SCOTUS ruling: Supreme Court decision on Trump immunity case | CNN Politics

Supreme Court rules Trump is entitled to some immunity in January 6 case

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Honig says this is why Trump's trial won't happen before the election
01:34 - Source: CNN

What we covered here today

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Our live coverage of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling has concluded. Please scroll through the posts below for details on what happened on Monday. And read our takeaways here.

Biden rips Supreme Court's immunity decision and warns about a possible second term for Trump

President Joe Biden on Monday ripped the Supreme Court’s decision on presidential immunity, which ruled that presidents have an absolute immunity from prosecution for core official acts, and issued a stern warning over a possible second term for former President Donald Trump.

Biden repeatedly warned that the limits of the president’s power now solely rest with the choices made by the holder of the office. He said Trump would be a danger in that role.

Read more about Biden’s speech

Analysis: The Supreme Court just gave presidents a superpower. Here’s what you need to know

With its immunity ruling on Monday, the Supreme Court granted former President Donald Trump’s wish of all but guaranteeing that his criminal trial for trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election will not go to trial before the 2024 election in November.

It also granted presidents in general a definitive “absolute immunity” from prosecution for core official acts and said presidents should be presumed immune for a much more expansive list of acts.

In the view of the majority comprised of the six conservative justices on the court, the decision does not place presidents in general, and Trump in particular, above the law. But the three liberals dissented with a warning about how elevating a president will affect American democracy.

The decision has the near-term result of delaying Trump’s trial while a court in Washington, DC, considers which criminal activity that Trump is accused of can be considered “unofficial.” It also has the long-term effect of placing presidents in a different system of justice than other Americans.

Here are some key lines from a landmark ruling:

  • What is this new immunity? Chief Justice John Roberts explains it in the majority opinion as including absolute immunity for some actions and a presumption of immunity for others.
  • Why does a president need this immunity? So that he can act boldly as president and take actions without fear of later prosecution clouding his judgement, according to the court. 
  • What does it say in the Constitution about presidents getting special immunity? Nothing. But that’s no problem, according to Roberts.
  • How far does this immunity extend? A president gets “at least a presumptive immunity” even for acts “within the outer perimeter of his official responsibility,” according to the court. But it’s careful to add that he gets no immunity for “unofficial acts” – and despite the broad reach of the immunity, the court argues presidents are still accountable.

Read more of the analysis of the Supreme Court’s ruling here.

A version of this story appears in CNN’s What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.

How Trump is now poised to avoid pre-election trials in 3 out of 4 of his criminal cases

As last summer came to a close, the four criminal cases that had been brought against former President Donald Trump posed both extraordinary political peril as well as the very real threat that the 2024 Republican White House front-runner would be convicted by multiple juries before the first ballot was cast.

What a difference a year made — or, perhaps more accurately, didn’t make.

With Monday’s Supreme Court presidential immunity ruling likely preventing a trial in the federal election subversion case before the election, Trump is poised to avoid pre-election trials in the three most significant criminal prosecutions he faces.

He was convicted in the fourth. But the hush money case brought by the Manhattan district attorney was widely viewed as the least serious and most tangential to the choice voters will make on November 5, as it used a controversial legal theory to target conduct that has been publicly known for nearly a decade.

It is possible that he won’t even receive prison time in the case.

Americans will go to the polls this fall without a verdict on whether Trump broke federal and state laws by seeking to overturn the 2020 election, or whether his hoarding of sensitive government documents post-presidency violated national security statutes.

November’s election will not only select the country’s next leader. It will determine Trump’s legal fate. If elected, it’s widely expected that Trump will make the federal prosecutions against him go away, either by ordering his attorney general to dismiss them or by pardoning himself.

Read more about how the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling impacted Trump’s criminal cases.

Burgum calls Supreme Court ruling on Trump's presidential immunity "a big win for America"

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, a potential running mate to President Donald Trump, on Monday called the Supreme Court’s ruling that Trump may claim immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts “a big win” for the country.

The Republican governor argued that the court’s ruling “isn’t a ruling for President Trump” but “for presidents.”

“This ruling also protects Joe Biden from immunity against official acts in office and we need to have immunity for presidents of the United States, particularly when we’re in times, like we are now, we’re conducting war in these proxy wars around the world,” he said.

