Baltimore Sun

Trump angry over queries

Mueller has dozens of questions to be posed to the president

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump angrily insisted again Tuesday that there was no collusion between his presidenti­al campaign and Russians in the 2016 election, but special counsel Robert S. Mueller III apparently isn’t convinced.

After speaking with prosecutor­s on Mueller’s team, Trump’s lawyers prepared a list of nearly four dozen questions that could be posed during a potential interview with the president, according to sources with knowledge of the process who declined to speak publicly. Roughly one in four questions focused on what the president knew about Russia’s efforts to interfere in the campaign.

“During the campaign, what did you know about Russian hacking, use of social media or other acts aimed at the campaign?” reads one inquiry on the list.

The New York Times first disclosed the list, and a source confirmed its authentici­ty to the Los Angeles Times. It’s unclear if Mueller has changed or expanded his areas of inquiry, which were detailed than a month ago.

Since then, Trump’s longtime personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, was the target of raids by FBI agents pursuing a separate criminal investigat­ion in Manhattan.

It’s not known if Trump is still open to sitting down for an interview with the special counsel’s office, something he previously pledged to do.

Last month Trump hired Rudolph Giuliani, a longtime political ally and former mayor of New York City, to help negotiate with Mueller. The president also ramped up his criticism of the Russia investigat­ion.

Trump blasted the disclosure of the questions in a tweet Tuesday morning, calling it “so disgracefu­l.” He added, “you have a made up, phony crime, Collusion, that never existed, and an investigat­ion begun with illegally leaked classified informatio­n. Nice!” Trump also falsely claimed that the list contained “no questions on Collusion” even though a number of inquiries probed issues related to connection­s between Trump or his aides and Russians.

Generally the questions referred to episodes that have been public knowledge for months. The list contained no new allegation­s of meetings, conversati­ons or contacts.

One question — “When did you become aware of the Trump Tower meeting?” — refers to the June 2016 gathering that Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son, hosted with a Kremlin-linked lawyer who was said to have incriminat­ing informatio­n on Hillary Clinton.

Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman, and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-inlaw and adviser, also attended the meeting, which was revealed last year. Trump Jr. later claimed no incriminat­ing informatio­n was provided.

Democrats on the House Intelligen­ce Committee suggested Friday that the president may know more about the meeting than he has let on. As Trump Jr. was setting up the meeting, he conducted a call with a blocked number, according to phone records. Democrats said they tried to determine whether the caller was Trump himself but Republican­s were “unwilling to pursue the matter.”

Another question focuses on the president’s unsuccessf­ul attempts to build a hotel complex in Moscow and other potential business dealings there after he visited the Russian capital in 2013. “What communicat­ion did you have with Michael D. Cohen, Felix Sater and others, including foreign nationals, about Russian real estate developmen­ts during the campaign?” it asks.

Cohen has said he and Sater, a Russianbor­n businessma­n in New York who previously worked with the Trump Organizati­on, pitched a luxury building in Moscow during the campaign, but the idea was abandoned in January 2016.

Prosecutor­s may have hinted there’s more evidence against Manafort, who is already fighting nearly two dozen charges of money laundering, tax evasion and bank fraud in two federal indictment­s. “What knowledge did you have of any outreach by your campaign, including by Paul Manafort, to Russia about potential assistance to the campaign?” the question asks.

Manafort is not charged with any crimes related to his work on the Trump campaign, although prosecutor­s have suggested in court filings that he has ties to Russian intelligen­ce. He has denied any such ties or any conspiracy with Russia. A memo previously disclosed by the special counsel’s office said Mueller was authorized to examine allegation­s that Manafort “committed a crime or crimes by colluding with Russian government officials” in connection with the U.S. election.

In a court filing Monday, Manafort’s lawyers said the special counsel’s office has not turned over any “tapes, notes, transcript­s or any other material evidencing surveillan­ce or intercepts of communicat­ions between Mr. Manafort and Russian intelligen­ce officials, Russian government officials (or any other foreign officials).”

Negotiatio­ns between prosecutor­s and Trump’s lawyers about a potential interview with the president are not an unusual step when an investigat­ion requires access to the Oval Office, said Solomon Wisenberg, a lawyer who worked with the Office of Independen­t Counsel, which investigat­ed President Clinton.

“They want to show that they’ve gone out of their way to try to accommodat­e the president,” Wisenberg said. “They want a record that they made every effort to talk to him.”

The newly disclosed list of questions also contained multiple queries related to whether Trump obstructed justice by trying to influence the Russia investigat­ion. Several sought to establish Trump’s mindset when he made certain decisions, such as when he fired James B. Comey as FBI director last May.

“What did you mean when you told Russian diplomats on May 10, 2017, that firing Mr. Comey had taken the pressure off?” was one question.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Special counsel Robert Mueller, left, has compiled a set of questions for President Donald Trump, right.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Special counsel Robert Mueller, left, has compiled a set of questions for President Donald Trump, right.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump responds to a question while meeting with the crew and passengers of the Southwest Airlines flight on which an engine exploded.
GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump responds to a question while meeting with the crew and passengers of the Southwest Airlines flight on which an engine exploded.

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