|
Sotomayor dissent -
|
"Orders the Navy's Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political rival?" she wrote. "Immune." | |
"Organizes a military coup to hold onto power? Immune. Takes a bribe in exchange for a pardon? Immune. Immune, immune, immune." |
"Even if these nightmare scenarios never play out, and I pray they never do,
the damage has been done," Justice Sotomayor wrote.
"In every use of official power, the President is now a king above the law."
Justice Sotomayor was joined in her dissent by the court's two other liberal justices, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Elena Kagan.
Justice Jackson wrote in a separate dissent that
the majority's ruling "breaks new and dangerous ground" by "discarding" the
nation's long-held principle that no-one is above the law.
"That core principle has long prevented our Nation from devolving into despotism," she said.
Justice Sotomayor argued that the majority had invented a notion of absolute immunity for a president performing "official acts", even though it has at times been assumed that presidents could be prosecuted for things they did while in office.
She was visibly emotional as she spent more than 20 minutes reading out parts of her opinion on Monday.
She cited Richard Nixon getting pardoned by the
president who succeeded him, Gerald Ford, for using
his official powers to obstruct an investigation into the
Watergate burglary - the scandal that eventually led to Mr
Nixon's resignation.
Those involved in the case were under the presumption that Mr
Nixon did not have immunity
and could be prosecuted after leaving office, Justice
Sotomayor wrote.
Her opinion went much further back in history as well. She quoted US Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, who wrote that former presidents would be "liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law".
Normally, court dissents include the word “respectfully” but Ms Sotomayor signed off hers by writing: “With fear for our democracy, I dissent.”
President Biden’s campaign manager, Quentin Fulks,
in a call with reporters.
"Immune, immune, immune. They just handed Donald Trump
keys to a dictatorship," Mr Fulks said.
Legal experts indicated that the scenarios laid out by the justices, as stark as they might seem, are open to further interpretation, particularly by lower courts.
Jeffrey Cohen, an associate professor at Boston College Law School, told the
BBC that the opinion lacks clarity as to what counts as
an official act.
“There’s language in there that suggests that official
acts could bleed into unofficial acts really easily and render things
presumptively immune,” he said. “It’s a problem that the court has left us all
with this sinking feeling that they’re presuming almost everything is immune.”