He accused Democrats of being upset over the ruling because “they see it as stopping what they were actually doing, which was political warfare” against Trump, as the court’s decision will likely further delay a trial on the federal election subversion charges against Trump.

Asked what he would’ve done if he were in former Vice President Mike Pence’s shoes on January 6, 2021, Burgum said, “This hypothetical is one that’s not going to happen. President Trump, he wins, he serves four years. He won’t be on the ballot again.”

Meanwhile, Justice Department trying to determine next steps in January 6 cases after immunity ruling Friday

After the Supreme Court on Friday limited the Justice Department’s ability to pursue obstruction charges against January 6 defendants, prosecutors are now trying to parse out what the decision means for the affected cases. 

In one case against alleged Oath Keeper Donovan Crowl, prosecutors asked Monday for a one- to two-month delay in his sentencing, citing the need “to evaluate the impact of the Court’s decision in Fischer on the defendant’s case.” 

Prosecutors, in their request to delay, said that the Supreme Court did not “reject the application” of the obstruction statute “to January 6” as a whole. 

Within hours of the Supreme Court ruling in the Joseph Fischer case, trial-level judges in the DC District Court started reopening cases against January 6 rioters, indicating they may be re-sentenced.  

The Justice Department has indicted in several cases that it needs more time to consider the impact of the Fischer opinion. Prosecutors also may try to shore up the evidence in some January 6 cases to meet the standard set by the Supreme Court.

According to the US attorney’s office in Washington, DC, about 249 cases involved the obstruction charge out of more than 1,400 people charged in the Capitol riot. 

Following a bench trial before Federal Judge Amit Mehta in July of last year, Crowl was found guilty of two counts, including conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, the charge at the center of the Supreme Court decision. 

In March, Mehta initially allowed Crowl’s sentencing to be delayed until after the Supreme Court decided on the Fischer case, after a request from his defense attorney. 

In a separate January 6 case on Monday, defendant Thomas Robertson — a former Virginia police officer who was sentenced to more than seven years for his actions on January 6 — has asked the federal judge overseeing his case to hold a re-sentencing hearing in the wake of the Fischer decision.  

Supreme Court decision could reshape Georgia election subversion case against Trump

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis looks on during a hearing in the case of the State of Georgia v. Donald John Trump at the Fulton County Courthouse on March 1, 2024, in Atlanta.

The Supreme Court’s decision on presidential immunity could reshape the criminal case against former President Donald Trump in Georgia related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in the Peach State.

The Georgia case has been paused while an appeals court weighs whether Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis should be disqualified – an unrelated decision that is not expected to come until after the November presidential election.

If Willis is allowed to remain on the case, proceedings at the trial court level would be allowed to resume – meaning Fulton County Judge Scott McAfee would have to go through the same analysis on presidential immunity that the US Supreme Court is requiring in the federal election subversion case. Under that test, Trump is entitled to some immunity for official acts as president and none for unofficial acts.

Trump’s lead attorney in the Georgia case, Steve Sadow, argued in January that the state-level charges should be dismissed on immunity grounds.

Prosecutors had been waiting for the Supreme Court to weigh in before responding to Sadow’s motion.

Willis’ office did not respond to CNN’s request for comment on Monday.

CNN legal analyst Michael Moore said the Supreme Court decision will undoubtedly complicate the Georgia case, noting that evidence related to official acts – that the justices said are immune from prosecution – would be excluded from the Georgia case, too.

That “creates a major problem in the Georgia case because Willis is relying largely on the state’s anti-racketeering statute,” Moore said.

“The usual benefit of that charge is that each defendant can be held accountable for the bad acts of their co-defendants,” Moore said, but if certain Trump conduct is not considered criminal, “how can the co-defendants have conspired to commit criminal acts?” he added.

But Anthony Michael Kreis, an attorney who has closely monitored the Georgia RICO case, said the impact on the case “should be minimal.”

“By and large, because the crux of the alleged criminality rests on Trump reaching out to state officials seeking a particular electoral outcome for his private benefit, the overall impact should be minimal because that conduct falls outside the ambit of official presidential functions,” he said.

Defense attorneys in the Georgia case say any decision from McAfee on presidential immunity would be subject to appeal, potentially all the way back up to the US Supreme Court. Other issues, like the Supremacy Clause, could also come into play.

White House offers very brief reaction to Supreme Court decision on immunity

More than four hours after the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity, the White House shared a brief reaction.

