Current:Home > ContactPeter Navarro must report to federal prison today after Chief Justice John Roberts rejects bid to delay sentence -Core Financial Strategies
Peter Navarro must report to federal prison today after Chief Justice John Roberts rejects bid to delay sentence
View
Date:2025-04-21 09:47:54
Washington — Chief Justice John Roberts on Monday rejected an attempt by former Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro to stay out of prison as he pursues an appeal of his conviction for contempt of Congress, clearing the way for him to begin serving a four-month sentence in Florida on Tuesday.
Navarro was charged and found guilty after he refused to comply with a subpoena from the House select committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Congressional investigators were seeking documents and testimony from the former White House official tied to his post 2020-election conduct and efforts to delay the certification of Electoral College votes.
He was sentenced to four months in prison in January. He appealed both his conviction and the trial judge's decision to enforce his sentence as the appeal is further litigated. Navarro has long held that he thought he was bound by executive privilege when he refused to comply with the committee's demands, but the judge overseeing his case ruled there was no evidence that the privilege was actually invoked.
Navarro has been ordered to turn himself into federal prison in Miami by Tuesday. His attorneys declined to comment on Roberts' order.
A three-judge panel on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals already rejected his bid to delay the sentence, writing he was unlikely to secure a new trial or reverse his conviction.
In urging the Supreme Court to grant him emergency relief and put a hold on his surrender, Navarro's lawyers argued that he is neither a flight risk nor a threat to public safety, and therefore should be allowed to remain free while he pursues his appeal.
"Dr. Navarro is the only former senior presidential advisor to be prosecuted for contempt of Congress following an assertion of executive privilege by the president that advisor served," his attorneys wrote in their request to the court.
They told the justices that Navarro's prosecution for contempt of Congress violated the separation of powers doctrine, so his conviction must be reversed and the indictment against him dismissed.
His legal team also argued that the questions Navarro plans to raise on appeal, which involve the assertion of executive privilege, are ones that have not been answered before, and therefore warrant his release for now.
"Dr. Navarro does not dispute that his failure to comply with the congressional subpoena at issue was deliberate. Rather, he contests that any such prosecution was consistent with the separation of powers doctrine," they said. "Not once before Dr. Navarro's prosecution has the Department of Justice concluded a senior presidential advisor may be prosecuted for contempt of Congress following an assertion of executive privilege."
The Justice Department opposed Navarro's bid for release, and argued that he fell short of meeting the standard for such relief.
Roberts wrote in his order that he saw "no basis to disagree with the determination that Navarro forfeited those arguments in the release proceeding, which is distinct from his pending appeal on the merits." He acted alone as the justice who oversees requests from emergency relief arising from the District of Columbia Circuit.
Navarro said in a statement that he'd continue his appeal on the merits, and if he fails in the appeal, "the constitutional separation of powers will be irreparably damaged and the doctrine of executive privilege dating back to George Washington will cease to function as an important safeguard for effective presidential decision-making. There is much at stake here and it is worth the fight."
Many of the records the Jan. 6 select committee was seeking were personal communications that couldn't implicate executive privilege, the Biden administration said, and Navarro is not contesting the district court's finding that Trump did not actually assert the privilege.
"If privilege was never asserted, it cannot be a defense to the prosecution here," wrote Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, who represents the federal government before the Supreme Court.
Prelogar noted that presidents often decline to assert executive privilege in response to congressional subpoenas, and said the president's superiority in that process would be "gravely undermined" if a subordinate — Navarro in this case — could override that determination.
Navarro's "suggestion that he was 'duty-bound' to claim executive privilege notwithstanding former President Trump's failure to assert it thus gets things exactly backward," she wrote.
Navarro was not the first Trump administration official to be convicted of defying Jan. 6 Committee demands, but he will be the first to report to prison. Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon was found guilty of two counts of contempt of Congress and sentenced to four months in prison. The judge overseeing his case paused the prison term as Bannon pursues an appeal of his own, writing it was likely his conviction could be reversed.
Robert LegareRobert Legare is a CBS News multiplatform reporter and producer covering the Justice Department, federal courts and investigations. He was previously an associate producer for the "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell."
veryGood! (1183)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Don't assume Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti is clueless or naive as he deals with Michigan
- Conservative Muslims protest Coldplay’s planned concert in Indonesia over the band’s LGBTQ+ support
- Drinks giant Diageo sees share price slide after warning about sales in Caribbean and Latin America
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- AJ McLean Reveals Where He and Wife Rochelle Stand 8 Months After Announcing Separation
- Sex therapist Dr. Ruth is NY's first loneliness ambassador – just what the doctor ordered
- Shohei Ohtani is donating 60,000 baseball gloves to Japanese schoolchildren
- Trump's 'stop
- Justice Department asks to join lawsuits over abortion travel
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- Nicki Minaj Reveals Why She Decided to Get a Breast Reduction
- 'The Killer' review: Michael Fassbender is a flawed hitman in David Fincher's fun Netflix film
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Media watchdog says it was just ‘raising questions’ with insinuations about photographers and Hamas
- The movie 'Elf' is coming back to select theaters to celebrate 20th anniversary
- Bipartisan group of senators working through weekend to forge border security deal: We have to act now
Recommendation
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
'The Marvels' is a light comedy about light powers
Manny Machado digs in at groundbreaking for San Diego FC’s training complex and academy
Belmont University freshman Jillian Ludwig dies after being shot by stray bullet in Nashville park
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
What Biden's executive order on AI does and means
Ryan Gosling Is Just a Grammy Nominee
How American Girl dolls became a part of American culture — problems and all