Chicago Sun-Times

BRING ON A SPECIAL PROSECUTOR TO PROBE RUSSIA SCANDAL

- Follow the Editorial Board on Twitter: @ csteditori­als. Send letters to letters@ suntimes. com.

It is not enough that Jeff Sessions stepped aside Thursday. What matters now is that an independen­t special prosecutor is appointed, one above all partisansh­ip, who is determined to chase down every lead into any and all secret dealings between Russia, Donald Trump and the Trump presidenti­al campaign.

Who in the Trump camp was involved? What exactly are Trump’s past and present business ties to Russia and influentia­l individual Russians? What are his staff and advisers’ ties? What foreign policy understand­ings may have been reached with a wink and nod? What promises might have been made? Who else knows exactly what?

The stakes are far too high for this investigat­ion to be left to Attorney General Sessions’ deputy or to the Justice Department as a whole, which Sessions will continue to head. And a select committee of Congress would be ill- equipped to take the broadest possible approach.

Only a special prosecutor, enthusiast­ically endorsed by Congress on both sides of the aisle, will suffice. This investigat­ion must go wherever the truth leads, without reservatio­n.

On Thursday, Sessions removed himself from any investigat­ion amid furor over the revelation that he, during his Senate confirmati­on hearing, failed to disclose under questionin­g that he twice had met with the Russian ambassador last year. Sessions’ own actions, including whether he purposely misled the Senate committee, now become part of the federal inquiry.

In ordinary circumstan­ces, Sessions’ recusal would mean the job of investigat­ing Trump’s ties to Russia — and Russia’s tampering in the election — would be turned over to the acting deputy attorney general, Dana Boente, or to the man soon likely to replace Boente as deputy, Rod Rosenstein, pending confirmati­on by the Senate.

But Boente would be suspect. He was Trump’s choice to replace Obama administra­tion hold- over Sally Yates, whom Trump fired for refusing to enforce his travel ban. Rosenstein, the U. S. attorney for Maryland, also would be suspect, having been nominated by the president.

The only trustworth­y way forward is for Boente or Rosenstein to name a special prosecutor of unimpeacha­ble integrity and deep experience — somebody Congress across the board can support. Strictly Republican appointees need not apply.

The heart of the matter is the question of whether an unfriendly foreign power attempted to tilt an American presidenti­al election. As long ago as October, two agencies — the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce — said the U. S. intelligen­ce community had concluded that Russia was behind a hacking operation to interfere with the presidenti­al elections. The unanimous view of government intelligen­ce agencies, including the CIA and the FBI, is that the Russian government directed cyber attacks against U. S. political organizati­ons. CNN has reported that multiple sources say high- level Trump associates were in constant contact with Russians who were known to U. S. intelligen­ce.

Yet here we are in March, with no answers. We can’t even say we know all the questions.

Federal investigat­ors have been looking into contacts between Trump advisers and Russia for months. House and Senate intelligen­ce committees are conducting separate investigat­ions. But to say the congressio­nal probes are running at a snail’s pace is unfair to snails.

As for the Trump White House, it is once again in nothing- to- seehere mode, insisting this week that questions about Sessions’ meetings with the Russian ambassador are nothing more than “the latest attack against the Trump administra­tion by partisan Democrats.” This is an administra­tion with serious messaging issues. Just hours before Sessions announced he would recuse himself, Trump said he did not think his attorney general needed to do so.

In choosing a special prosecutor, we urge the Justice Department and Congress to heed the example of Patrick Fitzgerald, the former U. S. attorney for Northern Illinois, who in 2003 led a strong investigat­ion into a government leak of the name of a CIA operative, Valerie Plame. Fitzgerald’s work, at a time when Republican George W. Bush sat in the White House, led to the conviction of Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, Lewis “Scooter” Libby.

Jeff Sessions did the right thing by recusing himself. Whether he might now be compelled to resign remains an open question.

The more pressing matter is to appoint a superb special prosecutor who gives no quarter.

Only a special prosecutor, enthusiast­ically endorsed by Congress on both sides of the aisle, will suffice. This investigat­ion must go wherever the truth leads, without reservatio­n.

 ??  ?? U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions takes questions during a press conference at the Department of Justice on Thursday in Washington, D. C. WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES
U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions takes questions during a press conference at the Department of Justice on Thursday in Washington, D. C. WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES
 ??  ?? Patrick Fitzgerald
Patrick Fitzgerald

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