That statement does not invoke former President Donald Trump, but obliquely references what it casts as Trump’s efforts to tear down the justice system.

The Biden campaign shared a more fulsome statement minutes after the ruling was issued.

Majority opinion has echoes of famous Nixon quote

In the majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts justified the partial granting of immunity to Donald Trump with an explanation that seemingly echoed one of former President Richard Nixon’s most infamous quotes from the Watergate era.

Roberts wrote that, “The ‘justifying purposes’ of the immunity … we recognize today, are not that the President must be immune because he is the President; rather, they are to ensure that the President can undertake his constitutionally designated functions effectively, free from undue pressures or distortions.”

This appeared to push back against the notion that the conservative majority was granting Trump, or any future president, special protection because of the fact that they are the president. It was evocative of Nixon’s widely panned assertion in a 1977 post-resignation interview that, “when the president does it, that means that it is not illegal.” 

Instead, Roberts said the decision was grounded in past rulings and writings from the Founding Fathers, including the Federalist Papers, which were cited by the majority.

Key takeaways from the Supreme Court’s historic decision granting Donald Trump immunity  

People gather outside the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.

Here’s a look at the key takeaways from Monday’s historic Supreme Court ruling that granted Donald Trump partial immunity from special counsel Jack Smith’s election subversion case and handed the former president a significant win during his reelection bid.

Trump got a bigger win than expected: For starters, the Supreme Court ruled that for “core” presidential activity, Trump has the absolute immunity he had sought. The majority said that Trump’s conversations with the Justice Department – his efforts to try to get officials on board with his effort to overturn the election – were covered with absolute immunity. For other official actions and more routine powers held by the president, the court said there is at least some immunity and it largely deferred to lower courts to sort that out. That’s a process that could take weeks or even months. Perhaps even more important, the majority made clear that official acts cannot be considered at all as evidence in a potential trial, which could make it much harder for Smith to prevail.

What’s next in the federal case against Trump? The next steps are likely to be more hearings, written arguments and even proceedings with witness testimony and debates over evidence before US District Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, DC. Once Chutkan works through the legal issues, it’s possible that more appeals of her preliminary decisions could put the case on hold again – adding in significant delay.

Liberals tear into majority for creating “a king above the law”: The nation’s long-held principle that no one is above the law was washed away by a ruling that means that in “every use of official power, the President is now a king above the law,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor said as she took the rare step of reading her dissent from the bench on Monday in a move that underscored how aggrieved the liberal bloc of the court is. “With fear for our democracy, I dissent,” she wrote at the end of her 30-page dissent.

Trump’s nominee Barrett pushes for a swift trial: Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s last appointee to the high court before leaving office, expressed frustration with how the court was sending the case back to lower courts for more proceedings and more delay in a short concurrence that failed to gain support from any of her colleagues.

Posterity vs. Trump: There was a clear tension through the course of the case between justices who wanted to limit the decision to the facts surrounding Trump’s effort to overturn the election and the broader concerns about presidential immunity for all future presidents. In the end, Roberts repeatedly framed the court’s decision as one made for posterity rather than any single president. The immunity, he wrote, “applies equally to all occupants of the Oval Office, regardless of politics, policy, or party.”

Read more takeaways on the Supreme Court ruling here.

CNN’s Katelyn Polantz contributed to this report.

Supreme Court's decision shows how justices had to grapple with extent of presidential immunity

A close look at the majority opinion, the concurrences and dissents — which span nearly 120 pages in total — show how Donald Trump’s boundary-pushing tenure forced the nation’s highest courts to grapple with how much power our presidents should have.

On nearly 20 occasions, the opinions cite previous Trump-related rulings that addressed questions about his susceptibility to state criminal investigations, congressional probes about his personal, and his potential civil liability for the January 6, 2021, insurrection.

The Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. Vance — a landmark 2020 case that said state prosecutors can subpoena a sitting president as part of a criminal investigation — is mentioned at least 11 times in Monday’s opinions. That case stemmed from Trump’s efforts to resist a subpoena in the New York state inquiry into his business dealings.

The majority on Monday cited the Vance case to point to the “unrivaled gravity and breadth” of the presidency, and that “the independence of the Executive Branch” might be undercut if it was routinely under criminal scrutiny. They raised these points while concluding that Trump has some immunity in his federal election subversion indictment. 

