemeanors, primarily related to Watergate. This investigation was undertaken one year after the United States Senate established a select committee to investigate the 1972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C., and the Nixon Administration's attempted cover-up of its involvement.
Following a subpoena from the Judiciary Committee, in April 1974 edited transcripts of many Watergate-related conversations from the Nixon White House tapes were made public by Nixon, but the committee pressed for full tapes and additional conversations. Nixon refused, but on July 24, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered him to comply. On July 27, 29, and 30, 1974, the Committee approved three articles of impeachment against Nixon, for obstruction of justiceabuse of power, and contempt of Congress, and reported those articles to the House of Representatives. Two other articles of impeachment were debated but not approved. 
Before the House could vote on the impeachment resolutions, Nixon made public on August 5, 1974 a transcript of one of the additional conversations, known as the "Smoking Gun Tape", which made clear his complicity in the cover-up. With his political support completely eroded, Nixon resigned from office on August 9, 1974. It is widely believed that had Nixon not resigned, his impeachment by the House and removal from office by a trial before the United States Senate would have occurred.
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Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Comparing Watergate scandal to current investigation 'actually an insult to Nixon'

President Richard M. Nixon’s Watergate scandal has been often mention in the wake of the many investigations of President Donald Trump, wrote Suzanne Garment at NBC.com. She contends the  comparisons are actually an insult to Nixon.
For all the comparisons made between the scandals, much separates them. Nixon’s fall was a classic tragedy. He was a man of substance, with immense political experience and a record of presidential achievement in both domestic politics and foreign policy. His own resentments and paranoia about his perceived enemies propelled him into Watergate.
There’s no such substance with Trump. His presidency has been one piece of tawdriness after another. To see the Trump tragedy, look to the Americans who are so estranged from the country’s institutions that they seem willing to risk blowing them up in order to be heard.
True, Nixon’s enemies would protest violently at the idea of Nixon as a tragic figure, a man of virtue marred by a fatal flaw. They should reconsider.
Prior to its ignominious end, Nixon’s presidency was one of consequential domestic and foreign policy. The former included initiatives — like peaceful school desegregation across the South, broadening civil rights protections to include gender discrimination, lowering the voting age from 21 to 18, creating the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, exponentially expanding the National Endowment for the Arts — that would later lead The New York Times’ Tom Wicker, once targeted on Nixon’s “enemies list,” to call him the “last liberal president.” The foreign policy achievements included not just the historic opening of China but nuclear arms limitations treaties with the Soviet Union and major action in the Middle East.
As with Watergate, the Trump investigation is now approaching the immediate neighborhood of the president. But with Trump, unlike Nixon, there will be little to place in the balance against the investigation’s verdict.
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Saturday, August 25, 2018

