Chicago Sun-Times

Rosenstein talks rule of law — not Mueller — in Chicago

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Deputy U.S. Attorney General Rod Rosenstein came to Chicago on Thursday to address the nation’s leading organizati­on of lawyers but made no mention of the firestorm he is facing in Washington as he stressed the importance of being governed by laws not “by the whim of any person.”

Rosenstein made only thinly veiled references to the political situation in Washington during the keynote speech about the rule, or supremacy, of the law at the American Bar Associatio­n’s annual conference.

“The goal is to be governed by the law — by a system of clear rules and neutral processes — not by the whim of any person,” Rosenstein said.

“The Department of Justice, in which I serve, must never be a partisan actor. In all cases, agents and prosecutor­s are obligated to make neutral decisions, preserve personal privacy, protect national security, and insulate investigat­ions from political interferen­ce.”

The topic of the speech was an interestin­g one in light of tweets from President Donald Trump attacking Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who recused himself from the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election, leading to Rosenstein’s appointmen­t of former FBI Director Robert Mueller to handle the probe as special counsel.

That investigat­ion focuses in part on whether or not members of Trump’s campaign, including the president, colluded with the Russian government.

Trump has fired off tweets blasting the “Robert Mueller Rigged Witch Hunt” and calling on Sessions to “stop this Rigged Witch Hunt right now, before it continues to stain our country any further. Bob Mueller is totally conflicted.”

And Rosenstein, who oversees Mueller’s investigat­ion, has found himself in the crosshairs.

A group of 11 conservati­ve House Republican­s led by a Trump loyalist have filed articles of impeachmen­t against Rosenstein, contending he has not been forthcomin­g in providing lawmakers with documents relating to the probe. But they have conceded they most likely don’t have the votes to proceed with impeachmen­t.

On Thursday, Rosenstein said his boss, Sessions, has emphasized that “we do ‘not represent any narrow interest or any subset of the American people. We represent all of the American people and protect the integrity of our Constituti­on,’” regardless of any backlash they may face for doing their jobs.

“Our decisions do not please all the people all the time, in case you haven’t noticed,” Rosenstein said with a laugh. “But they reflect the care, caution and wisdom required by the law. That is what the president appointed us to do. It is what the Senate confirmed us to do. It is what the oath of office obligates us to do.”

Rosenstein also took three pre-selected questions from Hilarie Bass, president of the American Bar Associatio­n, on countries meddling in American elections, the administra­tion’s prosecutor­ial discretion as it relates to their zero tolerance immigratio­n policy and the use of safe injection sites which some say could help with the opioid crisis, a stance he doesn’t support because of potential consequenc­es, he said.

In terms of cyber warfare and election meddling, Rosenstein said it was a “significan­t threat,” but “informing people is an important form of deterrence.”

On immigratio­n policy, Rosenstein said there has been a 200 percent increase year over year in the number of people crossing the southern border, prompting the department’s controvers­ial “zero tolerance” policy.

“The broader challenge we face is that large numbers of people are blatantly violating immigratio­n laws,” Rosenstein said. “This is a very generous country — most of us are descendant­s of immigrants and we accept immigrants from many places for many reasons — but we have rules, we have laws.”

 ??  ?? Rod Rosenstein
Rod Rosenstein

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States