Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump helped craft son’s statement on Russia meeting

Interferen­ce investigat­ions look into undisclose­d chat

- DAVID JACKSON AND KEVIN JOHNSON

WASHINGTON - The White House acknowledg­ed Tuesday that President Trump worked on a disputed statement about his son’s meeting with a Russian lawyer, in an apparent break with comments made by the lawyers defending the president in the Russia investigat­ion.

“The president weighed in — as any father would — based on the limited informatio­n that he had,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said.

Sanders was referring to a statement Donald Trump Jr. gave on July 8 about a meeting that is now a subject of various investigat­ions into Russia’s involvemen­t in the presidenti­al election.

The Washington Post reported on Monday that Trump personally dictated the statement about Trump Jr.’s June 2016 meeting with Russian attorney Natalia Veselnitsk­aya, which said the

meeting had to do with the adoption of Russian babies — and was not a campaign issue.

That initial statement, which was originally provided to The New York Times as it prepared a story on the previously undisclose­d meeting, was later proved to be incomplete and misleading.

Trump Jr. released email correspond­ence showing that he arranged the meeting in the hopes of obtaining potentiall­y damaging informatio­n about Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton — even after he was told it would be provided by the Russian government.

Yet Sanders said “the statement that Don Jr. issued is true, there’s no inaccuracy in the statement” — even though it omitted those facts.

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ors are now looking into the Trump Tower meeting, which was also attended by Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and thencampai­gn chairman Paul Manafort, as part of the probe into possible collusion between Trump associates and Russians seeking to influence the presidenti­al election.

Soon after Trump Jr. released his emails, Trump attorney Jay Sekulow and other aides said Trump had nothing to do with the statement issued in his son’s name.

“I do want to be clear, the president was not involved in the drafting of the statement and did not issue the statement,” Sekulow said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on July 16. “It came from Donald Trump Jr.”

And John Dowd, the lead attorney for Trump’s outside legal team, on Tuesday characteri­zed the report of Trump’s involvemen­t in crafting his son’s statement as “crap.’’ As Dowd put it: “It is of no consequenc­e. We can back it up if we have to.’’

Dowd declined to elaborate, referring to a statement attorney Sekulow provided to the Post. “Apart from being of no consequenc­e, the characteri­zations are misinforme­d, inaccurate and not pertinent,” that statement said. Dowd said Trump’s legal team stood by Sekulow’s statement.

Sanders on Tuesday insisted that while the president was involved with the statement, he did not dictate it. She also insisted that the meeting was “without consequenc­e.”

“There was no follow up,” she said. “It was disclosed to the proper parties, which is how The New York Times found out about it to begin with.”

Both Trump Jr. and Veselnitsk­aya, the Russian lawyer, said they spoke only about sanctions on Russia that led to a freeze on adoptions — and not anything to do with Clinton.

Yet Trump’s actions in response to the Russia probe are already under scrutiny by investigat­ors, and the latest revelation­s only add to the controvers­y.

The Post reported that Trump’s advisers wanted to provide a full statement about the Trump Tower meeting in order to be transparen­t — but Trump directed a different response while on board Air Force One returning from the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany.

Mueller and various congressio­nal committees are investigat­ing Russian efforts to influence the election by hacking Democrats close to the election, and whether there were any links to Trump’s campaigns.

Trump’s firing of former FBI director James Comey in May and recent tweets criticizin­g his own attorney general, Jeff Sessions, have also raised questions about whether the president was trying to obstruct or wrest control over the federal Russia investigat­ion.

In remarks Monday to a group of congressio­nal interns, Kushner said the Trump campaign was too disorganiz­ed to be involved in any collusion with Russia.

According to a tape of the off-the-record event obtained by Foreign Policy, Kushner said, “we couldn’t even collude with our local offices.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump personally dictated a misleading statement in which his son Donald Trump Jr. said a meeting with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 election was focused on adoptions, the Washington Post reported.
GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump personally dictated a misleading statement in which his son Donald Trump Jr. said a meeting with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 election was focused on adoptions, the Washington Post reported.

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