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Ex-attorney general says US president can be prosecuted after leaving office

Former US Attorney General Eric Holder insists President Donald Trump can be prosecuted after leaving office. (Photo by AFP)

Former US Attorney General Eric Holder has said that the country’s President Donald Trump can be subjected to prosecution after his presidential tenure ends.

Responding to a question on whether Trump could be prosecuted, the Obama administration’s top judicial official said during a Saturday interview with CNN that "I don’t think there’s any question about that."

Holder was being interviewed by former Obama adviser David Axelrod, who asked him: “If there is no impeachment, do you believe that [Trump] is subject to prosecution after he leaves office?"

"We already have an indictment in the Southern District of New York," Holder further asserted, referencing former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s guilty plea to campaign finance violations. 

"Individual-1 is the president, and it would seem to me that the next attorney general, the next president, is going to have to make a determination," he then emphasized. 

Cohen is in prison for campaign finance violations stemming from hush money payments. He testified before Congress last February that Trump directed him to make the payments.

Justice Department guidance states, however, that a sitting president cannot be indicted.

The development came a day after the US House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler of New York revealed that an "impeachment inquiry" has already begun against  Trump.

Speaking with CNN’s Chris Cuomo on Friday, Nadler further discussed the role of his committee, which has taken the lead in investigating potential charges against Trump that were raised in the Mueller report.

Highlighting on the legal term “impeachment inquiry,” Cuomo asked Nadler specifically whether that "was what his team was doing right now?”

“It is not necessarily called an impeachment inquiry ... It is, however, what we are doing,” Nadler replied.

“We have been very clear the last several months. We are conducting an investigation with the purpose, among other things, of determining whether to report Articles of Impeachment to the entire House. That’s exactly what we are doing. Whether you want to call it an impeachment investigation, impeachment inquiry, I am not interested in the nomenclature.”

Earlier press reports indicated that the committee was exploring new strategies and establishing the grounds to probe Trump on charge of obstruction of justice, allegations of campaign finance violations, witness tampering and unlawful self-enrichment through his business ventures.


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