In summary it says special prosecutor smith should have been approved by congress, plus given a budget by congress because he is an inferior official.
And the special prosecutor does not seemingly hold a principal official position that would avoid congressional approval.
My take: the court is being incredibly strict on following the formality of the law in this case. And is not skipping the process in the case of a highly sensitive matter like classified documents. This is rule for the rich and famous. And I don’t think this kind of strictness would have been applied on random joes.
I am not sure this is a win politically. It takes a lot of the wind out of the persecution argument he has been making.
I am also not sure this is a win legally. Dismissed on a technicality, not on the merits, is the weakest way to win a case. More than likely it is a delay, not a resolution.
If the argument that there is a flaw in the special prosecutor's appointment ultimately ends up being upheld on appeal–and there's no guarantee it will be–there is a solution that may save the case: appoint a new special prosecutor, using a different procedure that answers the constitutional infirmities of the previous appointment. That said, it is unclear whether a new special prosecutor would be allowed to resume the case at the same point, or be forced to re-run earlier parts of it – but I suspect judicial economy would favour resumption over repetition. Also, if it becomes necessary to seek Congressional approval for a new appointment, the current partisan division in Congress may make such approval difficult to achieve. If it is an appointment requiring Senate confirmation, it may be possible for Democrats to push it through on party lines even without any Republican cooperation – but that assumes no conservative Democrats (such as Manchin) defect. But if it also requires appropriations, it may be much harder to get the needed appropriations through the Republican-controlled House. And of course, whichever way the appeal goes, there is the very real risk this delays the case until after the November election, and if he wins, it may lead to the case being suspended on constitutional grounds, and likely eventually dismissed
There's also some debate about whether this decision, if upheld on appeal, might also lead to the overturn of Hunter Biden's convictions – https://www.newsweek.com/aileen-cannon-trump-case-dismissal-... – however, it appears possibly not, since the special counsel in the Biden case is concurrently serving as a Senate-confirmed US attorney; whereas, although Jack Smith never actually held such a role; at the time of his appointment, he did not hold any Senate-confirmed position, since he actually had been an employee of the Government of Kosovo (as a war crimes prosecutor) immediately prior to his special counsel appointment; previously, he had been a DOJ attorney, but never held a Senate-confirmed position.
This is a farce. If you've ever had a clearance you know those documents were improperly removed from some secure facility, stored wrong, and possessed illegally. If you or I had even 1 box like that, we'd be in jail
One justice system for the powerful, another harsher system for the rest of us. Couldn't be plainer.
> If you've ever had a clearance you know those documents were improperly removed from some secure facility, stored wrong, and possessed illegally
Classification was created by executive order [1]. There is a legitimate question as to whether the President is covered because, at the end of the day, whether something is classified is up to them. (Trump removed the material while still President.)
Classification authority derives from the executive but the president himself does not exercise it directly. But assuming for a moment he could -- did Trump scribble out the classification on these documents, to at least make it seem like he declassified them?
Also, when did he transport them to his compound? Was he still president at the time? Former presidents do not have the legal right to declassify anything at all.
> No. But it’s an open question if him thinking it changes their classification. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
That seems like a huge stretch. Maybe, maybe, if he had contemporaneous notes that described what he was thinking at the time. Otherwise it is a retroactive excuse for breaking the law, and I cannot imagine that flying in any other legal situation.
I see that line of thought discussed, and then basically discarded by reputable sources [0]. As a layman, I think their conclusion sounds way less convoluted than the argument in Trump's favor. The president can declassify most (not all) documents, but there is a procedure for doing so. And while it may not be a legal requirement yet, there should also be an explanation for why the document was worthy of being declassified.
Another case where the law did not anticipate an executive hostile to the law and the nation. That can be fixed in time. The authority for classification may rest with the executive, but clearly it should not be solely vested in a single individual without limits. Not when national security is concerned.
Yep. If you or I had done what Trump has done we'd be busting rocks at Leavenworth. Trump is the Deep State - one set of rules for them, another set for us.
