The Scotsman

Mueller turns to Washington grand jury in Trump-russia probe

President again pours scorn on ‘total fabricatio­n’ of an inquiry

- By CHAD DAY and ERIC TUCKER

The special counsel investigat­ing claims of Russian meddling in the US election has begun using a grand jury in Washington, a person familiar with the probe says.

The use of a grand jury, a standard prosecutio­n tool in criminal investigat­ions, suggests that Robert Mueller may be taking a more aggressive approach to gathering informatio­n on possible collusion with Donald Trump’s campaign team.

The person who confirmed that Mr Mueller had turned to a grand jury was not authorised to discuss the investigat­ion by name and spoke on condition of anonymity. The Wall Street Journal first reported the use of a grand jury.

Grand juries are common vehicles to subpoena witnesses and records and to present evidence, although they do not suggest any criminal charges are near or will necessaril­y be sought.

It was not clear how or whether the Washington grand jury was connected to the work of a separate one in Alexandria, Virginia. That panel has been used to gather informatio­n on Michael Flynn, Mr Trump’s former national security adviser.

Mr Mueller’s team did not return a request for comment.

But Mr Trump demanded in a tweet posted yesterday: “We won. Move on!” At a rally in Huntington, West Virginia, on Thursday he fired a host of broadsides at Democrats and investigat­ors.

He again poured scorn on the inquiry, saying it was a “total fabricatio­n”.

White House senior counsellor Kellyanne Conway told the Fox and Friends news programme: “We know that the nature of these investigat­ions become fishing expedition­s where you’re just throwing Jello up against the wall and hoping something will stick.”

Washington defence lawyer Jacob Frenkel called Mr Mueller’s reliance on a grand jury the “logical next step in this investigat­ion” given that it is the traditiona­l method for prosecutor­s to gather evidence.

“The use of the grand jury neither escalates, nor establishe­s a timeline for, the investigat­ion,” he added.

At the Huntington rally, Mr Trump challenged Democrats to either continue their “obsession with a hoax” or begin serving the interests of the American people.

“I just hope the final determinat­ion is a truly honest one, which is what the millions of people who gave us our big win in November deserve and what all Americans who want a better future want and deserve.”

Lawyers for Mr Trump said earlier they were unaware of the existence of a grand jury and had no informatio­n to suggest the president himself was under federal investigat­ion.

Ty Cobb, special counsel to the president, said he wasn’t aware Mr Mueller had started using a new grand jury.

“Grand jury matters are typically secret,” Mr Cobb said. “The White House favours anything that accelerate­s the conclusion of his work fairly. ... The White House is committed to fully cooperatin­g with Mr Mueller.”

It was not known what witnesses might appear before the grand jury or what evidence it might be accumulati­ng or presented with.

Mr Mueller, who worked as a prosecutor in Washington before becoming FBI director, was appointed special counsel in May by the Justice Department after FBI director James Comey was sacked.

He has since assembled a team of more than a dozen investigat­ors, including current and former Justice Department prosecutor­s with experience in internatio­nal bribery and organised crime.

 ??  ?? Robert Mueller may be taking a more aggressive approach
Robert Mueller may be taking a more aggressive approach

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