The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments this month about presidential immunity and whether former President Donald Trump can be tried on charges that he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
The high court’s decision will determine how some of the presumptive GOP nominee’s legal cases advance in an election year where he is facing 91 felony charges across four trials. They include the willful retention of national defense information in violation of the Espionage Act.
“Donald Trump is trying to show that a U.S. president is immune from criminal prosecution while acting in an official capacity,” University of Georgia political scientist Charles Bullock told VOA.
“But I think, at the heart of this matter, is just how broadly Trump and his lawyers define ‘official capacity,’” Bullock explained.
“They are defining it very broadly at the moment. Trump says a president should be completely immune while president, but the three-judge circuit panel that ruled against him posed the question: ‘Well, what if the president hired a hitman to take out one of their rivals? Is that in an official capacity, and are they immune from prosecution then, as well?’ I think we’d all say, of course not!”
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
OJ Simpson dies at 76 of prostate cancerTycoon Truong My Lan's death sentence is a turning point for VietnamArgentine court blames Iran and Hezbollah for deadly 1994 Jewish center bombingTrump: Court finding first Americans to sit in judgment of former presidentCable car accident in Turkey sends 1 passenger to his death and injures 7, with scores strandedRussian authorities announced mass evacuation for floodHow the OJ Simpson saga became a unique American momentUS — Chinese military planners gear up for new kind of warfareJudge orders exUS, Japan and South Korea hold drills in disputed sea as Biden hosts leaders of Japan, Philippines
2.9105s , 6578.890625 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by Does Donald Trump have presidential immunity? ,Global Groove news portal