25 C
Washington

Trump is “absolutely” immune for “official acts” on Jan 6th, SCOTUS rules

Date:

Share:


The Supreme Court ruled that presidents are “absolutely” immune from criminal prosecution when their actions involve allegedly official acts while they were in office. Former presidents also have a “presumption of immunity” for their official acts while in office — but, the court ruled, there is no immunity for “unofficial acts.”

The decision in Trump v. United States means that the special counsel Jack Smith’s prosecution against former President Donald Trump — who’s currently running to unseat President Joe Biden — may be able to proceed. In his majority decision, Chief Justice John Roberts remanded the case to the lower courts, which now have to determine whether Trump’s conduct was official or unofficial.

Trump is being prosecuted for his role in the events of January 6th, 2021. A grand jury approved an indictment against Trump in August for charges including conspiracy to defraud the US and obstructing an official proceeding. In February, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court judge’s decision to reject the immunity claims to allow the case the move forward, until the Supreme Court agreed to take it up.

While that case was brought at the state level, the election interference case impacted by this SCOTUS ruling would be at the federal level. That means — unlike in the state case — that if Trump were convicted but elected president, he could potentially pardon himself.



Source link

Subscribe to our magazine

━ more like this

Rishi Sunak awaits a multimillion-dollar payday after losing his $177,000 PM gig

It’s official. Rishi Sunak is no longer the U.K. Prime Minister. His long and winding road to the Number 10 exit door has...

Google might fix its fingerprint scanner woes with the Pixel 9

Google’s upcoming Pixel 9 lineup will reportedly feature a faster, more reliable ultrasonic fingerprint scanner, according to Android Authority. It would replace...

Amazon Kindle book downloads are broken

An ongoing outage is preventing Amazon Kindle users from downloading both new and previously purchased books to their e-readers. According to moderators responding...

Civics are becoming a 21st-century business skill

The Fourth of July is a day typically filled with food, festivities, and fireworks in the U.S., as our nation celebrates the passage...

Amazon’s Fire HD 10 tablet is nearly 50 percent off for Prime members

Let’s face it: Apple’s slates seem to get all the attention when talking tablets (and understandably so). However, you don’t necessarily need to...