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Trump didn't coordinate with Russia in 2016, Robert Mueller declares in report

But while Mr. Mueller was categorical in ruling out criminal collusion, he was more circumspect on presidential obstruction of justice.

Updated - March 25, 2019 08:33 am IST - WASHINGTON

The Department of Justice in Washington. Attorney General William Barr reviewed Special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on his investigation into Russian election interference.

The Department of Justice in Washington. Attorney General William Barr reviewed Special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on his investigation into Russian election interference.

Special counsel Robert Mueller did not find evidence that U.S. President Donald Trump’s campaign “conspired or coordinated” with Russia to influence the 2016 presidential election but reached no conclusion on whether Mr. Trump obstructed justice, Attorney General William Barr declared on Sunday. That brought a hearty claim of vindication from Mr. Trump but set the stage for new rounds of political and legal fighting.

Mr. Trump cheered the outcome but also laid bare his resentment after two years of investigations that have shadowed his administration. “It’s a shame that our country has had to go through this. To be honest, it’s a shame that your president has had to go through this,” he said.

Democrats pointed out that Mr. Mueller found evidence for and against obstruction and demanded to see his full report. They insisted that even the summary by the president’s attorney general hardly put him in the clear.

A copy of a letter from Attorney General William Barr advising Congress of the principal conclusions reached by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, is shown Sunday, March 24, 2019 in Washington.

A copy of a letter from Attorney General William Barr advising Congress of the principal conclusions reached by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, is shown Sunday, March 24, 2019 in Washington.

 

Mr. Mueller’s conclusions, summarized by Mr. Barr in a four-page letter to Congress, represented a victory for Mr. Trump on a key question that has hung over his presidency from the start — Did his campaign work with Russia to defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton? That was further good news for the president on top of the Justice Department’s earlier announcement that Mueller had wrapped his investigation without new indictments. The resolution also could deflate the hopes of Democrats in Congress and on the 2020 campaign trail that incriminating findings from Mueller would hobble the president’s agenda and re-election bid.

But while Mr. Mueller was categorical in ruling out criminal collusion, he was more circumspect on presidential obstruction of justice. Despite Mr. Trump’s claim of total exoneration, Mr. Mueller did not draw a conclusion one way or the other on whether he sought to stifle the Russia investigation through his actions including the firing of former FBI director James Comey.

According to Mr. Barr’s summary, Mr. Mueller set out “evidence on both sides of the question” and stated that “while this report does not conclude the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Mr. Barr, who was nominated by Mr. Trump in December, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mr. Mueller in May 2017 and oversaw much of his work, went further in Mr. Trump’s favour.

The attorney general said he and Mr. Rosenstein had determined that Mr. Mueller’s evidence was insufficient to prove in court that Mr. Trump had committed obstruction of justice to hamper the probe. Barr has previously voiced a broad view of presidential powers, and in an unsolicited memo last June he cast doubt on whether the president could have obstructed justice through acts like firing his FBI director that he was legally empowered to take.

Mr. Barr said their decision was based on the evidence uncovered by Mr. Mueller and not affected by Justice Department legal opinions that say a sitting president cannot be indicted.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller with his wife Ann in Washington on Sunday.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller with his wife Ann in Washington on Sunday.

 

Mr. Mueller’s team examined a series of actions by the president in the last two years to determine if he intended obstruction. Those include his firing of Mr. Comey one week before Mr. Mueller’s appointment, his public and private haranguing of then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation because of his work on the campaign, his request of Comey to end an investigation into Michael Flynn, the White House’s first national security adviser, and his drafting of an incomplete explanation about his oldest son’s meeting with a Russian lawyer during the campaign.

Mr. Mueller’s findings absolve Mr. Trump on the question of colluding with Russia but don’t entirely remove the legal threats the president and associates are facing. Federal prosecutors in New York, for instance, are investigating hush-money payments made to two women during the campaign who say they had sex with the president. Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, implicated Mr. Trump in campaign finance violations when he pleaded guilty last year.

The special counsel’s investigation did not come up empty-handed. It ensnared nearly three dozen people, senior Trump campaign operatives among them. The probe illuminated Russia’s assault on the American political system, painted the Trump campaign as eager to exploit the release of hacked Democratic emails to hurt Ms. Clinton and exposed lies by Mr. Trump aides aimed at covering up their Russia-related contacts.

Thirty-four people, including six Trump aides and advisers, were charged in the investigation. Twenty-five are Russians accused of election interference either through hacking into Democratic accounts or orchestrating a social media campaign to spread disinformation on the internet.

Sunday’s summary and its suggestion that Mr. Mueller may have found evidence in support of obstruction sets up a fight between Mr. Barr and Mr. Democrats, who called for the special counsel’s full report to be released and vowed to press on with their own investigations.

“Attorney General Barr’s letter raises as many questions as it answers,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement.

“Given Mr. Barr’s public record of bias against the special counsel’s inquiry, he is not a neutral observer and is not in a position to make objective determinations about the report,” they said. Mr. Trump’s own claim of complete exoneration “directly contradicts the words of Mr. Mueller and is not to be taken with any degree of credibility,” they added.

Mr. Trump was at his Florida estate when lawmakers received the report. Barr’s chief of staff called Emmet Flood, the lead White House lawyer on the investigation, to brief him on the findings shortly before he sent it to Congress. Mr. Mueller submitted his report to Barr instead of directly to Congress and the public because, unlike independent counsels such as Ken Starr in the case of President Bill Clinton, his investigation operated under the close supervision of the Justice Department.

Mr. Barr did not speak with the president, Mr. Mueller was not consulted on the letter, and the White House does not have Mueller’s report, according to a Justice Department official.

Though Mr. Mueller did not find evidence that anyone associated with the Trump campaign coordinated with the Russian government, Mr. Barr’s summary notes “multiple offers from Russian-affiliated individuals to assist the Trump campaign.”

That’s a likely reference not only to a June 2016 Trump Tower meeting at which Donald Trump. Jr. expected to receive damaging information on Clinton from a Kremlin-connected lawyer, as well as a conversation in London months earlier at which Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos was told Russia had “dirt” on Ms. Clinton in the form of thousands of stolen emails.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, said Congress needs to hear from Mr. Barr about his decision and see “all the underlying evidence.” He said on Twitter, “DOJ owes the public more than just a brief synopsis and decision not to go any further in their work.”

Mr. Barr said that Mr. Mueller “thoroughly” investigated the question of whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia’s election interference, issuing more than 2,800 subpoenas, obtaining nearly 500 search warrants and interviewing 500 witnesses. Mr. Trump answered some questions in writing, but refused to be interviewed in person by Mr. Mueller’s team.

Mr. Barr said Mr. Mueller also catalogued the president’s actions including “many” that took place in “public view,” a possible nod to Mr. Trump’s public attacks on investigators and witnesses.

In the letter, Mr. Barr said he concluded that none of Mr. Trump’s actions constituted a federal crime that prosecutors could prove in court.

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