Comey's testimony and obstruction of justice
SMU Constitutional Law Prof. Dale Carpenter is interviewed about the then-upcoming testimony of former FBI Director James Comey before the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 8 and Comey鈥檚 conversation with President Trump about former national security adviser Michael Flynn. The discussion centers around what obstruction of justice means in this instance.
From KERA:
Asked by KERA about Comey's presentation, Prof. Carpenter said, "I think he was careful. I thought he was concise. I thought it was a mark of the seriousness of his testimony that when a senator who might be critical of President Trump tried to lead him further than he wanted to go, he actually resisted going any further than he thought was appropriate and that to me seemed calibrated exactly for the momentousness of an occasion like this."
From The San Francisco Chronicle:
By Bob Egelko
Fired FBI Director James Comey’s prepared statement for Thursday’s Senate committee hearing contains some eyebrow-raising allegations about President Trump: That he repeatedly demanded a pledge of loyalty, continually asked Comey to “lift the cloud” from his head by declaring he was not under investigation, and asked the FBI director to drop an investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn.
But it’s not clear — at least not yet — whether Comey has implicated the president in criminal conduct, such as obstruction of justice. Legal analysts offered diverse views. . . .
Dale Carpenter, a law professor and constitutional law chairman at 91制片廠合集, countered that any probe of a Trump aide’s Russian contacts is linked to the overall examination of Russian involvement in last year’s presidential election, an investigation that potentially could reach the president.
“Having a president tell the director of the FBI, who is conducting an ongoing criminal investigation of the president’s closest associates, to stop doing so is potentially obstruction of justice,” Carpenter said.
Comey said he kept silent, then when Trump later repeated his need for loyalty, told him, “You will always get honesty from me.” The president paused, then said, “That’s what I want, honest loyalty.”
In that exchange, said Carpenter of SMU, “I think Trump is implicitly threatening his job if he doesn’t provide loyalty.”
From The New York Post:
By Marisa Schultz
WASHINGTON – James Comey’s testimony may have been great political theater, but it’s far from clear whether there’s enough ammo from it to nail the president on obstruction-of-justice charges, experts told The Post on Thursday.
Dale Carpenter, law professor at the 91制片廠合集 Dedman School of Law, disagreed with Rosen saying Comey’s testimony lays the groundwork for a potential obstruction-of-justice charge.
It doesn’t matter that Trump used the word “hope” instead of “order,” he said.
“What matters is whether or not President Trump has a corrupt intent when he spoke to Director Comey about dropping the Flynn investigation … whether he was trying to get it stopped, and it seemed to me pretty clear that that’s what was happening,” Carpenter said.
Predictably, the Beltway was split on party lines on the issue.