GateHouse: No one is above the law


Matthew T. Mangino
GateHouse Media
August 24, 2018
The President of the United States can and should be indicted. This week, President Donald Trump’s former lawyer and trusted advisor pleaded guilty to tax fraud, false statements to a bank and campaign finance violations, and implicated the president in criminal activity.
Michael Cohen said under oath in open court that he acted “in coordination with, and at the direction of, a candidate for federal office” and “for the principal purpose of influencing the election.”
Prosecutors allege that” hush-money” payments Cohen arranged for Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels broke the legal limit on individual donations to a political campaign and violated the law banning corporations from giving directly to a candidate.
According to Politico, candidates are permitted to make unlimited contributions to their own campaign, but that money must go through their campaign committee. Cohen facilitated the payments through an outside company, not the campaign — an unlawful act.
During the Watergate investigation, a memorandum prepared for Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski concluded that there was no legal bar to indicting President Richard Nixon. The memorandum concluded, “As we understand it, the conclusions regarding indictment of an incumbent president reached by the Department of Justice, the U.S. Attorney’s office, and this office, are all consistent: There is nothing in the language or legislative history of the Constitution that bars indictment of a sitting president.”
Some Constitutional experts have argued that the president should have immunity. If the president were indicted he would be burdened by pretrial matters, the preparation for trial and the commitment of weeks or months in a courtroom.
Constitutional scholar Jonathan Turley suggested in a recent Washington Post piece immunity for the president “ignores a couple practical considerations. First, it is highly unlikely that a president would be tried, let alone convicted, while in office ... Even when sentenced, appeals can take years.”
In May 1998, a distinguished constitutional scholar Ronald W. Rotunda reached the conclusion that a sitting president can be sued or indicted. According to The Atlantic, Rotunda confidentially advised then-independent counsel Kenneth Starr that President Bill Clinton could be indicted. “The U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly reaffirmed the state(ment) that no one is ‘above the law,’” Rotunda wrote.
Starr’s team concluded that ”(I)t is proper, constitutional and legal for a federal grand jury to indict a sitting president for serious criminal acts that are not part of, and are contrary to, the president’s official duties.”
Walter Dellinger, a former assistant attorney general and the head of the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice, writing for the New York Times, cited Clinton v. Jones. President Clinton had long fought to stop a civil suit brought against him by Paula Jones. The case ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme Court. The entire court agreed that the fact that a federal court’s exercising of its constitutional power to hear a case “may significantly burden the time and attention of the chief executive is not sufficient to establish a violation of the Constitution.”
Dellinger concluded that “the mere indictment of a president would not meet the stringent standard in Clinton v. Jones for presidential immunity from ordinary legal processes.”
The argument that an indictment would be too demanding on a sitting president is further blunted by the 25th Amendment that allows a president to voluntarily transfer powers of his office to the vice-president for a limited period of time.
When asked if a sitting president can be indicted Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said. ”(T)he Department of Justice has in the past, when the issue arose, opined that a sitting president cannot be indicted.”
The opinion of the Department of Justice is not precedent. The position of the DOJ can change and Rosenstein himself could change the scope of the Mueller investigation. Trump can be indicted. The question is will some prosecutor take the unprecedented action of indicting a sitting president to affirm the notion that no one is above the law?
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book The Executioner’s Toll, 2010 was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino.
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Monday, August 20, 2018

Watergate revisited: Trump's White House counsel cooperates with Mueller investigation


New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Michael S. Schmidt broke a blockbuster story explaining that the White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II, “cooperated extensively” with Robert Mueller’s investigation.
According to the Times, McGahn spoke to the special counsel’s office for as much as 30 hours, on at least three separate occasions. Although what he said remains unknown, Haberman and Schmidt report that his testimony was sparked, at least in part, by the fear that “Mr. Trump was setting up Mr. McGahn to take the blame for any possible illegal acts of obstruction” after Trump’s (now former) lawyers, John Dowd and Ty Cobb, encouraged McGahn to talk to Mueller as part of their “open-book strategy.” 
Reminiscent of the Watergate scandal McGahn was out to protect himself more than sink Trump. According to Slate the story suggests,  “Worried that Mr. Trump would ultimately blame him in the inquiry, Mr. McGahn told people he was determined to avoid the fate of the White House counsel for President Richard M. Nixon, John W. Dean, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct justice in the Watergate scandal.” 
Near the end of the piece, Haberman and Schmidt note—wryly—that “as the months passed on, it became apparent that Mr. McGahn and [his lawyer] had overestimated the amount of thought that they believed the president put into his legal strategy.”
To read interview with John Dean CLICK HERE

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Will Trump fire Mueller?--There is precedent for such an act

After Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox refused President Nixon’s offer of a “compromise” on the issue of the White House tapes, Nixon orders--through his chief of staff Alexander Haig--Attorney General Elliot Richardson fire Cox. Richardson refuses the presidential order, and resigns on the spot. Haig then orders Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox. Ruckelshaus also refuses, and also resigns.
Haig finally finds a willing Justice Department official in Solicitor General Robert Bork, who is named acting attorney general and fires Cox.  Bork tells reporters, “All I will say is that I carried out the president’s directive.” White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler announces that the Office of the Special Prosecutor has been abolished. 
FBI agents are sent to prevent Cox’s staff from taking their files out of their offices. Ziegler justifies the firing by saying that Cox “defied” Nixon’s instructions “at a time of serious world crisis” and made it “necessary” for Nixon to discharge him. 
After his firing, Cox says, “Whether ours shall continue to be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people.” 
The press dubs Cox’s firings and the abolishment of the OSP the “Saturday Night Massacre,” and the public reacts with a fury unprecedented in modern American political history. In a period of ten days, Congress receives more than a million letters and telegrams demanding Nixon’s impeachment. Soon after Congress launch an impeachment inquiry.
Former Washington Post editor Barry Sussman writes in 1974 that Cox’s firing was not a result of impetuous presidential anger. Nixon had been more than reluctant to accept a special prosecutor for Watergate. Cox, named special prosecutor in the spring of 1973, had quickly earned the ire of White House officials and of Nixon himself, and by October 7, Nixon had announced privately that Cox would be fired. Sound familiar?

