Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.),
a member of the House select committee investigating the Jan 6, 2021, attack at
the Capitol, said on Sunday, July 24, that he believes the Department of
Justice (DOJ) should investigate former President Trump for his actions on that
day.
“If
the department were now to take the position that you can’t investigate or
indict a former president, then a president becomes above the law. That’s a
very dangerous idea that the founders would have never subscribed to,” Schiff
said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
“Even
more dangerous, I think in the case of Donald Trump. Donald Trump is someone
who has shown when he’s not held accountable, he goes on to commit worse and
worse abuses of power. So I agree … there was evidence that the former
president engaged in multiple violations of the law, and that should be
investigated.”
When
moderator Margaret Brennan mentioned the notion of the political calculus
surrounding the possible prosecution of a former president, Schiff said it
would be worse to not hold Trump accountable at all.
“It’s
certainly not a step to be taken lightly at all. At the same time, immunizing a
former president who has engaged in wrongdoing, I would agree with our vice
chair, I think is more dangerous than anything else, and the decision not to
move forward to the investigation or not to move forward to the prosecution,
because of someone’s political status or political influence or because they
have a following – to me, that is a far more dangerous thing to our
Constitution than following the evidence wherever it leads, including when it
leads to a former president,” Schiff responded.
Schiff
added that the latest committee hearings have shown Trump’s efforts to have the
2020 elections results overturned, noting how Trump didn’t make any efforts to
stop the insurrection during that day.
“He wouldn’t lift a
finger as he watched on TV police officers being beaten and gouged and sprayed
with chemicals in the most supreme dereliction of duty ever,” Schiff said. “But
also, those multiple lines of effort, I think, invoke various criminal laws and
his conduct ought to be the subject of investigation.”
The Hill
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