Oman Daily Observer

Trump acknowledg­es he is under investigat­ion

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed on Friday that he is personally under investigat­ion as part of a widening probe into alleged Russian meddling in last year’s US presidenti­al race and possible collusion by his campaign, an inquiry that has cast a shadow over his five months in office.

“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.

Trump did not specify who he was referring to, but he appeared to mean Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the No 2 official at the US Justice Department. Rosenstein appointed Robert Mueller on May 17 as special counsel to head the inquiry into the Russia matter.

Rosenstein was also the author of a letter in May to Trump criticisin­g the performanc­e of FBI Director James Comey. While the Trump administra­tion initially said that 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 because of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion’s Russia probe. Comey also testified Trump had directed him to drop a related FBI investigat­ion into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

A person familiar with Mueller’s inquiry, speaking on condition of anonymity, said on Thursday Mueller was looking into whether Trump or others attempted to obstruct the Russia investigat­ion.

The Republican president has repeatedly complained about the probe, calling it a witch hunt and saying Democrats cannot accept his election victory. But he had said last week he felt vindicated by Comey’s testimony on June 8 that he was not the subject of investigat­ion while Comey was heading the agency. Several congressio­nal committees are also investigat­ing the Russia matter.

In another developmen­t, members of Trump’s transition team that served him after he was elected in November until he took office in January have been ordered to preserve materials related to the Russia matter, the New York Times reported.

Citing a memo from the general counsel’s office of Trump’s transition team, the Times said members were given the order on Thursday for any informatio­n involving Russia or Ukraine in the latest sign of the investigat­ion’s expanding reach.

ABC News reported on Friday that Rosenstein has privately said he may need to recuse himself from matters relating to the Russia probe, given that he could become a potential witness in the investigat­ion.

Citing unnamed reported Rosenstein sources, ABC told Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand she would have authority over the probe if he were to step aside.

A Trump confidant said this week the president had considered firing Mueller. Rosenstein, the official who would be responsibl­e for dismissing Mueller, told US lawmakers he would fire him only with good cause.

US intelligen­ce agencies concluded in a report issued in January that Russia interfered in the presidenti­al race to try to help Trump win, in part by hacking and releasing emails damaging to Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. Moscow has denied any interferen­ce. The White House has denied any collusion.

Trump, who hired his own lawyer last month to represent him regarding probes by the special counsel and congressio­nal committees, kept up his criticism of the investigat­ions in a series of tweets on Friday. “After 7 months of investigat­ions committee hearings about my & ‘collusion with the Russians,’ nobody has been able to show any proof. Sad!” he wrote in one post.

Vice-President Mike Pence’s office said on Thursday he had hired a lawyer known for defending government officials in high-profile investigat­ions to help him with the Russia probes.

Pence hired Richard Cullen, chairman of law firm McGuireWoo­ds and a former federal prosecutor who has long ties to Comey, to help him respond to inquiries from Mueller, a spokesman said.

The memo to former transition team members on Thursday also seeks specific informatio­n on five people, the Times reported. They are Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign manager; Rick Gates, Manafort’s business partner; Carter Page, a former foreign policy adviser; Flynn; and Roger J Stone Jr, an informal adviser to Mr Trump.

Flynn, dismissed by Trump in February after it emerged he had misled Pence about conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador, is a subject in investigat­ions by intelligen­ce committees in the House of Representa­tives and Senate, as well as the FBI. Manafort, Page and Stone have also been linked to the Russia investigat­ions.

 ?? — AFP ?? US President Donald Trump and National Security Adviser H R McMaster board Air Force One before departing from Andrews Air Force Base for Miami, Florida on June 16, 2017.
— AFP US President Donald Trump and National Security Adviser H R McMaster board Air Force One before departing from Andrews Air Force Base for Miami, Florida on June 16, 2017.

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