Can a sitting U.S. President be federally indicted or prosecuted? Exploring the history of impeachment and prosecution in (1) England and Great Britain, (2) colonial America, and (3) the states immediately after independence--and comparing these to the Founders\u27 Constitutional discussions--this article considers how the Founders would have answered that question, were it posed to them today. Deviating from most analyses of the problem, it argues that the Founders would have viewed the question as jurisdictional, involving a conflict between Courts of Law on the one hand, and the Congress -- operating as a High Grand Jury (the House) and a High Court of Impeachment (the Senate) -- on the other. They would have said that Congress, when ope...
The second impeachment of President Donald J. Trump raised an important and unresolved question: May...
The constitutional tragedy-or was it farce?-that the nation went through at the end of the millenniu...
Today\u27s subject, whether a sitting President may be indicted, is one that I have addressed in pri...
Can a sitting U.S. President be federally indicted or prosecuted? Exploring the history of impeachme...
This symposium addresses the difficult question of whether a President can be criminally prosecuted ...
The frequent investigations examining the possibility of executive misconduct suggest the country ev...
Can a sitting President ever be criminally prosecuted (outside an impeachment court)? The question h...
This article addresses whether the Constitution protects a sitting President from indictment. The te...
This article addresses the thorny question of whether a President can be criminally prosecuted while...
There are few topics more difficult or important than the question of whether the president of the U...
In 1996, my student Brian Kalt and I co-authored an article explaining that a sitting President is c...
Can a sitting President be indicted while in office? This critical constitutional question has never...
This Article intends to clarify some of the more difficult legal issues in our nation’s separation o...
The author begins his analysis with the statement that a constitutionally valid distinction between ...
This Article addresses a specific, but critically important aspect of presidential power: the inters...
The second impeachment of President Donald J. Trump raised an important and unresolved question: May...
The constitutional tragedy-or was it farce?-that the nation went through at the end of the millenniu...
Today\u27s subject, whether a sitting President may be indicted, is one that I have addressed in pri...
Can a sitting U.S. President be federally indicted or prosecuted? Exploring the history of impeachme...
This symposium addresses the difficult question of whether a President can be criminally prosecuted ...
The frequent investigations examining the possibility of executive misconduct suggest the country ev...
Can a sitting President ever be criminally prosecuted (outside an impeachment court)? The question h...
This article addresses whether the Constitution protects a sitting President from indictment. The te...
This article addresses the thorny question of whether a President can be criminally prosecuted while...
There are few topics more difficult or important than the question of whether the president of the U...
In 1996, my student Brian Kalt and I co-authored an article explaining that a sitting President is c...
Can a sitting President be indicted while in office? This critical constitutional question has never...
This Article intends to clarify some of the more difficult legal issues in our nation’s separation o...
The author begins his analysis with the statement that a constitutionally valid distinction between ...
This Article addresses a specific, but critically important aspect of presidential power: the inters...
The second impeachment of President Donald J. Trump raised an important and unresolved question: May...
The constitutional tragedy-or was it farce?-that the nation went through at the end of the millenniu...
Today\u27s subject, whether a sitting President may be indicted, is one that I have addressed in pri...