Albany Times Union

Trump’s corruption displayed in Stone decision

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Roger Stone has a tattoo of Richard Nixon on his back. But it’s the current president, Donald Trump, who had Stone’s back when on Friday he granted a commutatio­n of the 40-month sentence his friend was facing for lying during the Russian investigat­ion.

In doing so, Trump turned his back on the justice system and the American people by shamelessl­y shielding Stone, a felon convicted of obstructio­n of a congressio­nal investigat­ion, making false statements to Congress and for intimidati­ng a witness.

Even Attorney General William Barr, who often wrongly acts more like Trump’s personal attorney rather than the nation’s chief law enforcemen­t officer, called Stone’s prosecutio­n “righteous” and the final sentence “fair” (after working to reduce the length of it).

Other, more principled Republican­s were blunt about what can only be seen as a presidenti­al protection racket. “Unpreceden­ted, historic corruption: An American president commutes the sentence of a person convicted by a jury of lying to shield that very president,” Sen. Mitt

Romney, R-utah, tweeted on Saturday.

That descriptio­n wasn’t far from what Stone said Friday. “(Trump) knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him,” Stone told journalist Howard Fineman. “It would have eased my situation considerab­ly. But I didn’t.”

Another resolute Republican, Robert Mueller, who hearkens back to an era when “law and order” was a governing guidepost, not a Nixon or Trump campaign slogan, broke his long silence in a Washington Post commentary. The investigat­ion, Mueller wrote, was of “paramount importance” because “Russia’s actions were a threat to America’s democracy.” Regarding Stone’s prosecutio­n in particular, Mueller wrote, “Stone became a central figure in our

investigat­ion for two key reasons: He communicat­ed in 2016 with individual­s known to us to be Russian intelligen­ce officers, and he claimed advance knowledge of Wikileaks’ release of [Clinton campaign] e-mails stolen by those Russian intelligen­ce officers.”

So Stone’s crimes were a direct threat to the electoral process, the DNA of our democracy. It was “critical,” Mueller wrote, for Congress and the Justice Department to obtain accurate informatio­n. “When a subject lies to investigat­ors,

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