National
Review Online
Thursday,
January 12, 2023
We won’t
say “the walls are closing in,” but the sitting president of the United States
is now, formally, the subject of a criminal investigation.
That is
the upshot from Attorney General Merrick Garland’s Thursday afternoon
announcement that he has appointed a special counsel — Robert K. Hur —
to investigate President Biden’s mishandling of classified documents.
The
facts are still unfolding, but the basic picture is that after his vice
presidency ended, Biden retained highly classified documents in at least
two unauthorized locations, an office he maintained at his Washington think
tank (affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania), and a garage at one of
his Delaware homes.
Richard
Sauber, a deputy White House counsel, asserted that the president is confident
that the special counsel’s investigation will establish that the classified
documents were “inadvertently misplaced.” Even if true, this is not a defense
to a criminal charge of mishandling classified information.
Government
officials, even if they have not been handling classified intelligence for
nearly half a century as Biden has, are well aware of the rules for reviewing,
retaining, and safekeeping classified information, which are constantly drilled
into them.
Their
agreement to abide by those standards is the principal condition for obtaining
privileged access to it. This is why officials may be found guilty if they have
been grossly negligent in handling the documents, a standard
that includes handling classified intelligence so cavalierly it is lost track
of or is retained in an unauthorized location.
The
statement by Sauber suggests that Biden’s lawyers are banking on a favorable
exercise of prosecutorial discretion. In every criminal case, a prosecutor has
to make two judgments: whether there is sufficient evidence to convict beyond a
reasonable doubt, and whether a prosecution would be in the public interest.
Remarkably, it already appears that special counsel Hur is onto the second
question. Its answer is informed by such matters as precedent and whether there
are other national interests that cut against bringing charges.
While
many less famous government officials have been prosecuted aggressively for
keeping classified intelligence in their homes and other unauthorized
locations, Biden’s team knows that other top officials have committed egregious
misconduct yet eluded indictment — most notoriously, former secretary of state
Hillary Clinton, who was not indicted by the Obama–Biden Justice Department.
The
elephant in the room, however, is Donald Trump. The Justice Department has
spent many months carefully drawing a net around Trump that could end in prosecution
for his own conduct of retaining classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. But the
task of justifying to the public why a former president should be criminally
charged for the first time in our history becomes vastly more difficult when
DOJ has not only declined to prosecute his 2016 opponent, but is also
potentially going to let the current president off the hook as well.
Democrats
and other Biden apologists have spent the last several days trying to draw
favorable contrasts between Trump’s behavior, which involves hundreds of
documents and defiance of the government’s lawful efforts to force their
surrender, and Biden’s, which seems to involve fewer documents, self-reporting
of the violation, and cooperation with investigators. Yet the Justice Department’s
real challenge in making a case against Trump is likely not the evidence,
rather the Clinton precedent.
As both
Trump and Biden are candidates for the presidency in 2024, moreover,
prosecutors could justify a non-prosecution decision by reasoning that the
public interest in keeping electoral politics insulated from intrusion by law
enforcement (for a change) outweighs the interest in prosecution.
But will
the cases be treated evenhandedly? There are reasons for concern in this
regard.
Garland
appointed Hur only because the latest embarrassing disclosure about Biden left
him no more wiggle room. About two months ago, the attorney general appointed a
special counsel for Trump even though there was no real conflict of interest,
whereas investigating the Biden family’s influence-peddling, as the Justice
Department has since 2020, is a blatant conflict of interest.
In
addition, when Jack Smith was named Trump special counsel, Garland gave him a
broad mandate, which includes not only classified documents but Trump’s
connection to the Capitol riot, among other things. In naming Hur, though,
Garland appears to have narrowed the scope of the probe to the classified
documents, even though there is much else to investigate (foreign money,
especially Chinese money, had a curious way of finding its way to the Bidens).
Hur’s
appointment is meant to project the impression that he will be an independent
prosecutor, but in fact he will report to Garland as the head of the Justice
Department; and both he and Garland both ultimately report to Biden, the head
of the executive branch and the source of the power they exercise. Hur is also
bound by Justice Department guidance, which admonishes that a sitting president
may not be indicted (any charges would have to await Biden’s departure from
office).
Nevertheless,
the public interest is in thorough, credible investigations of both the
incumbent and the former president. And just as the Trump probe is of broad
scope, the Biden probe must include the shady dealings that unlocked millions
of dollars of foreign money. Fair play, and the imperative to root out
government corruption, demands nothing less.
No comments:
Post a Comment