Orlando Sentinel

As Mueller squeezes Trump team, who else will squeal?

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After Monday’s legal shock and awe, one thing is certain: The Mueller investigat­ion poses a serious and perhaps existentia­l threat to the Trump administra­tion.

Apologists for the president can yell “nothing burger” until they’re blue in the face. Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and his associate Richard Gates — now under home confinemen­t and charged with offenses that carry long prison terms — would likely disagree. Campaign adviser George Papadopoul­os, whom special counsel Robert Mueller has “flipped” into cooperatin­g with the probe, also might attest that Monday’s acts and revelation­s are a very big deal.

President Trump had good reason to spend that morning upstairs in the White House residence, brooding and fuming. Regarding Manafort and Gates, Trump perhaps could argue that Mueller has made no allegation — thus far — of collusion with the Russians to boost Trump’s prospects in the election. But the Papadopoul­os case, according to court documents, is all about Russian mischief — and what the Trump campaign may have known about it.

Perhaps the nastiest surprise for Trump and those close to him is that Papadopoul­os, who was on the campaign’s foreign policy team, was arrested July 27 and became a “proactive cooperator” with the Mueller probe. Papadopoul­os pleaded guilty Oct. 5 to making false statements, in an interview with the FBI earlier this year, regarding his contacts with foreigners about obtaining Russian help for the campaign.

That is ominous news on every level. First, while there had been speculatio­n that Mueller might go after Manafort and Gates, no one outside of Mueller’s team appears to have known anything about Papadopoul­os. How long has he been cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion? And what might that cooperatio­n have entailed?

Anyone who had a conversati­on with Papadopoul­os since his July arrest has to wonder whether he was wearing a wire. That’s what a “proactive cooperator” often does. Gulp.

Equally unsettling for the White House is the fact that Mueller and his allstar squad of prosecutor­s managed to keep their engagement with Papadopoul­os secret for so long. That took real discipline and sense of purpose. It also signals to Trump and his attorneys that they don’t have anything close to a full picture of what Mueller is up to.

Have others connected with the Trump campaign been squeezed for informatio­n in a similar way? Is more proactive cooperatin­g presently taking place? Speak clearly into my tie pin, please.

So what, exactly, did Papadopoul­os do? He had a series of meetings with a London-based professor who has connection­s with the Russian government, and in an April 2016 encounter this professor claimed the Russians had “dirt” on Hillary Clinton that included “thousands of emails.”

This was after Russian hackers had broken into the email system of the Democratic National Committee and also managed to steal the private emails of Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta. It is reasonable to assume that these are the emails that the professor was talking about to Papadopoul­os, who made repeated attempts to set up meetings between the Trump campaign and Russian officials — even suggesting, at one point, a meeting between Trump and Vladimir Putin.

No such get-together took place. But in June, there was that meeting at Trump Tower at which senior figures in the Trump campaign — Manafort, Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law — met with a well-connected Russian lawyer in hopes of receiving “dirt” on Clinton.

Trump must have noticed that one important name was not prominentl­y mentioned Monday: that of Michael Flynn, his shortlived national security adviser. Flynn faces potential legal jeopardy for his alleged representa­tion of foreign interests without properly registerin­g to do so. Trump has consistent­ly gone out of his way to protect and defend Flynn, even to the point of asking former FBI Director James Comey to go easy on him. Why such uncharacte­ristic compassion?

If I were Trump, I’d have to wonder if Flynn could be cooperatin­g with Mueller. I’d worry about what he might say. And if I spoke with Flynn, I’d choose my words very carefully.

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