Business Standard

Barr moves to take reins of politicall­y charged cases

- CHARLIE SAVAGE & ADAM GOLDMAN

While Attorney General William P Barr asserted his independen­ce from the White House this week, he has also been quietly intervenin­g in a series of politicall­y charged cases, including against Michael T Flynn, President Trump’s former national security adviser, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Barr installed a phalanx of outside lawyers to re-examine national security cases with the possibilit­y of overruling career prosecutor­s, a highly unusual move that could prompt more accusation­s of Justice Department politicisa­tion. The case against Mr. Flynn, who twice pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI in the Russia investigat­ion, is a cause célèbre for Mr. Trump and his supporters, who say the retired general was ensnared in a “deep state” plot against the president.

The disclosure­s came as Trump made clear on Friday that he believes he has free rein over the Justice Department and its cases, rejecting Mr. Barr’s public demand of a day earlier that the president stop commenting on such cases.

Citing Barr’s assertion in an interview on Thursday that Mr. Trump had never asked him to act in a criminal case, the president declared on Twitter: “This doesn’t mean that I do not have, as President, the legal right to do so, I do, but I have so far chosen not to!”

Hours later, the Justice Department told defense lawyers for Andrew G Mccabe, the former acting FBI director whom Mr. Trump has vilified for his role in the Russia case, that Mr. Mccabe would not be charged in connection with a leak case, ending a nearly twoyear criminal investigat­ion.

“We consider the matter closed,” the department wrote to Mccabe’s lawyers.

Together, the developmen­ts send conflictin­g signals at a time when the Justice Department’s independen­ce from political interferen­ce by the White House has come under sharp scrutiny.

Barr publicly challenged Mr. Trump after the turmoil this week over the case against Roger J. Stone Jr., Mr. Trump’s longtime friend and political adviser, threatened to erupt into a full-blown crisis.

After prosecutor­s recommende­d on Monday a seven- to nine-year sentence for Mr. Stone on seven felony conviction­s, the president criticised the move. Senior law enforcemen­t officials overruled the career prosecutor­s the next day, immediatel­y prompting accusation­s of political interferen­ce.

Though Barr said that he had intended to intervene to ask a judge to impose a more lenient sentence, he also said that Trump had complicate­d his plans by creating the specter of political tampering and that the president’s commentary was making his job “impossible.”

The four prosecutor­s involved in the case out of the US attorney’s office in Washington quit it.

Stone’s lawyers filed a sealed motion on Friday seeking a new trial, which could delay his sentencing scheduled for next week. It came a day after Trump alleged juror bias in Stone’s trial.

Barr installed the outside lawyers at the start of February and put them in a position to second-guess decisions on those cases, people familiar with the office’s workings said. Among the outsiders were Jeff Jensen, whom Mr. Trump appointed as the United States attorney in St Louis in 2017, and aides to Jeffrey A. Rosen, the deputy attorney general.

Barr’s interventi­on was described by multiple people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the delicate internal deliberati­ons. The Justice Department declined to comment.

The attorney general has also recently installed a personal aide, Timothy Shea, as interim US attorney in Washington.

 ??  ?? Attorney General William P Barr installed a phalanx of outside lawyers to re-examine national security cases with the possibilit­y of overruling career prosecutor­s
Attorney General William P Barr installed a phalanx of outside lawyers to re-examine national security cases with the possibilit­y of overruling career prosecutor­s

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