A Republican lawmaker is considering ways to hold prosecutors who abuse their powers to greater legal liability, including ending blanket legal immunity from lawsuits for misconduct.
Trump has since been indicted.
In a new interview with Just The News, Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) said that Republicans are now also considering altering the qualified immunity rules that protect prosecutors from being sued for misconduct.
“I think you’re going to have to look at prosecutorial misconduct and whether or not prosecutors in this country should be exempt from liability,” Scott said.
The indictment against the former president remains sealed. But it comes after Bragg’s office had been looking into Trump’s alleged involvement in a $130,000 payment in 2016 to adult entertainment actress Stormy Daniels by his lawyer at the time, Michael Cohen. The payment was allegedly made to stop Daniels from going public with her claim of an affair with Trump before the 2016 election. Trump denies the alleged affair and directing the payment.
Bragg’s office may argue the payment should have been classified as a campaign expense but was wrongly classified as a business expense by the Trump Organization—in violation of Section 175 of New York law—which ranks the falsification of business records as a Class E felony. The DOJ had already declined to prosecute the 2016 payment to Daniels as an election law violation.
Scott decried Bragg’s potential case against Trump, which may stem from a years-old allegation that federal prosecutors already declined.
Qualified immunity became a topic of debate in the summer of 2020, amid discussions on police reform following the death of George Floyd. Qualified immunity is a legal principle that protects government officials from civil liability for discretionary actions they may take that could violate a person’s civil rights in most case. Some police reform efforts sought to remove or modify qualified immunity protections for police officers after Floyd died while in the custody of Minneapolis Police Officers.
“These left-wing, liberal prosecutors and George Soros prosecutors want to take away immunity from police officers, yet they want to maintain it for themselves. I guarantee you if this prosecutor did not have immunity for his actions, he would not have filed this against Donald Trump,” Scott told Just The News.
States Adding Oversight Against Prosecutors
An aide for Scott told NTD that the federal representative’s office is not currently preparing legislation impacting qualified immunity for prosecutors.Bragg, Democrats Push Back on GOP
Bragg and some Democratic lawmakers have defended his decision to charge Trump and accused Republican critics of interfering with a legally valid prosecution.After Republican lawmakers called for Bragg to testify before Congress about his case, the legal counsel for Bragg’s office, Lesli Dubeck, said such oversight efforts “would interfere with law enforcement” and said a “congressional review of a pending criminal investigation usurps executive powers.”
Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), the ranking member on the House Judiciary Committee criticized the efforts of his Republican counterparts for seeking to compel Bragg’s testimony before congress.
“Ms. Pelosi mistakenly says that Trump can prove his innocence at trial,” the note states. “Law in the US assumes the innocence of a defendant and the prosecution must prove guilt for a conviction.”