The Daily - The Case Against Donald Trump
Episode Date: July 21, 2022A series of blockbuster hearings from the Jan. 6 committee has put growing pressure on Attorney General Merrick B. Garland to bring criminal charges against former President Donald J. Trump over the e...fforts to overturn the 2020 election.Before today’s committee hearing, we speak with Andrew D. Goldstein, one of the prosecutors who led the last major investigation into Mr. Trump, about why winning a case against the former president is such a challenge.Guest: Andrew Goldstein, a federal prosecutor who was part of the Mueller inquiry into Mr. Trump. Want more from The Daily? For one big idea on the news each week from our team, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: Mr. Trump has issued a rambling 12-page statement containing his usual mix of outlandish claims, hyperbole and outright falsehoods, but also, apparently, with something different: the beginnings of a legal defense.Robert S. Mueller III was often portrayed as the omnipotent fact-gatherer for his inquiry, but it was Mr. Goldstein who had a much more involved, day-to-day role. (Here’s our profile of Mr. Goldstein from 2019.)For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
A series of blockbuster hearings from the January 6th Committee
is putting growing pressure on the Attorney General, Merrick Garland,
to bring criminal charges against former President Trump
for his role in inciting violence at the Capitol
and trying to overturn the election. Today, as the committee prepares for its latest hearing
on Thursday night, my colleague Mike Schmidt talks to one of the prosecutors who led the last
major investigation into Trump about why bringing and winning a case against the former president is such a challenge.
It's Thursday, July 21st.
They usually don't let me do this, so this is like, uh, we're good? Okay.
Okay, it's weird to hear my own voice through my...
You got a bit of a radio voice.
I do not think that's right.
All right, uh, before we start, tell us who you are.
Like, who are you?
Why, what have you done in your career?
Oh, well, early in my career, I was a writer for Time magazine.
I decided to become a lawyer.
And early in that career, I was a federal prosecutor in Manhattan.
I focused on public corruption cases.
federal prosecutor in Manhattan. I focused on public corruption cases. I became the chief of the public corruption unit at a time when we brought successful cases against several major
New York political figures. But then I was asked to join the Mueller investigation,
and I moved to Washington and worked on that for two years. And now I'm the head of the white collar practice at the law firm Cooley.
You're not someone that I know that well.
I mean, during the Mueller investigation, I showed up at your house to try and get you to talk.
And I went to your door and your doorbell was broken and we knocked on the door and I could hear you and your family inside.
And I was with a colleague of mine and I turned to the colleague and I said,
you know what? This is too invasive. We've gone too far. This man is inside with his family and
we left. I didn't know that. That's all a little creepy. It's fair. Totally fair.
I first came to know the name Andrew Goldstein in the course of my own reporting on the Mueller investigation.
The thing is, is that this is an issue you understand.
In journalism, we often talk about people being the foremost expert on something.
But because of his work on the Mueller investigation, Goldstein is literally one of the last federal prosecutors
to look at the question of whether Donald Trump broke the law.
From an early period in the investigation.
And so over the past few weeks,
as the January 6th committee has presented all of its evidence
about Trump's behavior in the lead up to and during January 6th.
And as my editors have come to me literally every day to ask me, did Trump break the law?
And will or won't the Attorney General Merrick Garland bring charges against him?
The only person I wanted to answer those questions was Andrew Goldstein.
On the obstruction investigation, we looked at whether or not President Trump...
We started our conversation by talking about his experience on the Mueller investigation.
The two-year-long inquiry that looked at ties between Russia and Trump's 2016 campaign.
it ties between Russia and Trump's 2016 campaign. But you concentrated in the Mueller investigation on a narrow question, an important question, but a narrow question of whether Trump had tried to
impede that investigation, right? That's right. And what did you find? As we noted in our report,
we found that the president's conduct during the course of the investigation
involved a series of actions that involved attacking the investigation publicly and privately,
trying to control the investigation from his position as president and within the White House.
There were efforts in both public and private
to encourage witnesses not to cooperate
with the investigation.
And so those were our predominant findings
in terms of obstruction.