"The Appointments Clause sets as a default rule that all “Officers of the United States”—whether “inferior” or “principal”—must be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Id. It then goes on to direct that “Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in Heads of Departments.”"
It would apply to all special counsels unless confirmed by the Senate (or congress passes a law allowing the Attorney General to appoint special counsel)
> Is the ruling that special counsels violate the Constitution, or just that this one did?
The Ethics in Government Act did expire in 1999 [1]. But I’d think that just means Smith reports to Garland and Biden, versus having the autonomy he had before.
To summarize. An officer cannot be appointed by the executive (president or his disignates) unless congress passes a law authorizing the position(s). Congress passed no such law to allow this special prosecutor to be appointed.
Absent that, the only other way to appoint someone is to get senate confirmation via the appointments clause. The president didn't seek this confirmation for the special prosecutor.
This is a very important check on the president's power.
The current president basically hired a private attorney without authorization and sic'd him on his political enemy.
EDIT: Those of you downvoting - why are you against the rule of law? The law on this is very clear, and this issue about this special prosecutor has been known for years.
Does the AG need Congressional approval every time he hires a secretary?
There are two sets of principles of the rule of law in conflict [1]. On one hand, you are correct in Cannon’s argument being supported by “consistency (no contradictory laws)” and the “protection of individual rights.” But in throwing out precedent she discards “consistency (no contradictory laws)” and “certainty (certainty of application for a given situation).”
Where the balance tips for me is in her violating the most core tenet of the rule of law, that no man is above the law, something she has been dinged for in the past [2].
> Does the AG need Congressional approval every time he hires a secretary?
There is a legal distinction between an “officer of the United States” and an “employee of the United States”. An officer has the power to make significant legally binding decisions in the name of the United States government. A secretary is an employee: nobody is arguing the Attorney-General needs specific authorisation from Congress to hire a secretary (assuming their salary fits within the appropriated personnel budget, etc). But a special counsel is clearly not a mere employee, a special counsel is an officer - deciding to initiate and advance a federal criminal prosecution is a significant legal decision. Hence, the argument is that the special counsel, as an officer, needs to be authorised by Congress, either by statute, or as a Senate-confirmed appointment. Whether or not that argument is correct, the example you raise of hiring a secretary is irrelevant to it.
Correct. But the Appointments Clause says “but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments” - which says that to appoint an inferior Officer, you need statutory authorisation.
And this is part of the crux of the dispute - there used to be an Act of Congress authorising the appointment of special counsels, but it expired in 1999 and was not renewed. Supporters of Judge Cannon’s decision - not just Trump’s own lawyers, also conservative legal scholars such as professor Josh Blackman [0] - argue that with the expiry of that statute, there is no longer any Congressional authorisation for appointment of special counsel as “inferior officers”, and hence Jack Smith’s appointment is unconstitutional. Conversely, Smith (and the DOJ and A-G) argue that statutory authority can be found in various other provisions-I know one thing they’ve pointed to is a few “left-over” cross references in the US Code to the now expired independent counsel statute. The crux of the dispute is whether those “left-over” provisions are sufficient to meet the constitutional burden
EDIT: since you edited your post after I responded, I'll try to respond to your edit. It is Biden who believes he's above the law. He has consistently bragged about it, for example, in flouting decisions saying he has no authority to forgive student loans. It is Biden who is not following the law here. I'm sure this will be appealed, and maybe in a few years, if we're lucky, the law will be made clearer.
> Biden who believes he's above the law. He has consistently bragged about it, for example, in flouting decisions saying he has no authority to forgive student loans.
Cool, then ding him. Presidential authority is absolutely uncomfortably vague. But this expands it; Cannon is saying, in essence, a prosecutor who the President can order around should be bringing this case.
Right now, Biden is above the law. He could declare martial law in D.C., field promote his son and then—as commander in chief—order him to execute the conservative members of the Supreme Court, pardon his son, pardon himself, resign and—under current law—be absolutely immune. Under current law, the President is more powerful than Rome’s consuls ever were [1].