The justices’ opinions repeatedly brought up Trump v. Mazars, another Supreme Court ruling about Trump’s efforts to resist a congressional subpoena. They also referenced a consequential DC Circuit Court of Appeals decision about Trump’s potential liability for January 6, in civil cases brought by police officers and lawmakers.

All of these cases helped define the bounds of presidential immunity from legal scrutiny.

Trump's election subversion case needs to keep "moving forward" despite SCOTUS ruling, Clyburn says

Federal prosecutors and courts need to keep “moving forward” with the election subversion case against former President Donald Trump, even with the Supreme Court’s immunity decision, Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina said on Monday.

The Supreme Court ruled Monday that Donald Trump may claim immunity from criminal prosecution for some of the actions he took in the waning days of his presidency in a decision that will likely further delay a trial on federal election subversion charges pending against him. 

Former January 6 Committee chairman calls Supreme Court "lawless and corrupt"

Rep. Bennie Thompson is seen before a House Homeland Security Committee hearing titled "Havoc in the Heartland: How Secretary Mayorkas' Failed Leadership Has Impacted the States," at the US Capitol on January 10 in Washington, DC. 

Former January 6 Committee chairman Bennie Thompson called the Supreme Court “lawless and corrupt,” stating that the court has “chosen partisanship over their duty to do impartial justice.”  

As chairman of the select committee, Thompson played an integral role in dissecting Donald Trump’s involvement in the Capitol insurrection following his electoral loss.

Here's what happens next in Trump’s election interference case after the immunity decision

The biggest question now that the Supreme Court has decided Donald Trump is entitled to some immunity from prosecution: What happens next in special counsel Jack Smith’s election interference case against the former president?

Assuming Smith stays the course, written arguments and even proceedings with witness testimony and evidence are likely to be next before US District Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, DC.

The special counsel’s office has not responded yet publicly to the decision, and there is nothing at the moment on Chutkan’s docket indicating what next steps will be taken in the trial court.

Those are likely to come in the days after the Supreme Court hands the opinion down formally to the federal courts in DC. The mechanism for sending a case back down usually takes as a long as a month, but the high court could act more quickly — particularly if a party asks it to.

Once Chutkan works through the legal issues, it’s possible that more appeals could put the case on hold again. This is why it may be unlikely for Trump to go to trial this year, if at all. But courts can be hard to predict.

Where does immunity apply? The Supreme Court put one set of allegations against Trump — regarding his and his allies’ efforts to weaponize the Justice Department — in the bucket of absolute immunity.

For the several other categories of allegations, Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion said that the lower courts will have to go through a process of “fact-specific” and perhaps “challenging” analysis.

The Supreme Court said that that Trump’s pressure campaign on then-Vice President Mike Pence to help him overturn the election is “presumptively” immune, and put the burden on the prosecutors to rebut the presumptive immunity.

As for Trump’s state-level efforts to overturn the results, including the fake electors scheme, the high court told lower courts to analyze what of that conduct was an official act and what was not. Roberts said that analysis will require an “assessment of numerous alleged interactions with a wide variety of state officials and private persons.”

Read more about the implications of the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity and catch up on the four criminal cases Trump faces.

Trump legal team likely to use SCOTUS immunity opinion to challenge hush money criminal verdict, source says 

Donald Trump’s legal team will likely use Monday’s SCOTUS opinion as they challenge the New York hush money criminal verdict itself on appeal, a source familiar with their thinking tells CNN.

Trump’s team thinks the SCOTUS option could be used to challenge portions of Hope Hicks testimony as well as some of the tweets entered in as evidence, according to the source familiar.

CNN earlier reported the Trump team sees the opinion as “a major victory” because in addition to using it to try to get charges tossed, they can also use this opinion to get evidence related to official acts tossed in all cases — not just federal — which can hurt prosecutors’ ability to prove what charges are left.

Remember: The hush money case and 2020 election subversion case, which is at the center of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, are two of four criminal cases Trump faces while running again for president.

Here's how the Supreme Court immunity ruling impacts Trump's January 6 case

While the Supreme Court said that presidents are immune from prosecution for official acts, the justices didn’t define exactly what actions are official and which are unofficial.