And despite finding all of these things
that at the very least was not great behavior,
you made a decision about what to do about whether
Trump broke the law. What was that decision? Well, ultimately, we decided not to do what
traditional prosecutors do when they're considering bringing a criminal charge.
We went down that road for a few different reasons.
It was based on our understanding of the role of the president
and our understanding of what we believe to be the proper role of a prosecutor.
So you guys basically made a decision not to make a decision,
to sort of let the facts speak for themselves and say, look, if after
this man, Donald Trump, leaves office and the Justice Department wants to prosecute
him, they can do that based on what we found.
But we're not going to make a decision.
We're not going to say whether we think he broke the law.
And that's basically right.
And the reason for that is that normally the first step that a prosecutor takes when deciding to bring a criminal charge against somebody is to determine for yourself whether that person is in fact guilty.
You see, you know, can you actually prove this case in court?
Will it stand up on appeal?
But here, we weren't dealing with an ordinary subject. You know, the president is the head of the executive branch.
Under Department of Justice policy, the president cannot be charged with a crime while in office.
And that is because simply charging him with a crime, just making the
accusation, that would infringe on his ability to be president. Right. So that leads us to the
January 6th hearings and a different set of circumstances because, of course, Trump is no longer president. Explain to me what crimes Donald Trump could be investigated for
based on everything we've learned from the January 6th hearings.
I think the three main potential crimes that people have talked about
and that would be at issue here are, number one, obstruction of an
official proceeding. Number two, conspiracy to defraud the United States. And number three,
depending on the evidence, seditious conspiracy. Let's start with seditious conspiracy.
start with seditious conspiracy. What does that mean and how hard is that to prove?
It means agreeing with one or more other people to use force or violence to prevent the law from being carried out. Some of the people who stormed the Capitol on January 6th have been charged with this. And it's for their efforts and their plans to stop the counting of the electoral vote by force.
So basically using violence to stop the certification of the election.
Exactly. For someone like Trump to be charged with that, would that mean that the government would have to prove that he conspired with those individuals to use violence?
Would you have to show that he told them to commit violence?
Would you have to show that he actually committed violence himself?
You would not have to show that he committed violence himself.
to show that he committed violence himself. You'd have to show that he agreed with people who were going to use violence or who were planning to use violence to stop the electoral bill count from
happening. So you basically need like Donald Trump sitting down with the Oath Keepers and with like a
map of the Capitol and saying, look, like this is how you guys should break into the building to stop Pence from doing his certification.
I don't think you need that much, but you need to be able to prove that the president
had an agreement or that he joined a conspiracy to not just have the vote count be stopped,
but to use force or violence to stop it. And the evidence is out
on the public record right now, I don't think would support that. Okay. So what about the charge
of defrauding the public, defrauding the American people? It seems like just from watching it that
there might be a lot of grist for a charge there.
I'm thinking of Trump's efforts to install loyalists at the Justice Department,
him pressuring the Secretary of State of Georgia to come up with the exact number of votes that he needed to win that state.
It certainly looks to many like he took these acts knowing that he lost the election,
but was still trying to overturn them anyway.
Are those examples of actions that could be used to show that he was defrauding the American people?
Look, there is a crime called conspiracy to defraud the United States.
And it effectively means conspiring or agreeing with other people where the intent is to stop or obstruct the lawful function of the government
using deceitful or dishonest means.
He says, for many watching the hearings,
it might seem like that charge describes Trump's behavior
in the period leading up to January 6th.
Because with the help of the little-known lawyer John Eastman,
Trump tried to come up with a scheme that would essentially overthrow the election.
And they did that based on a lie, that there was election fraud.
After all, Trump had been told many times, including by his own Attorney General Bill Barr, that there was no election fraud. After all, Trump had been told many times, including by his own Attorney General
Bill Barr, that there was no election fraud. Goldstein says there is probably enough evidence
to bring that kind of charge. But he also says, the difficulty with that kind of a charge here
is that it's a little novel. Conspiracy to defraud is something that's not itself novel, but applying it to this set of facts, as I've seen it,
is something that has not clearly been done before.