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Toobin: 'A government of laws not of men'

Jeffrey Toobin wrote in The New Yorker that [President] Trump now seems set on terminating [Robert] Mueller’s investigation, which he could attempt to do by directing the head of the Justice Department (whoever that winds up being) to fire him.
This, of course, would be reminiscent of President Nixon’s determination, in October, 1973, to fire Archibald Cox, the Watergate special prosecutor. But a dismissal of Mueller would be worse. Nixon clashed with Cox over what was at least an arguable matter of principle—specifically, whether the prosecutor had the right to subpoena the White House tapes. 
Trump wants Mueller gone simply because he doesn’t want to be investigated. An order to fire Mueller would be an abuse of power, but one in keeping with the way that Trump has conducted his Presidency. On the Saturday night that Cox was fired, he said, “Whether ours shall continue to be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people” to decide. So it remains today.
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Saturday, June 17, 2017

GateHouse: The irony of an expanding obstruction probe

Matthew T. Mangino
GateHouse Media
June 16, 2017
A grim pall hangs over the White House. As the Russian investigation evolves into a probe of obstruction of justice by the president of the United States the irony seems lost on Donald Trump.
A grim pall hangs over the White House. As the Russian investigation evolves into a probe of obstruction of justice by the president of the United States the irony seems lost on Donald Trump.
This week the Washington Post and New York Times, both reported that the investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller is seeking interviews with current, and recently resigned intelligence officials.
Questions have been raised about whether Trump sought the help of National Intelligence Director Dan Coats and Mike Rogers, the head of the National Security Agency, to derail the FBI investigation led by former FBI Director James Comey.
To date, the penultimate White House scandal is Watergate. Then President Richard Nixon had incriminating audio recordings that he refused to turn over to the independent counsel Archibald Cox. He fired Cox in an effort to curtail the investigation. The tapes led in part to Nixon’s resignation.
President Trump has talked of tapes that could refute the allegation that he tried to influence Comey before he fired him. In fact, Trump used the threat of tapes to try and muzzle Comey. However, instead of providing those tapes to congress or the public they remain unheard, unseen, unverified. The lack of tapes could lead to a host of unfortunate scenarios for the president.
Nixon was the poster child for the adage that the cover-up is worse than the crime. Now 43 years later, Trump -- and America -- may have to learn that lesson all over again.
Unfortunately, the irony and significance of history seems to hold little sway with President Trump. This is a president that thinks the Civil War could have been avoided if the country would have listened to President Andrew Jackson, who died 16 years before the war began. He also spoke of Frederick Douglass as though he were still alive, “Frederick Douglass is an example of somebody who has done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more, I notice.” Douglas has been dead for 123 years.
The evidence of a cover-up continues to mount. Trump has admitted the Russia investigation motivated him to fire Comey; Trump asked Comey to end the investigation of former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn; Trump’s not-so-veiled threat to Comey about possible tapes of their conversations; Trump demanded that Comey pledge loyalty to him; and now the revelations that Trump may have enlisted other administration officials to influence Comey.
Consider Dana Milbank’s commentary in the Washington Post summing up Comey’s testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee. Comey’s account of why he wrote extensive, real-time notes of his conversations with President Trump. “The nature of the person,” Comey explained, “I was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting, and so I thought it really important to document.”
Here is the real irony as Milbank continued:
Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist Paper No. 68, “that the office of president will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications. Talents for low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity, may alone suffice to elevate a man to the first honors in a single state; but it will require other talents, and a different kind of merit, to establish him in the esteem and confidence of the whole Union, or of so considerable a portion of it as would be necessary to make him a successful candidate for the distinguished office of president of the United States.”
Hamilton, a man who lived in turbulent political times -- he was killed in a duel with the sitting vice-president -- could not fathom America in its current predicament.
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter at @MatthewTMangino.
To visit the column CLICK HERE

