Nixon v. United States is not related to the case involving former President Richard Nixon.
The Nixon v. US, (1993) ruling listed in United States Reports (the official volumes containing US Supreme Court opinions) is Nixon v. United States, 506 US 224 (1993). This case is not related to former President Nixon, but to an impeached Mississippi US District Court judge, Walter Nixon, who appealed the Senate's impeachment ruling to the US Supreme Court.
In that case, the Court determined that impeachment proceedings are non-justiciable, and are political matters, or the province of Congress. The 1993 Nixon case set a formal precedent preventing impeached officials from appealing their impeachment in court.
William Rehnquist wrote the opinion of a unanimous Court. Justices Stevens, White and Souter wrote concurring opinions.
The president cannot use executive privilege in order to withhold evidence from a criminal trial.
presidential powers were limited
The president cannot use executive privilege in order to withhold evidence from a criminal trial.
The president cannot use executive privilege in order to withhold evidence from a criminal trial.
The president cannot use executive privilege in order to withhold evidence from a criminal trial.
The president is accountable for obeying the law.
United States v. Nixon, 418 US 683 (1974)The court of original jurisdiction in this case was US District Court for the District of Columbia, presided over by Judge John Sirica.The Judge approved Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski's subpoena on the grounds that neither Executive Privilege nor Separation of Powers between the branches of government were sufficient to abrogate the six accused conspirators' constitutional rights under the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause and the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause. Nixon was ordered to give Jaworski the tapes.Nixon appealed the decision directly to the US Supreme Court, bypassing the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, so there was no intermediate appellate ruling in this case. The Supreme Court ultimately affirmed Sirica's ruling.(Sirica was Time Magazine's Man of the Year in 1973)For more information, see Related Questions, below.
US President Richard M. Nixon resigned his office on August 9, 1974.
United States v. Nixon was the case that questioned executive privilege. The case was decided on July 24, 1974. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously against Nixon.
United States v. Nixon, 347 US 683 (1974)On 24 July 1974, the US Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Nixon, that Executive Privilege did NOT apply in a criminal matter, unless the protected information involved military or diplomatic secrets, or national security. This decision is what led to Nixon's resignation on 9 August 1974.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
September 8 1974 was date of President Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon.
United States v. Nixon, 418 US 683 (1974)Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote the opinion of a unanimous (8-0) Court. Justice William Rehnquist recused himself because of his close ties to the Nixon administration.[Note: The question originally asked about Nixon v. United States, a case involving appeal of impeachment of a Mississippi federal District Court judge, in 1993. See Related Questions for information about that case.]For more information about United States v. Nixon, see Related Questions, below.
Trot Nixon was born on April 11, 1974.
Trot Nixon was born on April 11, 1974.