Trump's Justice Dept. reportedly failed to find a crime in Biden's use of autopen - MS NOW
One former U.S. attorney described the investigation itself as “a disgusting abuse of power,” which was more than fair given the circumstances.
In a healthier political environment, June 4, 2025, would be recognized as one of the most important days of Donald Trump’s presidency. It was on that day that the Republican incumbent took a step no American president had ever before taken: He directed the Department of Justice to launch a wide-ranging investigation into Joe Biden, based on Republican conspiracy theories about the Democrat’s mental acuity.
This was the first time in the nation’s history that an incumbent American president publicly ordered a federal probe into his predecessor.
There was a degree of irony to the circumstances. After his defeat in the 2020 election, Trump spent years insisting that Biden had ordered an investigation into him — an odd conspiracy theory for which there is literally no evidence. As of last June, however, it was Trump who did exactly what he falsely accused his predecessor of doing.
A day later, the Republican conceded that he had no evidence whatsoever of Biden doing anything wrong. “You know, it’s just one of those things,” Trump said, trying to justify the DOJ directive.
Whatever happened to this presidential directive? Nine months later, we appear to have an answer. The New York Times reported:
The Justice Department, after calls by President Trump to investigate former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., scrutinized whether Mr. Biden and his aides broke the law in using the autopen to sign presidential documents, but was ultimately unable to move forward with making a case, according to three people briefed on the matter.
MS NOW has not independently confirmed the reporting, though NBC News had a nearly identical report, noting that the case against the former president was “shelved.”
For those committed to the rule of law and the integrity of federal law enforcement, the reports may offer a sigh of relief: Trump demanded that prosecutors go after Biden, only to discover that prosecutors couldn’t find anything, causing the baseless crusade to evaporate.
But while the outcome is reassuring, the underlying process reflects one of the great Justice Department scandals of the modern era. Federal prosecutors pursued a criminal case against a former president, not because of evidence of wrongdoing but because the incumbent president, obsessed with retaliating against his perceived political enemies, barked unjust orders at the DOJ.
University of Michigan law professor Barbara McQuade, a former U.S. attorney and an MS NOW legal analyst, described this as “a disgusting abuse of power” — an assessment that is more than fair, given the circumstances.
Making matters worse is the degree to which these abuses have become the new norm since Trump returned to power. It was, after all, just last week when the public learned that Trump’s Justice Department also tried and failed to secure felony indictments against six members of Congress (two Democratic senators and four Democratic House members) because they appeared in a video urging military service members to disregard illegal orders.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.
Sign in to leave a comment.