Kuwait Times

Trump asked AG Sessions about dropping Arpaio case

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Donald Trump asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions about dropping a criminal case against controvers­ial ex-sheriff Joe Arpaio, a close ally of the Republican president who has since received a pardon, The Washington Post reported Saturday. Trump was advised that closing the criminal contempt case against Arpaio, who was convicted for ignoring a court order to stop detaining illegal migrants, would be inappropri­ate, said the Post, citing three unnamed sources with knowledge of the conversati­on.

The president decided to let the case go ahead, but said he would pardon Arpaio if necessary-one source said Trump was “gung-ho” about the idea, the Post said. Trump has received pushback on the pardon by members of his own party-most recently from the highest ranking Republican in Congress, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. “The speaker does not agree with this decision,” Ryan spokesman Doug Andres said in a statement late Saturday.

“Law enforcemen­t officials have a special responsibi­lity to respect the rights of everyone in the United States,” Andres said. “We should not allow anyone to believe that responsibi­lity is diminished by this pardon.” Both Republican senators from Arizona, John McCain and Jeff Flake, earlier criticized the presidenti­al pardon. Trump’s reported chat with Sessions over Arpaio stands as evidence of the inability-or unwillingn­ess-of the 71-year-old billionair­e US leader to maintain the traditiona­l distance between the White House and the Justice Department on specific cases.

It also bears similariti­es to two situations that have dogged Trump for months. One is his alleged bid to influence a federal inquiry into his onetime national security advisor Michael Flynn, and his bid to persuade high-level officials to downplay the possibilit­y of collusion between his campaign team and Russia, which is still under investigat­ion. The 85-year-old Arpaio, a divisive figure who was once dubbed “America’s toughest sheriff,” was granted a presidenti­al pardon on Friday-the first since Trump took office, and one that seemingly did not follow regular protocols. —AFP

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: US Attorney General Jeff Sessions, left, looks up at the partial solar eclipse with Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross from the balcony of the White House in Washington, DC. — AFP
WASHINGTON: US Attorney General Jeff Sessions, left, looks up at the partial solar eclipse with Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross from the balcony of the White House in Washington, DC. — AFP

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