But the high court did address a few of former President Donald Trump’s actions:

  • Conversations between Trump and the Department of Justice: Official act. Trump is immune from prosecution.
  • Trump allegedly pressuring then-Vice President Mike Pence to not count certified electoral votes on January 6: Trump is presumed immune, but the case is remanded to lower courts for further review.
  • Trump allegedly pressuring state officials to change their state’s electoral votes from Biden to Trump: Not answered. Remanded to lower courts for review.
  • Trump allegedly inciting violence in the Jan. 6 insurrection: Not answered. Remanded to lower courts for review.

Chief Justice John Roberts said the trial court will have to assess what of Trump’s alleged conduct is immunized under the new test handed down by the high court, and the opinion said that additional briefing will be needed for the trial court to do so.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s dissent claims that the majority’s ruling would allow presidents to be immune from prosecution should they order Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political rival, organize a military coup to hold onto power or accept a bribe in exchange for a pardon.

“President is now a king above the law,” Sotomayor declared. Justices Jackson and Kagan also joined this dissent.

Ocasio-Cortez says she plans to file articles of impeachment after ruling, but doesn't say who against

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks to journalists following a roundtable discussion on Supreme Court Ethics conducted by Democrats of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee at the Rayburn House Office Building on June 11 in Washington, DC.

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said she plans to file articles of impeachment given the Supreme Court ruling on Monday that would give Donald Trump limited immunity against criminal prosecution based on his time in office.

It’s unclear who Ocasio-Cortez plans to file impeachment against, but she has been active in efforts to increase accountability from the Supreme Court and investigate potential ethics violations of its justices.

Ocasio-Cortez first called for Justice Clarence Thomas’ impeachment on X in 2023 following a bombshell ProPublica report that detailed his travel paid for by Republican donor Harlan Crow, which included trips on the donor’s yacht and private jet.

Also last year, she reiterated on the impeachment call in an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union,” asking for an inquiry into the matter and saying it was “the House’s responsibility to pursue that investigation in the form of impeachment.”

The post was updated with background on Ocasio-Cortez’s previous statements regarding the Supreme Court.

Democratic National Committee chair says today's immunity decision "underscores the stakes of this election"

Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison said the Supreme Court’s decision that Donald Trump may claim immunity from criminal prosecution for some of the actions he took as president “underscores the stakes of this election.”

“It’s hard to believe, but Trump has only become more unhinged in the years since he lost to Joe Biden, promising to be a dictator on ‘day one,’ suggesting the ‘termination’ of our Constitution to overturn valid election results, and warning of a ‘bloodbath’ if he loses again. The only thing standing between Donald Trump and his threats to our democracy is President Biden – and the American people will stand once again on the side of democracy this November,” the DNC chair said.

Kinzinger says Supreme Court has "stripped the guardrails of democracy" with Trump immunity decision

The Supreme Court has “stripped the guardrails of democracy,” former Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois said in a post on X following this morning’s immunity decision

Speaking to CNN’s Dana Bash, Kinzinger described the Supreme Court’s ruling as “really disappointing.” 

While he accepted that there had to be some immunity for presidents, he said he believed the Supreme Court should have dispatched the case quickly, and could not understand the delay in handing down the decision.

More background: The former representative served as one of two GOP members on the House select committee investigating the Capitol riot. The panel concluded its work in December 2022 and laid out a case for the DOJ and the public that there is evidence to pursue charges against Trump on multiple criminal statutes.

Last week, Kinzinger announced he was endorsing Biden as president.

Speaker Johnson calls SCOTUS immunity decision a Trump "victory" and Biden "defeat"

House Speaker Mike Johnson talks to reporters at the US Capitol on June 28, in Washington, DC. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson said on Monday that the recent Supreme Court ruling, which grants Donald Trump limited immunity on actions taken during his presidency, is a “victory” in Trump’s favor.

Johnson’s words echo Trump’s narrative that the efforts by special counsel Jack Smith were politicized, which has caught wind among Republican lawmakers and justices. The House Appropriations Committee released a proposal last week that would involve nearly $1 billion in cuts to the Justice Department.

Meanwhile, Justice Clarence Thomas on Monday raised questions about whether Attorney General Merrick Garland violated the Constitution when he appointed Jack Smith as special counsel

Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell — and two of the top contenders for his leadership position next Congress, Senate GOP Whip John Thune and Sen. John Cornyn — have not weighed in yet on the Supreme Court’s decision.