It would be an unusual use of the law.
And when you're a prosecutor,
you don't want to test run novel legal charges against a former president.
In short, bringing the charge of conspiracy to defraud the United States
would be far riskier and more difficult
than pursuing the third charge Trump could face,
obstructing a congressional proceeding.
Well, then let's get to that third charge,
the charge of obstructing an act of Congress.
Define that for us.
The proceeding itself would be the proceeding on January 6th where Congress and the vice president were going to certify the results of the 2020 election.
And the crime would be doing something or conspiring with others to do something to obstruct that proceeding
and to do it corruptly. How would you prove that someone obstructed an act of Congress
or a congressional proceeding? At the most basic level, you need two things. You need
some action that would impede or would tend to impede the proceeding itself. And then you need corrupt
intent. Intent is typically the hardest thing to show in a political corruption or an obstruction
investigation. It requires showing that somebody was acting with an improper motive, that he was effectively conscious of
wrongdoing at the time he took his action. And here, there's been a lot of evidence about the
president's advisors and lawyers and people from the Department of Justice telling the president
that the election was over, that there wasn't sufficient evidence of fraud to overturn the
results of the election. And so that's the kind of evidence that would get at the president's
intent as he's continuing to push these claims of fraud even after having been told all of that.
There's evidence that he was told that Mike Pence did not have the power to, on his own,
refuse to take part in the certification or to delay the certification of the votes, and that he continued to push Pence to do that.
And then there's the evidence of his conduct on January 6th itself and some of the things he did not do while it was clear that the Capitol had been effectively under siege and people were telling him to take
actions and he didn't. All of those are things that would go to helping establish the president's
intent. Okay, so there's some evidence that could help establish intent here, but as you said as a
prosecutor, you would want to establish intent and action. What would be,
putting the facts aside, which we're not supposed to do in journalism, what would a clear-cut
example be of an action? If I said make up an action that shows obstructing a congressional
proceeding, what would that look like? And I think like if, for example, if there was evidence that the president directed Mike Pence's security detail to not let Pence go to the Capitol or when he was there to actually direct them to get him out of there before he could certify the vote, that would be an act.
It would absolutely have the effect of impairing or impeding the proceeding.
absolutely have the effect of impairing or impeding the proceeding. And I think if that was what happened, I think it wouldn't be that hard to show that the intent was corrupt.
So you need a clear-cut example of Trump doing something that literally impedes this certification.
Not necessarily in that you could have an attempt or you could have a conspiracy,
but in the end, I think a prosecutor would still need to point to an act, an action
that the president either took himself or directed to have been taken
that would itself obstruct the proceeding.
Based on what we know, Trump tried to pressure Pence in the days leading up to January 6th to essentially take the certification into his own hands and either decide who won or send the votes back to the states.
You have Trump's actions on the ellipse where he gives a speech and he says, let's all march to the Capitol.
And then he tries to go there himself in his own motorcade. And then when the riot is going on, Trump tweets about Pence, criticizing Pence for how Pence did.
Explain to us why those different acts would potentially get you there or not get you there in terms of establishing that Trump did something to truly impede the proceeding.
I think for each of those acts, there are ways to look at them where they would, in fact, have had the tendency to obstruct the proceeding.
But they all have their own problems. For example, if the jawboning of Pence is basically a disagreement and he's not trying to actually stop the proceeding, he's trying to get the proceeding to come out in a way that's in his favor or hope that, you know, by going up there and then it getting delayed, it could buy him some time.
That's different than an action that could actually obstruct the proceeding and the other
things that you mentioned and that are out there the speech that the president gave on the ellipse
early that afternoon telling the secret service to take away the magnetometers
the tweet about the vice president when people were already inside the Capitol. These are things where, on the one hand,
you can make an argument that they were designed to try to rile people up to then be able to go
to the Capitol and to obstruct the proceeding. But there are also things that politicians generally
do. And there's a defense that this is political speech, that the tweet would be political speech,
that the only reason he would have said it
to not let the magnetometers stay up
would be because he wanted to pack the crowd
and nothing to do with trying to get people
who were armed to then go to the Capitol.
