When former President Donald Trump indicated that he expected to be arrested by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, he didn’t pledge to fight the charges in court, or promise to abide by the legal system. Instead, the former president and his supporters, including those in Congress, hysterically attacked the prosecutor and threatened to interfere in the investigation. Before seeing the indictment and underlying evidence, they denounced the prosecution as political and unfounded. And in a foreboding echo of his actions in the lead-up to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, Trump called for protests in a further attempt to undermine our democratic foundations.
As a former federal prosecutor and the lead counsel in the first impeachment of President Trump, I helped prove that he abused the power of the presidency by extorting Ukraine for his personal benefit. I then ran for Congress principally on a platform of preserving and protecting our democracy and the rule of law. As Trump faces the first of several possible indictments, we must affirm a core value that the former president rejects: No person is above the law.
If we are truly a government of laws, not men, then it follows that the law should bend for no person.
The rule of law that underlies our democratic values finds its roots in the Greek philosopher Aristotle, who stated: “Passion influences those who are in power … Law is reason without desire.” Our second president John Adams stressed the importance of this concept for our fledgling democracy, insisting that “it may be a government of laws and not of men.” In order to preserve fidelity to the rule of law, Adams and our other Founding Fathers enshrined the separation of powers in our Constitution. They ensured that a neutral judicial branch would interpret and enforce laws passed by the Legislature and implemented by the executive branch. And they delegated critical responsibilities to the states, including the prosecution of most crimes. Neither the target of this investigation nor his defenders in Congress has any right to intervene in this prosecution, as they are trying to do.
Our criminal justice system includes vital protections against the awesome power of the prosecutor. The first is the grand jury, which decides whether there is sufficient evidence to support an indictment proposed by the prosecutor.
The second, of course, is the fundamental right to a trial by jury — 12 peers who must unanimously agree that the prosecutor has proven a crime beyond a reasonable doubt, the most stringent standard in our legal system.
If we are truly a government of laws, not men, then it follows that the law should bend for no person. Just like every other person, Trump has constitutional rights to a trial by jury, to confront his accusers and to legal counsel. If he believes that the legal basis for the charge is unfounded, he can make that argument to a judge, who decides the law.









