Khaleej Times

Will Trump take the risk to get rid of Mueller in Russia probe?

- Jan Wolfe

new york — After reports on Monday that the FBI had raided the offices of his attorney Michael Cohen, US President Donald Trump was asked if he would fire Special Counsel Robert Mueller. “Well, I think it’s a disgrace what’s going on,” Trump replied, calling Mueller’s investigat­ion into any links between his 2016 presidenti­al campaign and Russia and possible obstructio­n of justice a witch hunt. “We’ll see what happens.”

Senator Chuck Schumer and other Democrats immediatel­y expressed concern that Trump might seek to remove Mueller, who was appointed by the Justice Department in May 2017 to take over the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion’s Russia probe after Trump fired FBI director James Comey.

Trump has denied any collusion by his campaign with Russia and any attempt to obstruct the probe. Moscow has denied meddling in the 2016 election campaign.

Here is a look at how a special counsel can be removed from the job.

Can Trump fire Mueller?

The special counsel regulation under which Mueller was appointed gives the attorney-general or acting attorney-general sole authority to fire Mueller and only for “good cause”, such as misconduct, derelictio­n of duty, incapacity or conflict of interest. Attorney-General Jeff Sessions recused himself in March 2017 from overseeing the Russia investigat­ion after the emergence of previously undisclose­d contacts with the Russian ambassador, so that authority has fallen to the department’s No. 2, Deputy Attorney-Gen- eral Rod Rosenstein. Mueller was appointed by Rosenstein following Trump’s dismissal of Comey, whose agency had led the Russia investigat­ion at its outset.

Most legal experts say the special counsel regulation is constituti­onal and Trump must follow its protocol. Ignoring it would likely trigger a legal battle and a political firestorm.

Rosenstein has told Congress he has confidence in Mueller, prompting concerns among some Trump critics that the president might fire Rosenstein and replace him with someone willing to end Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Who would come after Rosenstein?

If Rosenstein were to resign in protest over an order to fire Mueller, the task of overseeing Mueller’s investigat­ion would typically fall to the associate attorney-general, the No. 3 official at the Justice Department. The person who held that position, Rachel Brand, has stepped down and taken a post at Walmart Inc. Jesse Panuccio, the principal deputy associate attorney-general, is doing her job until a replacemen­t is confirmed. But Panuccio does not take Brand’s place in the department’s succession order, legal experts said. Until Trump formally replaces Brand, the task of overseeing Mueller in the event of Rosenstein’s removal would fall to Solicitor-General Noel Francisco, according to an internal Justice Department memo on succession from November 2016 that is still in effect. Next in line after Francisco would be Steven Engel, the assistant attorney-general in charge of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

There is no guarantee any of those officials would follow a presidenti­al order that might be seen as a historic abuse of power, said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor and a professor at Loyola Law School.

Bork’s role in the Saturday Night Massacre was a factor in the Senate denying him a US Supreme Court seat in 1987.

“These people are establishe­d enough in their careers that they don’t need to take on the president’s controvers­ies for him,” said Levenson.

another replacemen­t tactic?

Trump could potentiall­y fire Rosenstein or Sessions and name a replacemen­t who would follow an order to fire Mueller. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998, which lays out general rules for temporaril­y filling vacant executive branch positions, could be interprete­d as allowing the president to replace Sessions or Rosenstein on an interim basis with a Cabinet member who has already been confirmed by the Senate.

Trump could likely find someone who fits that criteria and is willing to shut down the investigat­ion, said Andy Grewal, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law. “That’s probably the most politicall­y savvy way to fire Mueller,” he said.

But it is not clear the law, intended to address vacancies created by deaths or resignatio­ns, would apply if such a vacancy were created by the president firing someone. Such an appointmen­t could be challenged in court by a wide range of individual­s adversely affected by some action taken by the new department leader, including people who have nothing to do with the Russia investigat­ion, said Steve Vladeck, a professor of constituti­onal law at the University of Texas.

Mueller resistance?

If Trump removed Mueller, the special counsel could seek a temporary restrainin­g order blocking his removal on the grounds that there was not good cause, said Jed Shugerman, a professor of constituti­onal law at Fordham University Law School.

But Mueller, a former FBI director, would be unlikely to bring such a lawsuit, said Peter Shane, a professor of constituti­onal law at Ohio State University.

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