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Norms Impact

Impeach Trump for the Caribbean Killings – The Future of Freedom Foundation

If the president can order the military to kill accused drug offenders abroad without charges or trial, due process becomes optional and executive power becomes a death sentence.

Executive

Oct 30, 2025

Sources

Summary

The Future of Freedom Foundation claims President Donald Trump and the Pentagon have carried out more than 40 extrajudicial killings in the Caribbean tied to drug-law enforcement. It argues the executive branch is asserting unilateral authority to take life without judicial process by invoking a false “war” framing and terrorism labels to bypass courts. If normalized, this converts criminal-law enforcement into summary execution and collapses due process protections the Fifth Amendment is meant to guarantee.

Reality Check

Allowing a president and the Pentagon to summarily kill people accused of ordinary criminal conduct—without charges, trial, or judicial review—sets a precedent that can be turned inward and used to erase our own constitutional protections on command. If the conduct occurred as described, it implicates homicide prohibitions and the core due process constraints of the Fifth Amendment; at minimum it represents an extreme abuse of office by converting law enforcement into extrajudicial execution. The stated use of “war” and “terrorist” labels to bypass courts is the mechanism that corrodes democratic stability: it treats constitutional limits as mere branding problems rather than binding law.

Detail

<p>The Future of Freedom Foundation calls for impeachment and removal of President Donald Trump, asserting that Trump and the Pentagon have orchestrated and carried out more than 40 killings in the Caribbean of people accused of drug-war offenses. The piece states these deaths were justified by the executive branch through claims that the United States is at “war” with drug cartels and by labeling targets “terrorists,” which it describes as a means to sideline the federal judiciary.</p><p>It argues that drug offenses are federal criminal violations involving consensual transactions and that U.S. officials lack authority to summarily kill people suspected of such crimes. It cites the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition on depriving any person of life without due process, defined as notice of charges and a judicial trial, and invokes the presumption of innocence and proof beyond a reasonable doubt. It further contends there is no realistic prospect of criminal prosecution because the executive controls the Justice Department and U.S. officials are not subject to International Criminal Court jurisdiction, leaving impeachment as the proposed remedy.</p>