NewsNation host Chris Cuomo expressed on his Tuesday podcast that he does not believe former President Donald Trump should be prosecuted during the presidential election period.

Trump is currently facing four criminal cases: two related to the 2020 presidential election, one connected to the 2016 presidential election, and another involving classified documents.

On “The Chris Cuomo Project,” Cuomo mentioned that while he thinks some of these cases have merit, he still believes it is not worthwhile to prosecute Trump due to the timing of the upcoming election.

“Remember, Donald Trump has proven to you time and again he doesn’t give a shit about the law if it doesn’t suit his ends. And that’s the truth. I don’t like the cases that were brought against him — two of ’em in New York. The other ones, the classified documents, he did it, okay? Trying to rig this election — he did it,” Cuomo said. “He messed with them in Georgia, and he shouldn’t have, and he knew it. Is it worth prosecuting the guy in the middle of an election? I don’t know. I would say no, and I know that’s crazy. I believe in prosecutorial discretion. Theoretically, no one is above the law, but in practice, prosecutors make decisions of whom to prosecute and whom not to on a basis of policy or also prosecutability. And I think that going after Trump for business records, for the other thing they went after him for in New York, the catch-and-kill stuff, I just — I don’t think those are cases you make that often. And I don’t think you make them if it’s not Trump. And to me, just ’cause I don’t like how he is doesn’t mean I don’t think we should be better than that. We should.”

Special counsel Jack Smith filed a superseding indictment on Tuesday in Trump’s 2020 election interference case. This indictment includes four conspiracy and obstruction charges, similar to the original charges.

However, the case has been narrowed due to the Supreme Court’s ruling in July on presidential immunity, which determined that presidents have a certain level of protection from prosecution for official actions they take while in office.