> Right now, Biden is above the law. He could declare martial law in D.C., field promote his son and then—as commander in chief—order him to execute the conservative members of the Supreme Court, pardon his son, pardon himself, resign and—under current law—be absolutely immune.
Not as I understand the Supreme Court decision. Ordering the execution of 6 members of the Supreme Court is not within the scope of his office. You'd have to prove it - there's a presumption that his actions are within scope - but it's not absolute. (For stuff that is within the scope of the powers of his office, there is absolute immunity.)
> Ordering the execution of 6 members of the Supreme Court is not within the scope of his office
Commander in Chief is a core Constitutional duty, and one of the most-expansively interpreted ones at that.
Of course, if someone did that the rules wouldn’t matter. And they wouldn’t follow up by resigning. But it’s illustrative of how silly the framework is.
> Ordering the killing of Supreme Court justices is not part of the powers of the Commander in Chief
We’ve extrajudicially liquidated Americans overseas before. Why isn’t this a power of the Commander in Chief?
What if they aren’t SCOTUS, but federal judges suspected of a terrorist plot? State judge? Where do we draw the line? (We’ve executed Americans extrajudicially and under Article I powers.)
> that people are acting like it could be
Nobody is. I’m not arguing that absurdity is a likelihood that can be defended against with laws. My point is there is no good source for what constitutes an official act.
EDIT: You are arguing in good faith and shouldn’t be getting downvoted.
Was this an official act? The President of the United States ordered the military to kill an American citizen who had not been convicted of a crime, with the "due process" being a DOJ memo.
What would make a hit on SCOTUS any different? Both involve the President ordering the armed forces in his official capacity as Commander in Chief to kill an American citizen without trial.
The only difference would be motive, and the Trump v. United States opinion explicitly states courts cannot consider it!
What would make a SCOTUS hit any different? Whether it's within the US or not (and whether it's somewhere that will extradite them or not). The ability to arrest them rather than hit them.
Show me one instance of the president ordering a hit on a citizen within the US borders. For that matter, show me one instance of the president ordering it within a country that would extradite to the US.
OK, so he can drone strike SCOTUS if they go on vacation overseas?
> The ability to arrest them rather than hit them.
Well, it's pretty clear he can't arrest them. That wouldn't be an official act like issuing an order to the military would be.
> Show me one instance of the president ordering a hit on a citizen within the US borders.
The ruling granting absolute immunity without consideration to motives is brand new and the first and only person so far to be subject to it is a decent human being. The system needs to protect us against more than just the well-intended.
He can't arrest them himself, no. He can't order their arrest. The point is that the normal judicial process can work on them. So can impeachment. Neither was available for Awlaki.
So, back to the main point: The ruling did not grant absolute immunity for acts outside the scope of his office. (Really! Read it! Take what it says about itself, not Sotomayor's hyperventilating dissent[1]. The ruling says the scope of what it does and does not cover.)
And, second point: Ordering the execution of 6 sitting Supreme Court justices is not within the scope of the president's office. For all you keep raising Awlaki, it's not at all the same - not unless 1) a bunch of SC judges became Al-Qaeda organizers, and 2) the Justice Department, the FBI, the Marshalls Service, and the local police were completely unable to arrest them.
[1] "Hyperventilating" because it had lots of rhetoric but very little actual legal analysis.
> The ruling did not grant absolute immunity for acts outside the scope of his office.
Commanding the armed forces is very much in his scope. Remember, the same decision said motives couldn't be considered in determining official vs. non-official act; the difference between "Trump is a national security threat the judicial system clearly can't handle" and "al-Awlaki is a national security threat the judicial system clearly can't handle" is the President's motive behind the strike.
> it's not at all the same - not unless 1) a bunch of SC judges became Al-Qaeda organizers...
Can you clarify where in the Constitution it says it's OK to assassinate some Americans without a trial but not others?
