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Could Donald Trump Jr. Be Charged With Treason? Short Answer

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But he, and others in the Trump campaign, may have violated other laws.
The headlines get more breathless by the moment. “Explosive new charges!” “A bombshell!”
Was it a crime for Donald Trump Jr. to meet with a Russian government-connected lawyer who promised dirt on Hillary Clinton for use in the presidential campaign? Was it worse than a crime? Was it treason?
The latest Russian caper — this one involving the president’s son, his then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort, and the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner — has Washington (pardon the pun) atwitter.
In terms of what is now being investigated, “we are now beyond obstruction of justice, ” Sen. Tim Kaine, the former Democratic vice presidential candidate of Virginia, said Tuesday. “This is moving into perjury, false statements, and even potentially treason.”
Richard Painter, who served as the chief White House ethics lawyer in the George W. Bush administration, agrees, noting that “the dictionary definition” of treason and the “common understanding” is “a betrayal of one’s country, and in particular, the helping of a foreign adversary against one’s own country.”
More laws in play
Painter acknowledges that the crime of treason is rarely charged in the United States for a variety of reasons, including the fact that the Constitution requires either a declaration of war or some attempt to overthrow the government by violence. But, as he observed in an interview with NPR, “we just use other statutes because most of what is treason would have violated another statute anyway.”
During the Cold War, for instance, when Americans gave secrets to the Soviet Union, the charge used to prosecute accused spies, including Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, was espionage. Most were sentenced to prison; the Rosenbergs were executed.
Today, other, less dire laws are in play. Painter and others, for instance, maintain. there is the possibility that Trump Jr. violated campaign laws by seeking to acquire something of value — namely, opposition research to use against Clinton — from a foreigner. U. S. campaign finance laws explicitly bar obtaining money or other things of value from foreigners.
Indeed, Kushner and Manafort could be in legal jeopardy, too. They also met with the Russian lawyer after they were forwarded the email exchange promising that she had “information that would incriminate Hillary and her dealings with Russia, ” to which Trump Jr. responded, “I love it especially later in the summer.”
And then there are laws barring perjury or making false statements to law enforcement officials. Painter says that he presumes Trump, Jr., as well as Manafort and Kushner, were interviewed by the FBI in connection with Kushner’s security clearance, for instance. Any potential false statements made during that process — denials about meetings with Russians, for example — could put any of the three in legal jeopardy, he says.
The Trumps and the White House have repeatedly denied there was any collusion between the campaign and the Russian government. Donald Trump Jr. says his June 2016 meeting in Trump Tower did not produce in the information that had been referenced via email about Clinton. He said he did not discuss the meeting with his father — ” there was nothing to tell.”
Treason is deliberately hard to prove and rare in U. S. history
Using the word “treason” can be a fraught affair. As Yale Law School’s Eugene Fidell observes, treason is the only crime specifically mentioned and defined in the Constitution because it was a charge so abused by the English monarchy. In rebelling against the Crown, the Founders put a narrow definition of treason into the Constitution as “a protection, ” according to Fidell. Under the Constitution, “treason against the United States shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.”
Subsequent interpretations, by James Madison in the Federalist Papers and Chief Justice John Marshall in an 1807 Supreme Court opinion, have connected treason only to the “levying of war” or the use of force to overthrow the established institutions of government.
There is a second protection as well for those accused of treason. Under the explicit terms of Article III of the Constitution, “no person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses, ” both confirming the same “overt act, “or on confession [of the accused] in open court.”
That requirement is an unusually high bar to meet, which is part of why there have been relatively few successful treason prosecutions in the nation’s history. Fewer than a handful of those convicted were put to death, and some were acquitted—including Aaron Burr, accused of intending to found an independent nation in the Western states.
Indeed, many were subsequently pardoned or had their sentences commuted. Two men convicted of treason in the Whiskey Rebellion and sentenced to death by hanging, were later pardoned by George Washington. The leader of the Fries Rebellion and two accomplices were convicted of treason and sentenced to death in 1800, but they were pardoned the same year by President John Adams.
Perhaps the most infamous American turncoat was Benedict Arnold, the Revolutionary War general who switched sides, and spied for the British. Although his co-conspirator was executed, Arnold escaped to Britain.
A more modern example was Iva Toguri D’ Aquino, an American citizen dubbed ” Tokyo Rose ” by American servicemen in the Pacific during World War II. Stuck in Japan at the time of Pearl Harbor, and under pressure, she refused to renounce her U. S. citizenship but participated in propaganda broadcasts aimed at allied servicemen. When she returned to the U. S. after the war, she was convicted of treason, served six years of a 10-year sentence. She was later pardoned by President Gerald Ford after the Chicago Tribune reported that the two major witnesses against her had been coached to give false testimony.

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