Trump risks interfering with New York attack prosecution, despite warnings in Bergdahl case
Reporting from Washington — President Trump has relentlessly tweeted and spoken about the man accused of killing eight people in a terror attack in New York, risking the possibility of interfering with the prosecution — even as he got a concrete example of why presidents normally avoid such behavior.
Since the Tuesday attacks, Trump has called Sayfullo Saipov “the degenerate animal who killed, and so badly wounded, the wonderful people on the West Side,” demanded the death penalty in his case and raised the prospect of sending him to the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
He also has exaggerated, repeatedly suggesting that Saipov brought in two dozen potentially “evil” family members. Under immigration rules, Saipov would not have been able to bring in that number. Trump conceded in a Thursday night interview that his statement might not be true.
Typically, presidents, who have authority over the Department of Justice, stay silent on even the most egregious cases rather than offer statements that could complicate prosecutions or give ammunition to defense attorneys. Trump has not followed suit.
Indeed, his tweeted insult at Saipov on Friday came amid a blast of criticism of the FBI and Justice Department, which he accused of dallying in prosecuting his 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton. Trump offered no evidence of illegalities on Clinton’s part.
“At some point the Justice Department, and the FBI, must do what is right and proper,” Trump tweeted. “The American public deserves it!” On Thursday night, in a radio interview, Trump said he was “frustrated” that he could not order officials to prosecute Clinton.
Friday, he told reporters as he left on a 12-day foreign trip that “a lot of people are disappointed in the Justice Department, including me.”
Those comments brought a protest from Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, a Republican who has become a strong critic of Trump.
“President Trump’s pressuring of the Justice Department and FBI to pursue cases against his adversaries and calling for punishment before trials take place are totally inappropriate,” he said in a statement.
Trump’s latest criticisms came the day that the case against Bowe Bergdahl, who abandoned his Army post in Afghanistan in 2009, provided strong evidence of how such comments can backfire. A military judge sentenced Bergdahl to a dishonorable discharge but no prison time. The judge noted Trump’s attacks on Bergdahl as a mitigating factor for the defense. Military law includes protections against “command interference,” including by the commander in chief.
Throughout his presidential campaign, Trump lambasted Bergdahl, at one point calling him “a no-good traitor who should have been executed.”
After the sentencing, Bergdahl’s attorney, Eugene R. Fidell, said he will raise Trump’s comments as part of an appeal.
Trump’s words represented “one of the most preposterous states of affairs” in legal history, Fidell told reporters. “President Trump’s unprincipled effort to stoke a lynch-mob atmosphere while seeking our nation’s highest office has cast a dark cloud over the case,” he said. “Every American should be offended by his assault on the fair administration of justice and disdain for basic constitutional rights.”
That did not stop Trump from tweeting his disagreement with the verdict: “The decision on Sergeant Bergdahl is a complete and total disgrace to our Country and to our Military,” he wrote.
The Saipov case has given Trump a new defendant to discuss — and, like Bergdahl, an unsympathetic one. Saipov came into the country seven years ago from Uzbekistan under a visa program for countries with historically low rates of entrance into the U.S.
“Applicants are randomly selected in an annual lottery,” Trump said Thursday, calling for the program to be eliminated. “And the people put in that lottery are not that country’s finest. We know that the program presents significant vulnerabilities to our national security.”
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Trump’s press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, underscored that message by claiming, incorrectly, that entrants like Saipov are not vetted. They are vetted the way other visa applicants are.
Trump also has repeatedly insisted that Saipov brought family members into the country with him. The president has long campaigned against what he terms “chain migration,” in which family members of those already in the U.S. have priority for immigration. For several days, he has suggested that Saipov brought in two dozen people.
“CHAIN MIGRATION must end now!” he tweeted Wednesday. “Some people come in, and they bring their whole family with them, who can be truly evil. NOT ACCEPTABLE!”
“This man that came in — or whatever you want to call him — brought in with him other people. And he was a point — he was the point of contact, the primary point of contact for — and this is preliminarily — 23 people that came in, or potentially came in with him. And that’s not acceptable,” Trump said Wednesday.
In an interview Thursday night, Fox News host Laura Ingraham asked Trump if that figure had been “verified.” The president hedged.
“It’s what I heard, it’s what I gave,” he said. “Whether it’s 23 or whether it’s two, as far as I’m concerned, it’s too much, OK?”
According to federal immigration rules, Saipov would not have been able to bring in anywhere near two dozen people. Immigration law allows a green card holder to petition for the entrance of an unmarried child or a spouse. Petitions can only be made when here, so Saipov would not have been able to bring relatives in with him. Each family member must be petitioned for separately, and the process can take years for each individual.
A White House spokesman would not comment on the president’s words, forwarding inquiries to the Department of Homeland Security. Maria Elena Upson, a DHS spokeswoman, said she could not specifically discuss Saipov’s case or the president’s comments. She confirmed that permanent residents are not allowed to bring in family members other than a spouse or unmarried child.
“They cannot petition for their mother, father or siblings or married children,” she said.
Twitter: @cathleendecker
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