> The point is that the normal judicial process can work on them.
I mean, maybe? Not long after news broke of Thomas accepting $4M+ in gifts, Snyder vs. United States said gratuities after an act don't count as bribes.
> Commanding the armed forces is very much in his scope.
Commanding the armed forces against other branches of the United States government is very much not in the scope of his office.
"Commanding the armed forces" is not the unlimited blank check that you seem to think it is. Since Vietnam, it's drilled into the heads of the military not to accept an illegal order. Inherent in that is the idea that some orders are illegal. They are not legitimate things to ask the military to do. Well, if they're not legitimate to ask, then they can't be within the scope of the commander-in-chief's legitimate authority. And I'm pretty sure that killing Supreme Court justices would be on the "not legitimate" side of the line.
> Commanding the armed forces against other branches of the United States government is very much not in the scope of his office.
Why not? Where is this restriction laid out in the Constitution? The Presidential Oath of Office even says he'll defend the Constitution "against all enemies, foreign and domestic". As we've discussed, precedent for "enemy" seems to be "DOJ writes themselves a permission slip".
Absurd setup? Yes. That's precisely why folks are incensed about this ruling.
> Commanding the armed forces against other branches of the United States government is very much not in the scope of his office
We fought and won a civil war. Lincoln was well within his rights the whole time. Based on that, firing upon leaders of traitorous states is precedented.
> it's drilled into the heads of the military not to accept an illegal order
Absolute immunity toys with that restraint. The President, if absolutely immune, is tactically sovereign. Add to that pardon power and this blurs the line between what constitutes a legal, executable order and one that does not. (We’re no saints when it comes to international law, incorporated or not.)
We’re not in a scary place. The levers of tyranny have always been there. We’re in a stupid place. That makes more likely not calculated coup but idiotic dishevelment.
Nobody is suggesting this is realistic. If you’re going to do what I described, you go all the way and hold the Congress at gunpoint. (That’s been a risk we’ve trusted in the Presidency since at least the New Deal, and nobody in power seems unhappy about it.) What we’re asking is whether it would be legal.
Arguing ad absurdum has a long tradition in law. Usually it’s constrained to academia by the “cases and controversies” clause, but SCOTUS is no longer narrowly deciding cases. (“Decision for the ages” and the Warren court.) It’s used to uncover internal inconsistency.
> There's a reason Thomas's concurrence is separate from the majority opinion; even the other five conservative justices didn't support the theory.
You wrongly assume the only reason they didn’t concur with Thomas’ arguments is because they think they are incorrect. There is another possible explanation: whatever they may think of Thomas’ arguments, they may have thought it better to leave discussion of that issue out of the majority opinion, given it wasn’t part of the questions presented for them to decide in the immediate case, and it wasn’t fully ventilated in the briefs and arguments and the record below. It isn’t impossible, despite not joining him in his concurrence, some or all of them might end up agreeing with him if they were presented with a case directly on that topic (which may indeed now happen)
I think if you look more deeply at the history of special counsels, you will see that this issue has been raised before and dealt with differently in different cases.
Besides which, a litigant would need to raise this issue in court for it to be litigated.
If this particular issue does come before SCOTUS, then we'll see how the justices rule.
> If this particular issue does come before SCOTUS, then we'll see how the justices rule.
We got a pretty decent preview. Thomas's concurrence pretty clearly indicates he tried to get them to sign on to the concept during deliberation; its separate existence also indicates he was unsuccessful at convincing them.
Five conservative justices were being 'conservative' in not joining Thomas' concurrence, as that issue was not before the court. The moment this issue comes before SCOTUS, you can expect more concurrences from these five conservative justices.
if you are suggesting that the FBI brought in papers and planted them in the Mar-a-Lago photos, presumably in an attempt to frame Trump, you should provide sources.
>Smith’s team revealed in the filing that FBI agents carried printed “classified cover sheets” during the Aug. 8, 2022, search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate and used them to replace any classified documents they discovered in cardboard Bankers Boxes that littered the former president’s residence.
