Murder of President – 18 U.S.C. § 1751 Sentencing Guidelines
Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers, a second-generation firm managed by our lead attorney with over 40 years of combined experience. When federal prosecutors charge murder or attempted murder of the President under 18 U.S.C. § 1751, the stakes couldn’t be higher: death or life imprisonment, no intermediate options. This statute criminalizes not just completed killings but attempts, conspiracies, and assaults against the President, Vice President, President-elect, and designated successors. The constitutional question isn’t whether presidential murders warrant severe punishment—obviously they do. It’s whether the mandatory death/life binary eliminates judicial discretion in ways that violate proportionality principles.
This article explains how § 1751 sentencing works, why attempted presidential murders carry 20-year maximums while completed murders require life or death, and how defense attorneys navigate cases where mental illness, delusion, or political extremism drove conduct that defendants barely understand themselves.
Protected Persons Under § 1751
The statute protects the President, President-elect, Vice President, Vice President-elect, and anyone “otherwise next in order of succession to the Office of the President.” That last category covers designated survivors during State of the Union addresses and successors under the Presidential Succession Act. It also protects immediate family members of the President, Vice President, and President-elect if Secret Service protection extends to them.
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(212) 300-5196Protection doesn’t end with death threats or murder attempts. The statute criminalizes kidnapping and assaults as well. Someone who assaults the President—even without intent to kill—faces up to 10 years. Someone who attempts to kidnap the President faces life imprisonment. The statute treats any violent act toward these officials as an attack on constitutional governance itself, warranting federal prosecution with maximum penalties.
Sentencing: Same as First-Degree Murder
Section 1751 incorporates the penalty structure from 18 U.S.C. § 1111 (murder) and 1112 (manslaughter). If you kill the President with premeditation or during commission of another felony, that’s first-degree murder: death or life imprisonment. If you kill the President in sudden heat of passion or through reckless conduct, that’s voluntary or involuntary manslaughter with correspondingly lower sentences.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

Your college roommate confided that he had been posting increasingly violent rhetoric about the President online, and last week he asked you to drive him to a political rally where the President would be appearing. Federal agents arrested you both at a checkpoint near the venue after finding a firearm and detailed surveillance notes in the trunk of your car.
Can I really be charged under 18 U.S.C. § 1751 just for driving someone to an event, even though I never intended to harm the President myself?
Under 18 U.S.C. § 1751, conspiracy and aiding an attempt against the President carry the same severe penalties as the completed act itself — up to life imprisonment or death. Prosecutors only need to show you knowingly participated in furthering the plot, even in a supporting role like providing transportation with awareness of the plan. The Secret Service and FBI treat any overt act in furtherance of such a conspiracy with maximum seriousness, and federal sentencing guidelines offer virtually no leniency for accessory roles in presidential threat cases. You need experienced federal defense counsel immediately to challenge the government's evidence of your knowledge and intent before any statements or plea discussions take place.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
Under Federal Sentencing Guidelines §2A1.1, first-degree murder receives offense level 43—the maximum. At that level, every criminal history category yields the same result: life imprisonment if death isn’t imposed. There’s no guideline range calculation, no balancing of factors, no room for judicial discretion. Congress decided presidential murders warrant permanent incapacitation, period.
