Could the serving POTUS smoke a joint and get away with it?

IIRC, someone once wrote that the Secret Service actually takes an almost condoning/approving attitude towards presidential shenanigans such as extramarital sex; the idea being that the POTUS is under immense psychological stress 24/7 and that if the sex or whatnot is relieving the mental stress, well, OK.

Which former president? IIRC, there was more than one. :wink:

This made my day. Please. Please, please, please give me your absolute definition for “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Something official, of course. In writing, in law, in modern American jurisprudence. Heck, once you get desperate I’ll let you go to the historical record and look at what Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton got impeached for. That ought to give you oodles of assurance as to what the phrase actually does “correspond” to and then you can tell me and Congress. I’ll give you a cookie if you can do it.

Clearly a high crime.

Jokes aside, a high crime is whatever congress decides it is. Invading Iraq would be a perfect example. Only the president can make such a decision. As for misdemeanor, I guess that has its usual meaning and pot smoking is illegal under federal law. So clearly impeachable. But it would not lead to conviction and the house would end up with even more egg on its face.

I know it’s not exactly relevant, but during the 80’s I occasionally smoked a joint on the steps of the US Capital.

Are Secret Service bodyguards licensed to act as policemen?
As mentioned upthread , they didn’t interfere when Malia Obama apparently smoked a joint in public.
If their only job is to protect a politician’s physical safety, do they have any authority over regular citizens? (other than , I assume, being allowed to shoot them, if they appear to be trying to assassinate somebody.)

But can a Secret Service bodyguard arrest me for, say, a driving offense? Or for underage drinking? Or pickpocketing somebody in a crowd at a political rally?
Or would he have to call a local cop and let him put the cuffs on me while reading me my Miranda rights?

Secret Service are all federal law enforcement officers. All the crimes you just mentioned are state offences. I’m sure they could hold you for the local cops if they felt it was necessary, but they’re not looking to enforce local laws.

True, but bedsport doesn’t leave the room smelling like pot smoke for the next couple of days.

The Secret Service are not there to stop their protectees from breaking laws, they’re there to protect them.

Imagine a protectee (POTUS or one of his family) feeling like they needed to ditch their security detail in order to toke up or meet up with a mistress: that compromises the Secret Service’s ability to protect them. So what happens in front of the protection detail, stays with the protection detail. They’re not going to blab, it’s a direct security concern if they did.

That is it! ^^^

Persons the Secret Service has protected in the past (which includes teenagers of Presidents), have done illegal things. They don’t report it. But they will not participate in anything which would be an illegal action on their part of course (Secret Service).

Seems to me the concern would be less about a broken law than about having a President under the influence of drugs in the event of a national emergency.
“Mr. President, we’ve picked up two Russian ICBM’s over the Atlantic.”
Wicked!!!

On a related note, while I’ve seen Presidents having a beer now and then (usually for a photo op, and it always seems to go unfinished), I would assume they are discouraged from ever drinking to excess. Though I’m also sure it must have happened at some point in history that our Commander-in-Chief has been totally stinking blotto.

Nixon after Watergate was reported as a stinking drunk many times.

According to reliable sources, “Diamond Joe” Biden may be a better bet. No one should have to put up with shitty ditch weed.

Neither is doing an intern impeachable in and of itself, but if you can get the president to lie under oath about lighting up, then you can impeach him.

I’d go with the pot brownies myself. They also don’t make the bedroom smell like weed.

Did he smoke 2 joints in the morning,
and smoke 2 joints at night?

Did he smoke 2 joints in the afternoon,
and make him feel aw-right?

True but the OP didn’t ask about perjury and obstruction of justice.

While President Ulysses Grant was pulled over for speeding (on a horse. Grant was a first rate horseman). Apparently the officer didn’t want to cite him but Grant insisted that he do his duty.

Only a third-hand account, but JFK supposedly toked up in the White House.

I suspect if the President says to one of his aides, “get me some boo”, the aides would be able to get some into the White House. If the President says to his Secret Service detail, “I won’t be needing you for the rest of the night” they would leave the room and he could spark one up in peace. Could he be impeached for it? Sure - high (heh) crimes and misdemeanors means whatever Congress wants it to.

Related question - is there any kind of confidentiality privilege for the Secret Service, so they could refuse to testify about a crime the President committed in their presence?

Regards,
Shodan