Constitutional provisions Article II, Section 4 provides for which crimes the President shall be removed from office by impeachment in the House and conviction in the Senate.
Article I, Section 3, Clause 7 specifies that a President impeached by the House and convicted by the Senate is nevertheless "liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment according to Law."
Background A number of sources have repeated a claim that
Ulysses S. Grant was
arrested in office in 1872, and this has been cited in the context of presidential immunity. While the
Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia has appeared to confirm this narrative, there does not seem to be any contemporaneous documentation of it, which has caused the
Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site to question its
historical accuracy. A similar claim regarding
Franklin Pierce has been dismissed as
apocryphal by Pierce scholar Peter Wallner. Two
vice presidents have been indicted:
Aaron Burr in New York and New Jersey for killing
Alexander Hamilton in
a duel; and
Spiro Agnew, who pleaded
no contest to several offenses at the moment of
his resignation. However, the same arguments have not been made for vice presidential immunity as for presidential. Its arguments include that the president "is the symbolic head of the Nation. To wound him by a criminal proceeding is to hamstring the operation of the whole governmental apparatus in both foreign and domestic affairs." It says that the statute of limitations should not be tolled while the president is in office, but suggests that Congress could extend the statute of limitations specifically for presidents. After the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in
Clinton, the OLC issued a second memorandum in 2000, distinguishing civil and criminal presidential immunity and determining that it was still improper to prosecute a president due to the adverse affect it might have on his ability to govern. Neither memorandum has force of law, but both are binding within the Department of Justice. Because they were not promulgated with room for
public comment, they do not qualify as
administrative law either; rather, they are an internal prosecutorial policy. The memoranda are not taken to bar investigating the president or even announcing a determination that the president has broken the law, as Nixon, Clinton, and
Donald Trump have all been subject to criminal investigations while in office.
Special counsel determinations and further debate The staff of
Leon Jaworski, the
special counsel investigating Watergate, wrote an internal memorandum in 1974 concluding that Jaworski could indict Nixon, then the sitting president. Jaworski later argued the same in court, but ultimately deferred to Congress's
impeachment powers. Nixon later resigned
facing impeachment. In 1998, a consultant for
Ken Starr, who as
independent counsel was investigating Clinton, wrote a memorandum discussing the topic at greater length and reaching the same conclusion. Starr drafted an indictment of Clinton but never filed it, instead reporting to Congress, which
impeached and later
acquitted Clinton. The question of presidential criminal immunity re-emerged during the
presidency of Donald Trump and
Robert Mueller's
special counsel investigation. The
Mueller report determined that Mueller was bound by the 1973 and 2000 OLC memoranda. Mueller found that he could investigate Trump, but concluded that, since he could not indict him and thereby give him the chance to defend himself, it would not be fair to label Trump's actions criminal. Amidst the investigation,
Laurence Tribe argued in
The Boston Globe and
Lawfare that it is constitutional to prosecute a sitting president, citing a hypothetical example of a president who blatantly murders someone.
Philip Bobbitt in
Lawfare respectfully disagreed with Tribe, in particular his logic that any president indicted after an impeachment will be pardoned by his successor (
as with Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon).
Walter Dellinger argued that a sitting president cannot be put on trial but can still be indicted.
Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash compares the OLC's reasoning to that of an "unabashed monarchist".
Kim Wehle has criticized the OLC memoranda at length in
The Atlantic and
Stanford Law & Policy Review, highlighting that they have no force of law and could be overturned by the
attorney general at any time. Wehle goes as far as to say that, if necessary, federal courts should issue
writs of mandamus forcing the Department of Justice to apply laws equally to the president, an extension of logic used by Judge
Brett Kavanaugh in
In re Aiken County (2011).
Donald Trump election obstruction case During a January 9, 2024, hearing regarding
Trump's 2020 election obstruction case, Trump's attorney,
D. John Sauer, argued before a three-judge panel of the
DC Circuit Court of Appeals that Trump enjoyed absolute immunity for any crimes he may have committed as president. Judge
Florence Pan asked Sauer whether immunity would cover a sitting president who orders the assassination of a political opponent. Sauer responded that prosecution could only start after a successful impeachment conviction; Pan replied that the response did not answer her question. The three judges questioned the contention that impeachment and conviction by Congress was a prerequisite for any criminal prosecution. Pan asked Sauer how a defendant who claims "blanket" immunity can also plausibly and concurrently claim immunity conditioned on the President having been "impeached and convicted" by Congress: "Once you concede that presidents can be prosecuted under some circumstances, your separation of powers argument falls away, and the issues before us are narrowed to are you correct in your interpretation of the impeachment judgment clause?" On February 6, a federal appeals court dismissed Trump's assertion of absolute immunity from criminal charges during his tenure as president. On March 6, the Supreme Court set a date of April 25 for its consideration of the criminal immunity argument related to former President
Trump’s claim of presidential immunity. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Donald Trump's eligibility to appear on the 2024 presidential primary ballot, finding that the former U.S. president is eligible to participate in the primary. Specifically, with respect to the
Insurrection Clause, the Court confirmed that states can only restrict the eligibility of state officials and do not have the authority to enforce Section 3 as it relates to the office of the President, which is a federal office. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments regarding Trump's assertion of absolute immunity on April 25. Trump attorneys cited the 1982
Nixon v. Fitzgerald civil suit which found in a 5–4 decision that a president "is entitled to absolute immunity from
damages liability predicated on his official acts" and "the President's absolute immunity extends to all acts within the 'outer perimeter' of his duties of office." Attorneys for the
Smith special counsel investigation that was prosecuting Trump cited
United States v. Nixon, the 1974 unanimous Supreme Court decision rejecting Nixon's claim of "absolute, unqualified Presidential privilege of immunity from judicial process under all circumstances." Smith attorneys argued the
Fitzgerald precedent, which found presidents enjoy absolute immunity from civil suits, does not apply to federal criminal prosecutions. On July 1, 2024, the Supreme Court ruled in
Trump v. United States that presidents have absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for those official acts which fall within their "exclusive sphere of constitutional authority". For those official acts that do not fall within this inner core, but nevertheless within "the outer perimeter of his official responsibility", a president enjoys at least a presumptive immunity. When it comes to unofficial acts, there is no immunity. The case was returned to the lower courts to determine whether Trump's actions related to the January 6, 2021, attacks on the U.S. Capitol were official or not, and if so, then to which degree of immunity they would be entitled. == See also ==