Los Angeles Times

Key questions

What lawmakers are likely to ask about Russia and the president

- By Chris Megerian

Lawmakers of both parties are likely to try to get Mueller to go beyond his report.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has directed Robert S. Mueller III not to go beyond the evidence in his 448-page report on the Russia investigat­ion when he testifies Wednesday to the House Judiciary and Intelligen­ce committees. His spokesman said he would not stray past the “four walls” of the written report.

Of course, Democrats and Republican­s will try to push the former special counsel outside those boundaries. Here are several major questions he’s likely to face:

Would Donald Trump have faced criminal charges if he weren’t president?

It’s against Justice Department guidelines to indict a sitting president. As a result, Mueller’s report says he never considered whether Trump had committed a crime by attempting to obstruct justice. But he also wrote that his report “does not exonerate” the president.

Mueller’s office compiled such an extensive record of the president’s efforts to thwart the investigat­ion that it inevitably raised the question of whether Trump could have faced charges if he were not in the White House.

Atty. Gen. William Barr and Rod Rosenstein, then the deputy attorney general, later said they reviewed the evidence and determined that Trump did not break the law. Does Mueller agree with their assessment — or with hundreds of former prosecutor­s who saw the evidence as strong enough to warrant prosecutio­n?

What is the role of Congress now?

Mueller suggested that it was up to Congress to hold the president accountabl­e if lawmakers believed that was necessary. Some Democrats — including many on the House Judiciary Committee — believe that’s a prompt for impeachmen­t proceeding­s. What exactly does Mueller think the next steps should be?

When did Mueller realize he couldn’t establish a criminal conspiracy linking the Trump campaign with the Kremlin-backed effort to interfere in the 2016 race?

The special counsel’s office stayed silent outside the courtroom for nearly two years, never tipping its hand on whether the investigat­ion would show a criminal conspiracy between Trump’s campaign and Moscow’s operatives. Ultimately prosecutor­s charged or indicted 34 individual­s, including 25 Russians, and Mueller’s report said Trump’s team had welcomed Moscow’s meddling.

However, no Americans were charged with knowingly working with the Russians to spread disinforma­tion on social media or to help hack and release thousands of internal Democratic Party emails. That outcome has raised questions about when Mueller determined the evidence didn’t support conspiracy charges — what Trump calls collusion — and why he didn’t say so at the time. Some Republican­s believe the special counsel’s office unfairly left a cloud hanging over the White House.

Why wasn’t Donald Trump Jr. questioned?

The report makes clear that prosecutor­s considered bringing criminal charges against the president’s eldest son. He accepted a meeting with a Moscowbase­d lawyer in New York in June 2016 after being promised political dirt on Hillary Clinton as part of the Russian government’s support for Trump’s campaign. Two of Trump’s top campaign aides — Paul Manafort, the campaign chairman, and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and advisor, also attended the meeting.

But Mueller never questioned Trump Jr. He declined a voluntary interview. Was he issued a subpoena? Why wasn’t he forced to testify? It may be hard to get an answer. Some details are redacted in the report because they involve grand jury informatio­n.

Did the president successful­ly discourage witnesses from cooperatin­g with the special counsel’s office?

The report lays out various ways that Trump communicat­ed his feelings to potential witnesses. When Manafort, his former campaign chairman, was convicted on bank fraud and tax evasion charges, the president praised him as “a brave man” who didn’t “break.” Trump’s lawyer also discussed a potential presidenti­al pardon with Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer and lawyer in New York, before Cohen began cooperatin­g with federal prosecutor­s. After Cohen agreed to help the special counsel’s office, Trump publicly denounced him as a “rat.”

What impact, if any, did Trump’s statements have on witnesses during the investigat­ion? Did Trump’s comments affect Mueller’s ability to collect evidence?

Did Trump or his allies have advance knowledge of WikiLeaks releases of stolen emails from the Democratic Party and Clinton’s campaign?

Trump’s campaign sought to capitalize on the trove of private emails published by WikiLeaks during the 2016 race. But Mueller’s report leaves vague whether Trump’s aides or allies knew in advance of those releases. Squeezing new informatio­n out of Mueller could be difficult because Roger Stone, a longtime Trump political advisor, is awaiting trial on charges of lying to Congress about his conversati­ons involving WikiLeaks.

Does Mueller believe partisan politics influenced how the investigat­ion was started or run?

The Russia investigat­ion had already been underway at the FBI for nearly a year when Mueller was appointed special counsel on May 17, 2017. Many Republican­s believe the probe was rooted in anti-Trump prejudice during that earlier period. What does Mueller think? He has never faced public questions about these issues.

Does he agree with Republican­s that the infamous dossier of unverified allegation­s, which was funded by Democrats and compiled by a former British intelligen­ce officer, had an inappropri­ate impact on the investigat­ion? Did agents properly disclose the origins of that dossier when they sought a surveillan­ce warrant against a former Trump campaign aide? Does Mueller believe that thenFBI Agent Peter Strzok, who exchanged private text messages with an FBI lawyer critical of Trump, allowed his political beliefs to affect his work on the case?

Republican­s have also criticized the way Mueller staffed the special counsel’s office, in some cases hiring prosecutor­s who had supported Clinton or given money to Democratic campaigns. Does Mueller, a lifelong Republican, feel that affected their ability to be impartial in their work?

 ?? Jewel Samad AFP/Getty Images ?? THEN-FBI CHIEF Robert S. Mueller III testifies at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in 2009. This time he’s taking questions from the House Judiciary and Intelligen­ce committees on his work as special counsel.
Jewel Samad AFP/Getty Images THEN-FBI CHIEF Robert S. Mueller III testifies at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in 2009. This time he’s taking questions from the House Judiciary and Intelligen­ce committees on his work as special counsel.

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