Is Trump immune from criminal prosecution? Supreme Court will decide major question today

The Supreme Court is expected to rule imminently on whether Donald Trump is immune from criminal prosecution for his attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

His defense has already been shot down by the federal judge overseeing the election interference case against him as well as a unanimous panel of appeals court judges, who wrote that Trump’s attempts to stay in power were “an unprecedented assault on the structure of our government.”

The question is now in the hands of the nation’s highest court.

An answer – expected on July 1 – could have profound consequences for holding former presidents accountable for crimes committed while in office.

But the court’s decision to take up the case – and wait until the final day of its current session to issue a ruling – ensures that voters will not see a verdict in the trial to determine if he unlawfully conspired to overturn an election before they cast their ballots in the next one this November.

How did the case get to the Supreme Court?

A federal investigation into Trump’s efforts to subvert the 2020 election are detailed in a 45-page indictment outlining three alleged criminal conspiracies and the obstruction of Joe Biden’s victory, culminating in a mob’s violent breach of the Capitol to stop it.

After months of evidence and witness testimony under an investigation helmed by special counsel Jack Smith, a grand jury voted to indict Trump in August 2023.

Two months later, Trump’s attorneys argued that the case should be dismissed because he was acting within his official duties as president. Smith’s office then asked the Supreme Court to step in and settle the question to keep the case moving swiftly, and avoid a trial in the middle of – or after – the 2024 election.

is trump immune from criminal prosecution? supreme court will decide major question today

A mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Trump claims he is immune from federal criminal charges accusing him of failing to stop the mob (REUTERS)

Prosecutors feared that Trump, if elected president again, would pressure the Department of Justice to throw out criminal cases against him.

The Supreme Court denied that request and didn’t agree to consider the case until February.

Instead of affirming the lower-court decisions that rejected the “immunity” claim, justices scheduled oral arguments in April on the final day of the court’s term.

What did other judges say?

In December, District Judge Tanya Chutkan wrote that Trump’s “four-year service as Commander in Chief did not bestow on him the divine right of kings to evade the criminal accountability that governs his fellow citizens.”

The office “does not confer a lifelong ‘get-out-of-jail-free’ pass,” she wrote in her 48-page ruling.

“Granting the immunity Defendant seeks would also break with longstanding legal precedent that all government officials – even those immune from civil claims – may be held to criminal account,” she added.

A federal appeals court panel affirmed Judge Chutkan’s ruling, stating that “for the purpose of this criminal case, former President Trump has become citizen Trump, with all of the defenses of any other criminal defendant.”

“But any executive immunity that may have protected him while he served as president no longer protects him against this prosecution,” the judges wrote.

How will the court rule?

Supreme Court justices are extremely unlikely to agree that presidents are immune from prosecutions for ordering the assassination of a political rival – a wild hypothetical that Trump’s attorneys suggested during an appeals court hearing that he could be protected against.

During oral arguments, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson grilled Trump’s attorneys to draw out what, in their position, would prevent the Oval Office from turning into “the seat of criminality in this country.”

It’s more likely that justices will try to take aim at how to prosecute “private” conduct performed in office, and carve out some immunity for certain “official” actions.

“The question becomes … about how to segregate private from official conduct that may or may not enjoy some immunity,” Justice Neil Gorsuch said during arguments.

is trump immune from criminal prosecution? supreme court will decide major question today

Protesters outside the Supreme Court blast both conservative Justice Samuel Alito, who rejected calls to recuse himself from Trump-related cases, and Trump’s defense that his attempts to overturn election results were “official” acts as president (Getty Images)

Justices already heard another Trump-related case this term, on whether he should be disqualified from presidential election ballots under the text of the 14th Amendment, which prohibits candidates who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” from holding public office.

On March 4, the day that Trump’s federal election interference trial was initially scheduled to begin, the court unanimously agreed that Trump can stay on Colorado ballots, and that only Congress – not states – has the authority to disqualify federal candidates.

The court’s three liberal justices sharply disagreed that only Congress can act, writing that the court’s conservative majority was attempting “to insulate all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges to their holding federal office.”

Will a ruling derail his other criminal cases?

Trump has pursued an “immunity” defense in nearly all criminal and civil cases against him, and nearly all have failed. If the Supreme Court sides with Trump, even in a narrow ruling, courts could revisit some of those decisions.

In the unlikely event that the Supreme Court sides with Trump entirely – granting him broad criminal immunity – his legal team is expected to aggressively appeal his criminal conviction in New York.

Prosecutors have said that his “immunity” has no bearing in his classified documents case. Those charges largely revolve around his attempts to evade the government retrieving documents that he allegedly unlawfully kept after he left the White House.

With Trump’s “immunity” question moving through appeals courts, Judge Chutkan has effectively paused the pretrial clock in his election interference case. After the Supreme Court reaches a decision, and if that clock starts ticking again, parties will have more than two months to prepare their cases before a trial can begin.