Because you don't want a direct photo of a top-secret document laying around, they cover it and document it as such.
(There were even so many to cover they had to make extras, which because they were hand-made, didn't get removed as is apparently the norm during processing.)
> “The investigative team used classified cover sheets for that purpose, until the FBI ran out because there were so many classified documents, at which point the team began using blank sheets with handwritten notes indicating the classification level of the document(s) seized,” the prosecutors wrote.
> “Any handwritten sheets that currently remain in the boxes do not represent additional classified documents — they were just not removed when the classified cover sheets with the index code were added,” Smith’s team wrote. “In many but not all instances, the FBI was able to determine which document with classification markings corresponded to a particular placeholder sheet.”
The point is that putting a "TOP SECRET" cover sheet on a TOP SECRET document doesn't change the status of what's underneath that cover sheet.
They didn't bring a bunch of "TOP SECRET" cover sheets to sprinkle on random unclassified docs to make it look more illegal than it was. They weren't "regular papers"; they were classified documents.
> It was regular papers before and made to look super illegal in the photo
it was "regular papers before" does not match with the evidence regarding the large amount of classified documents found, that had to be covered with coversheets so that classified information would not be leaked.
The investigative team used classified cover sheets for that purpose, until the FBI ran out because there were so many classified documents, at which point the team began using blank sheets with handwritten notes indicating the classification level of the document(s) seized,” the prosecutors wrote.
it seems these cover sheets were used to cover the _actual_ classified information so that the photographs were not leaking info.
are you suggesting that since the FBI covered the actual classified docs at Mar-a-Lago with coversheets that should have negated the entire thing?
In my 3 decades experience of being responsible for handling and storing classified, including comsec material, no one goes to jail for mishandling classified. The only exceptions to this case might be personnel who fall under UCMJ as the military does things differently - and I have seen that. All others? Civilians? Might lose their job, might be censured, might lose a promotion opportunity - but no one goes to jail.
In fact, the only time jail is threatened, is when the incident is IN ADDITION to other charges, often related to espionage.
Frankly, the cases of people accidentally mishandling classified, accidentally taking it home, improper storage etc. are very, very, common and are simply dismissed with minor (or major) implications but never imprisonment.
The violation's charges are so subject to selective (and subjective use) that I would be uncomfortable with selectively employing it in cases so fraught with partisan politics.
Mishandling without intent is quite different. AFAIK the DOJ has evidence of intent in this case. If he had just cooperated with the national archives and the FBI like every other president before him it would have been nothing more than a footnote.
> In Kansas City, a former FBI analyst pleaded guilty in October to taking home more than 300 classified files or documents, including highly sensitive material about al-Qaeda and an associate of Osama bin Laden. She faces up to 10 years in prison. In Massachusetts, a defense contractor pleaded guilty in 2019 to removing classified national defense information from his office and storing it at home. He got 18 months.
> And in Maryland, Harold Martin, a former government contractor, took home a huge number of hard and digital copies of classified materials — the equivalent of 500 million pages — though he never shared it with anyone. He is midway through a nine-year prison sentence.
"Frankly, the cases of people accidentally mishandling classified, accidentally taking it home, improper storage etc. are very, very, common and are simply dismissed with minor (or major) implications but never imprisonment."
> Trump certified that he was returning all the remaining documents on June 3, 2022, but the FBI later obtained evidence that he had intentionally moved documents to hide them from his lawyers and the FBI and thus had not fulfilled the subpoena.
In summary it says special prosecutor smith should have been approved by congress, plus given a budget by congress because he is an inferior official.
And the special prosecutor does not seemingly hold a principal official position that would avoid congressional approval.
My take: the court is being incredibly strict on following the formality of the law in this case. And is not skipping the process in the case of a highly sensitive matter like classified documents. This is rule for the rich and famous. And I don’t think this kind of strictness would have been applied on random joes.