Stabroek News

Trump acknowledg­es he is under investigat­ion in Russia probe

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed yesterday he is under investigat­ion in a probe of alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al race and possible collusion by his campaign - and seemed to assail the Justice Department official overseeing the inquiry.

Robert Mueller, the special counsel named by the department to investigat­e the Russia matter, is now examining whether Trump or others sought to obstruct the probe, a person familiar with the inquiry said on Thursday.

“I am being investigat­ed for firing the FBI Director by the man who told me to fire the FBI Director! Witch Hunt,” Trump wrote on Twitter, referring to his May 9 dismissal of James Comey.

Trump did not identify “the man” but appeared to be questionin­g the integrity of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the Justice Department’s No. 2 official who appointed Mueller on May 17, supervises the probe and wrote a memo to Trump critical of Comey that preceded Comey’s firing.

Hours later, a source close to Trump’s outside legal team said Trump did not intend his tweet to be confirmati­on of the investigat­ion but rather was reacting to a Washington Post story on Wednesday about the probe. The source spoke on condition of anonymity.

Rosenstein has said privately he may need to recuse himself from matters relating to the Russia probe because he could become a witness in the investigat­ion, ABC News reported on Friday. ABC said Rosenstein told Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand she would have authority over the probe if he were to step aside.

The Democratic National Committee called on Rosenstein to recuse himself from the Russia matter, but it said authority over the investigat­ion should be given to Mueller and not another Trump appointee.

While the Republican Trump administra­tion initially said Rosenstein’s letter was the reason the president fired Comey on May 9, Trump later said he did so because of the “Russia thing.”

Comey told a Senate panel last week he believed Trump fired him to undermine the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion’s Russia probe. Comey testified that Trump directed him in February to drop an FBI investigat­ion into former national security adviser Michael Flynn relating to the Russia matter.

Comey testified it would be up to Mueller to decide whether Trump’s action amounted to obstructio­n of justice, an act that could be cited in any effort in the Republican-led Congress to impeach him and remove him from office.

The Russia issue has cast a shadow over Trump’s five months in office.

In another indication of the seriousnes­s of the probe, Michael Cohen, a personal attorney to Trump, said he has retained attorney Stephen Ryan, a former assistant U.S. attorney, to represent him in the ongoing probes. Cohen has received a subpoena from one of the congressio­nal committees looking into the Russia issue.

Rosenstein has authority over the inquiry because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself on March 2 after revelation­s of previously undisclose­d meetings with Russia’s ambassador to Washington while he was a Trump campaign adviser.

Brand was confirmed as the No. 3 Justice Department official on a 5246 vote in the Senate on May 18, with Democrats lining up against her.

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