So what you're saying is that
because these actions that he took
are sort of braided together
with his First Amendment rights.
It makes it more difficult for those to be actual acts because it's unclear where sort of
his free speech rights begin or end and his intent to obstruct the proceeding
picks up from there. Is that right?
I think when it comes in particular to the speech itself and to the tweet,
and more other tweets, that those, he would have a legal argument
that it's core protected First Amendment activity.
He's the president. He needs to be able to talk to supporters.
He didn't explicitly say, let's go march on the Capitol
and break the doors down
and stop this proceeding from happening.
And so there's a real legal defense there.
And factually, there's the defense
that he did not, in fact,
sort of say the magic words
that would be, you know, true incitement.
At least he would have been argument
that that's not what he was actually doing.
So if I'm reading between the lines on what you're saying, it seems like in terms of these
two things you need, intent and an act. Based on what we know and has come out at the hearings,
there's probably enough on the intent side. But on the act side side it's fuzzier in terms of whether there's a clear
cut act is that i mean is if we're sitting back and we're assessing this and you're saying okay
just just do it for us right so like you're the prosecutor how much you know do you get there on
on each one number one i don't really want to weigh in on the strength of the evidence in part
because I don't know all of it and it would be a little bit of shooting from the sidelines to weigh
in. But number two, I do think it's important as the evidence is coming out of the January 6th
committee to realize that there are difficulties here in proving either
of these things. There are issues with, are any of the things that the president did or tried to
get others to do that day, would they really count as obstructive acts? And in terms of his intent,
there's definitely been a lot of evidence that has come out. Does that get you over the hump
of proving
beyond a reasonable doubt that the president was acting with a corrupt intent? I think these are
very hard questions. Beyond the obvious of like, you know, wanting to have witnesses in the room
for everything and documents backing it all up, if you were the prosecutor here, what would you
want to know? What would you really be keying in on to try and understand whether the president
broke the law? One thing that I think I would want to know, is there any evidence that the
president was telling people internally, anybody internally, that he didn't believe the things he
was saying, that he knew he had lost and that all of this was effectively a construct to try to stay in power.
If the department had evidence of him saying that to a confidant or to somebody who was in the inner circle,
that's the kind of evidence that I think if I were a prosecutor in this type of a case, I would really want.
And why does that change things? I think it goes right at the heart of intent, and it would put a bolster the acts because their intentions of the actual acts are clear.
Because I think what it could end up showing is that some of the actions might be able to be read in different ways.
If the government could actually show that the reason behind them, the intent behind them, was all about trying to stop the certification of the election,
that would then change what might be the type of act that could be read in two different directions and read in a way where actually that's the kind of action
where the purpose of it was to impede the certification of the election.
So bolstering one can help bolster the other.
It can.
We'll be right back.
After our last hearing, President Trump tried to call a witness in our investigation,
a witness you have not yet seen in these hearings.
That person declined to answer or respond to President Trump's call
and instead alerted their lawyer to the call.
Their lawyer alerted us, and this committee has supplied that information to the
Department of Justice. Let me say one more time, we will take any effort to influence witness
testimony very seriously. We've heard Liz Cheney talk about witness tampering.
Would a witness tampering charge here be more appealing to a prosecutor?
It's potentially because it's more straightforward than some of the other things that are out there.
It's easier for the public to digest, and the law on witness tampering is very clear.
You're not going to be pushing for some aggressive view of the law.
Look, I do think factually tying the former president to the type a witness tampering charge to stick,
a prosecutor would have to prove that Trump himself was involved in the outreach to witnesses
and that he intended to prevent the witnesses from testifying or from testifying truthfully.
He said while the evidence of outreach presented by the committee is concerning,
it doesn't prove that Trump was
trying to interfere in witness testimony. But if that were the provable crime, that in some ways
becomes easier to explain that no person can tamper with a witness as they're going to provide
testimony before Congress on an important issue.
So it's cleaner and clearer.
