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U.S. Special Counsel "Trump's attempt to overturn the presidential election is a private act."

2024.10.03 PM 12:22
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[Anchor]
A U.S. federal special prosecutor's team has called former President Donald Trump's attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election a private act that cannot be subject to criminal immunity.


It was against the Supreme Court's earlier recognition of the former president's broad immunity from public conduct while in office,

I'm connecting you with a reporter from the international department. Reporter Hong Joo Ye!

[Reporter]
Yes, this is the international department.

[Anchor]
There are only about 30 days left until the U.S. presidential election, and evidence against Trump has been released?

[Reporter]
The 165-page document submitted to the court by Special Counsel Jack Smith's team included former President Donald Trump's conversations with then-Vice President Mike Pence after the November 2020 presidential election.

Former Vice President Pence accepted the results of the presidential election and advised him to run again in 2024, but former President Trump said, "I don't know," adding, " 2024 is too far."

In January of the following year, former President Trump persuaded then-Vice President Pence, who also serves as Senate president, to refuse to certify the election results, saying that people would think it was stupid if Congress certified "Joe Biden's election."

The special prosecution team pointed out that former President Trump was in office when he tried to overturn the presidential election, but the scheme was fundamentally private.

He then pointed out that former President Trump relied on crime to remain in power even after losing the presidential election.

Earlier in July, the Supreme Court made a decision that broadly recognized immunity from public conduct while the former president was in office.

As a result, the special prosecution team, which indicted former President Trump on charges of attempting to overturn the presidential election and leaking confidential documents, is in a position to cancel the indictment on "public conduct" among the indictments.

Therefore, the independent counsel team seems to have refuted the judgment of Chief Justice John Roberts, who estimated that former President Trump could apply immunity to the charges of pressuring former Vice President Pence.

I'm Hong Joo Ye of YTN in the international department.



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