[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1315 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1315
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the Supreme
Court of the United States should use its powers under the All Writs
Act to protect its jurisdiction and bring the questions of Federal and
constitutional law and equity before the Court for resolution with all
deliberate speed and possible urgency.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
June 21, 2024
Mr. Timmons submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the Supreme
Court of the United States should use its powers under the All Writs
Act to protect its jurisdiction and bring the questions of Federal and
constitutional law and equity before the Court for resolution with all
deliberate speed and possible urgency.
Whereas the United States is founded on the constitutional bedrock principles of
fair trials and equal justice for all before the law;
Whereas the use of weaponized prosecutions, ``lawfare'', political show trials,
two-tiered justice systems, and targeted political prosecutions are
hostile to the founding principles of the United States;
Whereas, in the case of The People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump,
a conviction on several counts was entered against former President and
presumptive Republican nominee for President, former President Donald J.
Trump, on May 20, 2024, in the Supreme Court of the State of New York,
New York County;
Whereas this conviction was the result of a targeted, dogged, abusive,
desperate, and politically motivated prosecution by Manhattan District
Attorney Alvin Bragg;
Whereas District Attorney Alvin Bragg resurrected a zombie case, declined by the
Federal prosecutors of the Southern District of New York and previously
declined by his own District Attorney's office;
Whereas the Federal Election Commission likewise found no reason to issue a
civil fine over the same allegations;
Whereas elected District Attorney Alvin Bragg resurrected this zombie case to
fulfill his electoral promise to New Yorkers to hold former President
Trump ``accountable'';
Whereas Alvin Bragg even went so far as to staff his office with zealous
activists, like former senior Biden Department of Justice official
Matthew Colangelo, who has previously targeted former President Trump,
to drive the prosecution;
Whereas the judge in the case, Juan Merchan, has and had a clear conflict of
interest in the case, with his daughter's role as president of Authentic
Campaigns, a firm known for representing and fundraising for Democrat
politicians, and whose Democrat clients have fundraised off of this
prosecution;
Whereas the New York State Commission on Judiciary Conduct privately cautioned
Judge Merchan in July over his own illegal and unethical political
donations to Biden and Democrats in 2020, while a sitting judge of the
New York State Supreme Court;
Whereas members of this chamber have filed a complaint against Judge Merchan
with the New York State Commission on Judiciary Conduct regarding these
improprieties;
Whereas throughout the pretrial and trial proceedings Judge Merchan consistently
demonstrated favor toward the prosecution through rulings and
unconstitutional gag orders on the presumptive Republican nominee for
President;
Whereas the unprecedented nature of the prosecution and overwhelming public
interest in the case of The People of the State of New York v. Donald J.
Trump is matter of public record and merits both judicial notice and
judicial intervention from superior Federal courts;
Whereas this conviction was based on novel, questionable, and untested legal
theories advanced for the purpose of a targeted prosecution against the
former President and presumptive Republican nominee;
Whereas there are serious, substantial, and dire questions of Federal and
constitutional law under the First Amendment, Fifth Amendment, Sixth
Amendment, and Fourteenth Amendment, requiring dispositive resolution
before the Court arising from multiple reversible, clear errors in the
case of The People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump;
Whereas the charges against former President Trump were misdemeanors time-barred
by the New York statute of limitations;
Whereas the charges against former President Trump involved conduct allegations,
such as Federal elections law violations, that are the exclusive
jurisdiction of Federal authorities to enforce and resolve;
Whereas former President Trump was convicted based on uncharged conduct, ranging
from conspiracy to conceal a Federal election law violation and
falsification of business records, to tax law violations, which never
had to be proven at trial or specified;
Whereas that uncharged and unproven conduct provided the predicate for felony
escalation and the basis for avoiding the time-bar that would otherwise
have precluded the entire proceeding;
Whereas prosecutors were permitted to expressly state to the jury that it was
``a fact'' that Federal election law violations occurred in this case at
the direction of former President Trump, even though that ``fact'' was
directly at issue in the case and required a factual finding by the jury
to maintain the felony escalation theory;
Whereas the jury instructions in the case were constitutionally deficient and
legally flawed by allowing for a nonunanimous, or ``4-4-4'' verdict on
the uncharged conduct, despite the clear command of the Supreme Court
that the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments ``require[] a unanimous verdict
to convict a defendant of a serious offense,'' in Ramos v. Louisiana,
590 U.S. 83 (2020);
Whereas the verdict form returned in the case did not even ask for the
specificity of jury findings of the various uncharged conduct theories
found in the case, denying the former President his right to fair notice
and confrontation;
Whereas the conviction was obtained in part through the testimony of a
discredited witness with a personal animus toward former President
Trump, admitted felon and disbarred attorney Michael D. Cohen;
Whereas the conviction was obtained in part through the entry of other highly
prejudicial and immaterial testimony and evidence that never should have
been admitted;
Whereas former President Trump is the presumptive Republican nominee for
President of the United States, the highest office in the Nation, and
the occupant of which is a matter of utmost public importance;
Whereas the Republican Convention to nominate a Presidential candidate is on
July 11, 2024, and the Presidential election is November 5, 2024;
Whereas the felony conviction of a presumptive major party nominee for President
can cause confusion for candidate ballot access, depending on State law
and despite the opinion of the Supreme Court in Trump v. Anderson, No.
23-719 (2023) (reversing the removal of Donald Trump from Colorado's
Republican primary ballot);
Whereas the politically motivated prosecution and conviction draws into question
the integrity of Federal Presidential elections, of which the government
``indisputably has a compelling interest in preserving the integrity . .
.''Eu v. San Francisco County Democratic Central Comm., 489 U. S. 214,
231 (1989);
Whereas the bias of both the judge and prosecutor in this case, as well as the
numerous procedural flaws, raises dire issues of judicial impartiality,
the appearance of propriety, and faith in the judicial system;
Whereas the ``principles of equity'' require speedy resolution of legal issues
that could affect voter decision and information at ``a time
sufficiently early to permit the holding of elections . . . without
great difficulty'', cf. Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 585-86 (1964);
Whereas the public interest is in final and Supreme disposition of the
substantial questions of Federal law raised in the case;
Whereas the Supreme Court has previously intervened in order to provide final
and dispositive resolution as to questions of law and equity arising
from essential and crucial Presidential electoral deadlines, e.g., Bush
v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98 (2000); and
Whereas under the All Writs Act (28 U.S.C. 1651) ``the Supreme Court and all
courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs necessary or
appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to
the usages and principles of law'': Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives
that--
(1) immediate resolution of these matters is necessary for
the people of the United States to make informed decisions
about the upcoming Presidential election, would be necessary
and appropriate in aid of the respective jurisdictions of the
Federal courts, is demanded by the principles of equity, and is
agreeable to the usages and principles of law; and
(2) with all due deference to the respective coequal
branches of government, that the Supreme Court of the United
States should use its powers under the All Writs Act to protect
its jurisdiction and bring the questions of Federal and
constitutional law and equity before the Court for resolution
with all deliberate speed and possible urgency.
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