That will put the special counsel in the uncomfortable position of deciding whether to prosecute the Republican nominee for the presidency just days before Election Day.

Trump’s attorneys have also filed a motion to dismiss his election interference case in Georgia. The judge overseeing that state-level case is waiting on the Supreme Court’s decision.

This story was first published on June 26 and was updated with developments

Publishing from 12 countries and in six languages, The Independent is a truly international news organisation. The first of the quality news brands to embrace a fully digital future in 2016, The Independent is the UK's largest quality digital news brand, and a top ten news brand by reach in the US.

OTHER NEWS

22 minutes ago

The animal vaccine firm all set for profits boost: MIDAS SHARE TIPS

25 minutes ago

MW3 has a secret neon multiplayer map thanks to G3T_H1GH3R

25 minutes ago

I’m scared about what will happen when I go to vote

25 minutes ago

Health officials reveal cause of cucumber-related illnesses across America

26 minutes ago

Windows 11 finally gets some love, but it feels more like a 'necessary evil' than a voluntary upgrade with Windows 10's death on the horizon

26 minutes ago

Shadow of the Erdtree's worst enemy is seeking vengeance for Elden Ring

26 minutes ago

Get a taste of automated, voxelated terraforming in the free preview of Eden Crafters

26 minutes ago

Mzansi in stitches as high schoolboy cries over girlfriend who left him for Polo driver

26 minutes ago

'We are being sent a warning from France - and must reject the hateful politics of British right'

26 minutes ago

Labour slips behind SNP ahead of election day, poll suggests

26 minutes ago

Over 200 ad campaigns from oil and gas firms shown on TfL network since Sadiq Khan set out 'zero carbon' goal

26 minutes ago

Suns 'crazy' not to ponder Dusty recruitment: Hardwick

26 minutes ago

'Immense' premiership winner locks in new deal

26 minutes ago

Malaysia trials second QR code system at Johor border crossing with Singapore

26 minutes ago

Lily Allen joins OnlyFans to sell pictures of her feet

27 minutes ago

Review: To see Murphy, Reinhold and Ashton mix it up again in 'Beverly Hills Cop 4', is fine fan service

27 minutes ago

Find out if YOU are about to plunge off a salary tax cliff - it could cost you £20,000

30 minutes ago

Video: Ralf Rangnick appears to take a swipe at England... as the former Man United interim boss reveals he 'struggled to stay awake' when watching other Euro 2024 games

31 minutes ago

Alarming testimonies: Russian soldier's harrowing escape from frontline

31 minutes ago

Chelsea hold talks to sign 60,000-a-week forward likened to Alexander Isak

32 minutes ago

Man Utd laughing after £30m West Ham bid fails, but separate deal talked up by Sky Sports reporter

32 minutes ago

EastEnders boss teases dramatic Christmas with Mitchells at the heart of the drama

32 minutes ago

Costa Rica eliminated from the Copa America despite beating Paraguay 2-1 in group stage finale

32 minutes ago

£235m expected to be withdrawn from ATMs as voters go to polls on Thursday

32 minutes ago

Lithuania Reports Airspace Violation by Russian Aircraft

32 minutes ago

Euro 2024 power rankings: The quarter-finalists rated

32 minutes ago

There’s A Fantastic Fake Tourism Site For Final Fantasy XIV: Dawntrail’s New World

32 minutes ago

Kunitsu-Gami: Path Of The Goddess preview hands-on - the Onimusha purge

32 minutes ago

2025 Cupra Terramar revealed… sort of

33 minutes ago

New study finds Aussie drivers unclear on drink driving laws

35 minutes ago

Webtoon Entertainment Bosses On How Nasdaq Listing Will Expand U.S. Opportunities & Creator Revenue Share Model

37 minutes ago

Son of footy legend John Hopoate reveals how he bounced back from horrific burns accident that left him 'sooky'

37 minutes ago

Declan Rice is to blame for fiery exchange, claims Slovakia boss Francesco Calzona - and was 'acting like a bodyguard' after England's Euro 2024 last-16 clash

37 minutes ago

Luke Littler suffers SHOCK first-round defeat by the World No 116 - who only just returned to darts after 15 years away - at the Players Championship 13

37 minutes ago

Aussie brand's 'perfect' tights that leave shoppers 'feeling amazing' can now be snapped up for just $33: 'So flattering, so comfy'

37 minutes ago

West Ham weigh up making a fresh bid for Nice centre back Jean-Clair Todibo after £25m offer was rejected... with new boss Julen Lopetegui keen to strengthen his backline

38 minutes ago

1,453 HSBC shares could make me £14,832 a year in passive income!

38 minutes ago

Def ministry inks deal to establish state-of-the-art testing facilities in Chennai

38 minutes ago

Olympic men's soccer offers underdogs hope of medals in Paris. US team back after 16-year absence

39 minutes ago

‘Save of the century’ at Euro 2024 from Turkey’s Mert Gunok hailed by pundits