Will Trump still face lawsuits? Will he use Justice Department to sue his enemies?

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President-elect Donald Trump made history last night, not only as the second president ever elected to non-sequential terms in the White House. He is also the first American president ever elected with a felony conviction.

Besides the felony conviction, Mr. Trump is facing criminal felony charges in three other cases: two related to his failed efforts to overturn the 2020 election result, and one related to his alleged unlawful retention of classified documents after leaving office four years ago.

Why We Wrote This

Newly elected president Donald Trump has a bucket of legal problems – and a Justice Department soon at his disposal. He may reshape American justice.

With his re-election on Tuesday, those legal troubles are now likely to disappear, experts say. What could emerge in its place is legal trouble for Mr. Trump’s political opponents. And after a campaign in which Mr. Trump repeatedly claimed that he would pursue retribution against political opponents, some worry that his administration’s priorities could have troubling implications for the rule of law.

“For all intents and purposes, his criminal prosecutions are over,” says Jeffrey Cohen, a former federal prosecutor and an associate professor at Boston College Law School. “There’s some clean-up to do, but he’s going to effectively avoid any kind of accountability.’’

President-elect Donald Trump made history on election night. He is not only the second president ever elected to non-sequential terms in the White House but also the first American president ever elected with a felony conviction.

Legal troubles hung over Mr. Trump the entire campaign, but voters did not seem to mind. Besides the felony conviction, he is facing criminal charges in three other cases: two related to his failed efforts to overturn the 2020 election result and one related to his alleged unlawful retention of classified documents after leaving office four years ago.

With his re-election last night, experts say those legal troubles are likely to disappear. Some observers worry that what could emerge in its place is legal trouble for Mr. Trump’s political opponents.

Why We Wrote This

Newly elected president Donald Trump has a bucket of legal problems – and a Justice Department soon at his disposal. He may reshape American justice.

“For all intents and purposes, his criminal prosecutions are over,” says Jeffrey Cohen, a former federal prosecutor and an associate professor at Boston College Law School. “There’s some clean-up to do, but he’s going to effectively avoid any kind of accountability.”

And after a campaign in which Mr. Trump repeatedly claimed that he would pursue retribution against critics and opponents, some observers worry that his administration’s new priorities could have troubling implications for the rule of law.

The Manhattan case

Of the four criminal cases against the former and now future president, only one has gone to trial. In May, a jury in Manhattan convicted Mr. Trump on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to hide hush money payments to an adult film star during the 2016 presidential campaign.

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