Sunday, May 21, 2017

The Vindicator: Dimensions of Trump’s troubles grow wider than scope of Watergate Scandal

Matthew T. Mangino
The Youngstown Vindicator
May 21, 2017
Last week, at the International Republican Institute dinner, Arizona Sen. John McCain, a Republican, reportedly said the scandals within President Donald Trump’s administration are reaching a “Watergate size and scale.”
McCain’s comment was prescient; within hours of his speech Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel to conduct the Russia investigation. Mueller will oversee an investigation that has the potential to be even more consequential than Watergate.
Here is why Trump’s problems are worse than Watergate. First, President Richard Nixon obstructed justice when he tried to cover up a “third-rate” burglary at the Democratic National Committee headquarters. President Trump allegedly intervened in an investigation into possible collusion by his administration and campaign with Russia, a foreign power and long-time nemesis of the U.S.
Resignation
Second, Nixon was 51/2 years into his presidency when he came under scrutiny and ultimately resigned. President Trump is a little more than 100 days into his presidency and senior members of his own party are comparing him to a former president that resigned in the face of impeachment.
Third, there are no voices of dissent within the Trump administration – with the possible exception of FBI Director James B. Comey who Trump fired.
There was resistance in the Nixon administration. When Nixon sought to fire special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox – he was initially defied by the Department of Justice.
In 1973, President Nixon demanded the Department of Justice fire Cox for refusing to obey the president’s order to abandon his demand for the “White House tapes.” Attorney General Elliot Richardson resigned rather than dismiss Cox.
When Nixon turned to Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox, Ruckelshaus chose to resign as well. Finally, the Solicitor General Robert Bork carried out the demand.
When Trump “decided” to fire Comey, not only did the Justice Department not balk, senior Justice officials aided and abetted the president. Attorney General Jeff Sessions – who had recused himself from the Russia investigation – consulted with the president immediately before the firing.
Rosenstein also met with Trump before the firing, where, according to the Wall Street Journal, they discussed Director Comey’s job performance. At the White House’s request, Rosenstein wrote a memo to the president detailing his concerns about the director’s conduct. After President Trump pointed the finger at Rosenstein to support Comey’s firing, he was left with no alternative but to appoint a special counsel.
Has President Trump obstructed justice?
First, he fires Comey who as director of the FBI is overseeing an investigation of Trump’s administration and Trump’s campaign, right after Comey reportedly asked for more money and agents for the campaign.
Trump suggested during an interview with NBC’s Lester Holt that he was thinking about the “fake” Russia investigation when he fired Comey. However, Trump said at the time of Comey’s firing that the reason behind it was the mistreatment of Hillary Clinton during the email investigation – the same investigation that Trump rallied behind during his presidential campaign.
Loyalty pledge
The New York Times reported that President Trump asked Comey in January to pledge loyalty to him and that Comey refused to do so. According to sources, the director pledged honesty and independence.
Last week we learned that President Trump allegedly asked Comey in February to drop the investigation into his former national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn. Comey apparently has notes memorializing the meeting.
Nixon covered up a bungled break-in, and it cost him the presidency. President Bill Clinton faced impeachment for covering up a tryst in the White House. President Trump may well have attempted to obstruct the investigation into his administration’s ties to a major foreign power and his campaign’s possible collusion with that power.
Now Robert Mueller will investigate whether Mr. Trump committed a crime.

Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino)
To visit the column CLICK HERE


Saturday, May 20, 2017

GateHouse: A young presidency and a growing scandal

Matthew T. Mangino
GateHouse Media
May 19, 2017
Last week, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that calls for a special counsel would only be counterproductive to the Senate Intelligence Committee’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
“Partisan calls should not delay the considerable work” of the ranking members of the Intelligence Committee, McConnell told reporters. “Too much is at stake.”
On Wednesday, Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein announced the appointment of former FBI Director Robert S. Mueller to serve as Special Counsel to oversee the investigation of Russian government efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election and related matters.
McConnell, with what seems a change of heart, said the appointment of the special counsel “confirms that the investigation into Russian intervention into our election will continue.”
“In my capacity as acting Attorney General, I determined that it is in the public interest for me to exercise my authority and appoint a Special Counsel to assume responsibility for this matter,” said Rosenstein.
He continued, “Our nation is grounded on the rule of law, and the public must be assured that government officials administer the law fairly.”
Mueller is a widely respected lawyer and public servant. He was appointed to head the FBI by Republican President George W. Bush and continued in that capacity under Democratic President Barack Obama. His 10-year term was extended by 2 years, and he finally retired in September 2013 -- making him the second-longest-serving FBI director behind only, J. Edgar Hoover.
Federal law provides that “The Attorney General, or in cases in which the Attorney General is recused, the Acting Attorney General, will appoint a Special Counsel when he or she determines that criminal investigation of a person or matter is warranted.”
The investigation’s focus will be whether the Trump campaign colluded with the Russian government during the 2016 campaign and whether the Trump administration had improper contact with the Russian government.
The investigation may also involve whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice.
President Trump fired James B. Comey, who as director of the FBI, was overseeing an investigation of Trump’s administration and campaign, right after Comey reportedly asked for more money and agents for the investigation.
Trump suggested during an interview with NBC’s Lester Holt that he was thinking about the “fake” (as he refers to it) Russia investigation when he fired Comey. However, Trump said at the time of Comey’s firing that the reason behind it was the mistreatment of Hillary Clinton during the FBI’s email investigation -- the same investigation that Trump rallied behind during his campaign.
The New York Times reported that President Trump asked Comey in January to pledge loyalty to him and that Comey refused to do so. According to sources, the former director pledged honesty and independence.
This week we learned that President Trump allegedly asked Comey, in February, to drop the investigation into his former national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn. Comey apparently has notes memorializing the meeting.
There is no clear legal answer whether a sitting president can be indicted and prosecuted. The Attorney General’s Office in 1973 -- during the Watergate scandal -- and again in 2000 -- in the wake of the Clinton impeachment -- determined that the indictment or criminal prosecution of a sitting president was impermissible and unconstitutional because it would undermine the executive branch’s ability to perform its constitutionally assigned functions, wrote Robert Anello a contributor to Forbes.
Instead, the decision to terminate the service of a president “is more fittingly handled by Congress than by a jury, and such congressional power is founded in the Constitution” through impeachment.
Whatever direction this investigation leads -- one thing is certain, Robert Mueller will be busy sorting out the sordid details of Trump’s brief presidency.
-- Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter at @MatthewTMangino.
To visit the column CLICK HERE


Monday, May 15, 2017

GateHouse: A reprise of ‘our long national nightmare’