If the facts support it, I think it would be both cleaner and clearer.
Okay. So let's say if prosecutors think they can prove intent, they think they have an act,
an action, and they think they can prove the count beyond a reasonable doubt and they can survive an appeal and they send that up the chain of command at the justice department it lands on
Merrick Garland's desk in Washington and he says okay I accept at face value what you prosecutors have determined about intent and action, then Merrick Garland
has another decision to make, a whole other set of issues to look at.
What are those issues and what is that decision?
In this kind of a situation, it's not easy. As I said earlier, when a prosecutor
makes an analysis about whether to bring a criminal charge, in any case, they have to believe that the
person is guilty. They have to have the evidence to prove it and to have it withstand any challenge
on appeal. But then they also have to believe that it's in the public's interest
to bring the case. Is there a substantial federal interest in bringing this prosecution?
Explain what that means. What does the public's interest mean to a prosecutor?
Look, in some respects, it's a very straightforward thing that prosecutors consider all the time.
In some respects, it's a very straightforward thing that prosecutors consider all the time.
Most prosecutors believe that their job is to do justice.
And so, of course, what they want to do if they're going to charge somebody with a crime is not just do an analysis of the facts and the law, but also think about and believe
that this is the right thing for the country.
think about and believe that this is the right thing for the country. And there are factors that are actually listed in what's called the Justice Manual, which is the guidebook for all
federal prosecutors that walk through all the different factors that a prosecutor should consider
when evaluating the public interest in bringing a prosecution. And they include things like the seriousness of the offense, the circumstances of the defendant, the ability for there to be other means of accountability, the need for deterrence in that particular situation.
and the hard question is how do you weigh all these things?
And there's not an easy answer to that.
It comes down to an assessment of what you think is right and what you think is ultimately in the interests of the American public.
So what you're saying is that in our system,
we've entrusted prosecutors with not just the ability to investigate crimes and figure out
whether an individual violated the law in terms of whether the facts line up with the law but then on
top of that whether bringing such a prosecution is essentially the right thing to do. This power that we've given prosecutors in our country is
just so great that there's an added element of whether is this in the best interest of the
public that every case is looked at through. That's right. And why is it the prosecutor's job
to figure out whether it's in the best interest of the country and not simply just based on the evidence?
Why do they get to decide whether it's in the interest of the country or not?
In the criminal law, you want prosecutors to have some measure of discretion.
You want to have a prosecutor have the ability to say no, to say, you know what, there's a different forum to try to carry out the best interests of the public here.
potential candidate in a presidential election, potentially representing the whole country,
that you do want a prosecutor to consider the public interest there. Otherwise, you could effectively have your head sort of in the sand and, you know, be bullcharging ahead,
taking a step that could have massive ramifications for the whole country.
Why should that matter, right?
So one of the major tenets of the American legal system is that we're all treated the
same under the law.
Why is it that it seems like the bar for someone who's such a high-profile politician or a
former president or someone running is higher?
Why is that higher?
Why is that not the same for everyone else?
higher? Why is that not the same for everyone else? I don't think it's necessarily higher,
but the considerations when you're talking about a political leader are certainly different and harder because there, you know, you have the very clear and important rule that the Department of
Justice should try in every way possible not to interfere with elections,
to not take steps using the criminal process that could end up affecting the political process.
And so I think a prosecutor in evaluating what to do with potential criminal conduct by
a political leader has to weigh those things. And those are things that are just not going to be present
in the ordinary course.
Does it become so high profile at a point
that not prosecuting is as much a political decision
as prosecuting?
It certainly could be viewed that way.
And look, one of the things that the Department of Justice
has to weigh in this kind of a situation
is both what are the potential
ramifications of prosecuting, but also the ramifications of not prosecuting. And here,
in part because of just how high profile all of this is, if there were very clear evidence of a
crime and it was very straightforward and provable, but the Department of Justice walked
away. There is a real risk of the American people thinking that there are two systems of justice,
and that would be devastating to the mission of the department.
