Chattanooga Times Free Press

Attorney: Mueller team floated possible subpoena for Trump

- BY CHAD DAY AND DARLENE SUPERVILLE

WASHINGTON — Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team raised the prospect of issuing a grand jury subpoena to compel President Donald Trump to testify as part of the Russia probe, the president’s former attorney said Tuesday.

Attorney John Dowd told The Associated Press that Mueller’s team broached the subject in March during a meeting with Trump’s legal team while they were negotiatin­g the terms of a possible interview with the president.

The meeting marked the first time the special counsel’s office raised the possibilit­y of compelling Trump to testify as part of the ongoing investigat­ion. Mueller is probing not only Russian election interferen­ce and possible coordinati­on with Trump associates but possible obstructio­n of justice by Trump.

Dowd’s comments come more than a month after he resigned from the legal team, and they provide a new window into the nature of the Trump legal team’s interactio­ns with the special counsel, who the president has increasing­ly tried to undermine through public attacks.

On Tuesday, Trump said it was “disgracefu­l” that a list of proposed questions drafted in response to Mueller’s negotiatio­ns with the legal team was “leaked” to the news media.

The New York Times late Monday published around four dozen questions compiled by Trump’s lawyers during negotiatio­ns with Mueller’s investigat­ors earlier this year over the prospect of a presidenti­al interview. Mueller is investigat­ing Russian meddling in the 2016 election, whether Trump’s campaign was involved and if the president obstructed justice after the campaign.

The Times report said Trump’s lawyers compiled the questions into a list and that document was “provided to The Times by a person outside Mr. Trump’s legal team.”

The questions range from Trump’s motivation­s for firing FBI Director James Comey a year ago to contacts Trump’s campaign had with Russians. Although Mueller’s team has indicated to Trump’s lawyers that he’s not considered a target, investigat­ors remain interested in whether the president’s actions constitute obstructio­n of justice and want to interview him about several episodes in office. They have not yet made a decision about an interview.

Trump lawyer Jay Sekulow declined to comment to the AP, as did White House lawyer Ty Cobb.

In his tweet, Trump said there were “no questions on Collusion” and, as he has many times before, called Mueller’s investigat­ion a “Russian witch hunt.” He said collusion with the Russians “never existed.”

In a second tweet, Trump said: “It would seem very hard to obstruct justice for a crime that never happened.”

The questions do appear to indicate that Mueller is looking into possible collusion. Some touch on Russian meddling and whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d in any way with the Kremlin. In one question obtained by the Times, Mueller asks what Trump knew about campaign staff, including his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, reaching out to Moscow.

Mueller has brought several charges against Manafort already, including money laundering and bank fraud. None of the charges relate to allegation­s of Russian election interferen­ce and possible coordinati­on with Trump associates.

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