Houston Chronicle

Trump’s legal team in disarray as new lawyer won’t be added

- Josh Dawsey, Carol D. Leonnig and Rosalind S. Helderman

WASHINGTON — In the latest sign of disarray in President Donald Trump’s legal team, a lawyer who he said last week would come on board to help handle his response to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion will no longer be part of the effort.

The developmen­t came three days after John Dowd, who had been Trump’s top attorney handling the Russia inquiry, resigned amid strategy disputes with the president.

Trump is now left, at least temporaril­y, without a traditiona­l criminal defense attorney as Mueller’s team appears to be entering a critical phase in its investigat­ion into Moscow’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election and whether Trump’s campaign cooperated in this effort.

Joseph diGenova, the lawyer Trump wanted to replace Dowd, has often stridently defended the president on Fox News Channel and cast the Mueller probe as a conspiracy against him. Trump enjoyed the TV appearance­s and wanted diGenova on his team even though he did not know him, officials say.

But in a statement Sunday, a spokesman for Trump’s legal team said both diGenova and his wife, Victoria Toensing, who is also a lawyer, would not be working on the Russia probe because clients they were already representi­ng in connection with the investigat­ion posed conflicts of interest.

“The president is disappoint­ed that conflicts prevent Joe diGenova and Victoria Toensing from joining his Special Counsel legal team,” said Jay Sekulow, counsel to Trump. “However, those conflicts do not prevent them from assisting the president in other legal matters. The president looks forward to working with them.”

The unraveling of the president’s legal team has left his advisers concerned. People familiar with the situation said the president has been counseled by friends that he needs to find a new lawyer to quarterbac­k his team and efforts are underway by people close to Trump to try to hire a new lawyer.

Before his resignatio­n Thursday, Dowd had been Trump’s main point of contact with Mueller’s office and had been helping to negotiate the terms for an interview between the president and the special counsel’s team as it examines whether Trump obstructed justice by seeking to shut down the investigat­ion, which was being conducted by the FBI until Trump fired FBI Director James Comey in May of last year. Mueller was then appointed special counsel by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

Trump’s legal effort is now led by Sekulow, a conservati­ve attorney and radio host who has concentrat­ed on constituti­onal issues, and assisted by Ty Cobb, a White House lawyer paid by taxpayers to represent the institutio­n of the presidency rather than Trump personally. Cobb, too, has occasional­ly drawn the president’s ire, people familiar with the team have said.

A number of white-collar attorneys in Washington said firms are fearful that an affiliatio­n with Trump and the Russia case could impact their ability to attract other clients and lawyers.

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