And in this case, in terms of assessing whether to bring a charge is the fact that it occurred around the
certification of the election something that we are supposed to hold so sacred in this country
in our democracy does that weigh in terms of look this is a really serious event and because a really
serious event led to complete mayhem on essentially
one entire branch of government, that a charge should be brought?
I think that shows exactly why it is so important to get this right.
And Merrick Garland has said publicly that he's effectively committing all the resources necessary to get to the bottom of what happened and to hold people accountable for it.
I think we should take him at his word.
But without question, what happened on January 6th was horrendous for our country and for our democracy.
You certainly wouldn't want to look away
if there's criminal wrongdoing there,
but you also want to make sure
that the cases that you bring are strong
and are the right cases to bring.
But also the issue is, look,
if we go to trial and we lose,
the consequences of that could be
just as great for the country, right?
I think that is right.
And I think that is one of the reasons why, before bringing criminal charges at this level as part of this investigation, the Department of Justice is going to want to make sure that their cases are as bulletproof as humanly possible. You know, one possibility to consider would be whether it would make sense
to delay bringing a charge until after the 2024 election. The upside of that is that you
potentially are not interfering in the actual electoral process and having a potential trial or pre-trial motions
right in the middle of an election. The downside is that you would still have all kinds of talk
and chatter about the presidential candidate being under investigation. And if he wins,
then you have an even more difficult decision. Do you then bring a charge after
the election is over against a candidate who won? So if we look at the whole landscape of this thing,
in your analysis, it seems like to me that bringing a prosecution against Donald Trump
would be difficult. It was difficult when he was in office
because he was president. It's now difficult because he's out of office and may run for
president. Maybe you have to delay this prosecution until after the 2024 election. If it's so hard
to prosecute a president or a former president or such a high-profile politician like this, why would we even investigate it anyway?
I think if there's evidence of criminal wrongdoing and it's a federal criminal wrongdoing, it is the job of the Department of Justice to investigate that.
of the Department of Justice to investigate that.
And in the end, an investigation such as the one being done by the January 6th Committee or an investigation
like what we did under Special Counsel Mueller,
there are forms of accountability that are vindicated
even if criminal charges are not brought.
You know, one of the great things that the January 6th Committee
has been able to do has been to show in much greater detail what was actually happening on January 6th, not just inside Congress and among the people who stormed the Capitol, but also inside the White House at that time.
And I think all of the American public are better for having seen these facts and knowing what is out there.
If ultimately that doesn't result in a criminal prosecution of the president or any of his top
advisors, that doesn't mean that there hasn't been some real good that has come out of the
January 6th Committee.
Andrew, thank you so much for coming in to talk to us today.
It was a pleasure to be here. During a news conference on Wednesday, Attorney General Merrick Garland was asked about the
potential perils of bringing criminal charges against a former president.
Look, no person is above the law in this country.
Nothing stops us.
No per- I don't know how to, maybe I'll say that again.
No person is above the law in this country.
I can't say it any more clearly than that.
There is nothing in the principles of prosecution,
in any other factors which prevent us from investigating anyone.
Anyone who's criminally responsible for an attempt to undo a democratic election.
The January 6th committee's next hearing is scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight. Thank you. We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Here's what else you need to know today.
A bipartisan group of senators has reached a deal to modernize the 135-year-old Electoral Count Act,
the law that President Trump sought to abuse on January 6th to remain in office.
Their proposed legislation seeks to guarantee a peaceful transfer of power from one president to the next by, among other things, clarifying that the vice president's role
in certifying electoral votes on January 6th is purely ceremonial.
And on Wednesday, Russia expanded its territorial ambitions in Ukraine,
saying that it wants to capture land in the country's south.
That's a reversal from a few months ago,
when Russia said it would only seek to capture territory in Ukraine's east.
But so far, it's unclear if Russia can follow through with the threat.
Today's episode was produced by Jessica Chung
and Aastha Chaturvedi,
with help from Stella Tan.
It was edited by Michael Benoit,
Lisa Chow, and Paige Cowett,
contains original music by Dan Powell and Marian Lozano,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderland. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.