• @dunidane
    link
    83 months ago

    The Senate chose not to impeach because by the time they got around to it he was not president. It had nothing to do with the legality of it. It was even stated by several of them that the actions were now left to the justice system.

    There is no reason why a president should be immune from prosecution for crimes committed during the presidency.

    • @mwguy@infosec.pub
      link
      fedilink
      03 months ago

      Which was stupid. They should have continued to impeach because then they could legally bar him from running from office again.

      There is no reason why a president should be immune from prosecution for crimes committed during the presidency.

      Can you really think of no way to abuse this? Imagine when Biden leaves office if Texas tries to prosecute him for “dereliction of duty” or on whatever Texas’ equivalent of a RICO charge is because his actions “assisted organized crime”. Should they be allowed to?

      • @BrokenGlepnir@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        73 months ago

        It wouldn’t be in Texas’s jurisdiction. The president should not be above the law. If I would be prosecuted then so should he.

        • @mwguy@infosec.pub
          link
          fedilink
          03 months ago

          I mean it almost certainly would be in Texas Jurisdiction. Actual crimes of that nature are prosecuted at the state level every day.