Matthew T. Mangino,
GateHouse Media
May 14, 2017
On the night President Donald Trump announced that he had fired FBI Director James B. Comey, David Ignatious, a columnist with the Washington Post, wrote “[A] prominent Republican politician gave me this simple, blunt assessment of the Trump White House: ’These guys scare me.’”
Forty-five years ago this country was in the midst of one of the scariest times in American history. President Gerald Ford referred to Watergate as “our long national nightmare” after assuming the presidency in the wake of Richard Nixon’s resignation.
In many ways, Russiagate and President Trump’s efforts to derail its investigation are far scarier than Nixon and the White House Plumbers.
For starters, there was resistance within Nixon’s own administration. The “Saturday Night Massacre” — the firing of special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox — was initially defied by the Department of Justice.
Trump’s firing of Comey has been compared to Nixon’s conduct. To compare the two events is to do a disservice to the top two Nixon-era justice officials and to elevate the top two current Justice officials to a level of unwarranted integrity and independence.
In 1973, President Nixon demanded the Department of Justice fire Cox for refusing to obey the president’s order to abandon his demand for the “White House tapes.” Attorney General Elliot Richardson resigned rather than dismiss Cox.
When Nixon turned to Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox, Ruckelshaus chose to resign as well. Finally, the Solicitor General Robert Bork carried out the president’s demand.
The New York Times reported that President Trump asked Comey in January to pledge loyalty to him and that Comey refused to do so. According to sources, the director pledged honesty and independence. Although a highly unusual request of an official investigating a president’s administration — apparently, neither response was adequate.
When Trump “decided” to fire Comey — the man investigating his administration’s ties to Russia and possible collusion between the Trump Campaign and Russia to turn the election — not only did the Justice Department not bulk, senior Justice officials aided and abetted the president.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein met with Trump before the firing, where, according to the Wall Street Journal, they discussed Director Comey’s job performance. At the White House’s request, Rosenstein wrote a memo to the president detailing his concerns about the director’s conduct.
The 12-paragraph letter was deeply critical of Comey’s handling of an investigation into then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server to conduct public business. Rosenstein concluded that the FBI had lost the public’s trust and that “the director cannot be expected to implement corrective action.” The president’s termination letter to Comey refers to the memo.
As for the top man at Justice, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the concerns are even greater. Sessions admitted that he consulted with the president as he made the decision to terminate Comey. Trump admitted that the Russia investigation was a consideration in his decision. However, Sessions had recused himself from the Russia probe and all matters relating to the 2016 campaign, including the investigation into Clinton’s emails — the “primary” factor is Comey’s firing.
“Refusing to recuse oneself from a conflict or breaking the promise to recuse from a conflict is a serious breach of legal ethics,” conservative Washington Post blogger Jennifer Rubin wrote. “He [Sessions] needs to testify immediately under oath; if there is no satisfactory explanation, he must resign.”
Nixon covered up a bungled break-in at the Democrat National Committee headquarters and it cost him the presidency. President Trump may well have attempted to obstruct the investigation into his administration’s ties to a major foreign power and his campaign’s possible collusion with that power. How will Russiagate end for him?
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter at @MatthewTMangino.
To visit the column CLICK HERE



Thursday, May 11, 2017

Politico: Is Trump's metastasizing crisis Watergate 2.0?

President Donald Trump’s astonishing firing of FBI director James Comey raised throughout Washington the inevitable question: Is this Watergate? 
While Watergate was sui generis and is likely to remain so, Trump’s metastasizing crisis, and Washington’s reaction to it, make for a discomfiting reminder of that period, reported Politico Magazine. And suddenly it seems increasingly possible it could end the same way.
As it did during Watergate, in the spreading Trump scandal, all of Washington fixates on the latest development, virtually to the exclusion of what had preoccupied five minutes earlier. 
Thus the firing of Comey, for the moment at least, displaced the city’s and the national media’s obsession since as long as the day before with the question of it took so long for Trump to fire Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, his national security adviser, after the acting attorney general at the time, Sally Yates, informed the White House counsel that Flynn had been compromised by Russia.
As the stunning news of Comey’s firing spread through Washington on Tuesday evening, the reactions were similar to those when a previous president fired his chief investigator: astonishment, a kind of ghoulish humor, plus deep unease at a president behaving so far outside of traditional norms. The fear that permeated the Washington atmosphere during Watergate hasn’t quite developed, but some of the elements of the story—in particular, a vindictive president seeming out of control—are in place for that to happen as well.
Like Richard Nixon, Trump has a propensity for ridding himself of those who presented a threat to him. Nixon’s elimination of special prosecutor Archibald Cox, even if he had to fire a couple of attorneys general until he got to a Justice Department official, Robert Bork, who would carry out the deed, was the point at which the word “impeachment” began to be on people’s lips. Until then the idea was too outsized and even alarming to consider. 
No president had ever been removed from office by the constitutionally designated congressional act of impeaching (the House) and convicting (the Senate) a president. Cox was demanding that Nixon turn over the tape recordings of his Oval Office conversations, which Nixon was – understandingly, as it turned out – of no mind to do. Comey was seeking information possibly at least as damning, and perhaps worse. We can get too used to a question until it returns in full force: What if the president, or his close associates, colluded with a hostile foreign power to win the office?
To read more CLICK HERE