Orlando Sentinel

Former U.S. attorneys, Republican officials defend Mueller

- By Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — More than 40 former U.S. attorneys and Republican and conservati­ve officials are pushing back against efforts to discredit the special counsel investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

In a pair of letters, the groups say Robert Mueller and his team must be allowed to continue their work, unimpeded.

The 22 former U.S. attorneys, who served under presidents from Richard Nixon through Barack Obama, say it is “critical” to the “interests of justice and public trust to ensure that those charged with conducting complex investigat­ions are allowed to do their jobs free from interferen­ce or fear of reprisal.”

Seeking Mueller’s removal “would have severe repercussi­ons for Americans’ sense of justice here at home and for our reputation for fairness around the world,” they wrote in a letter to President Donald Trump on Friday that was coordinate­d by Georgetown Law’s Institute for Constituti­onal Advocacy and Protection.

Another letter signed by 20 former members of Congress — Republican­s and conservati­ves — and other top U.S. officials says efforts to discredit Mueller’s work “undermine the institutio­ns that protect the rule of law and so our nation.”

“We urge the Administra­tion, members of Congress on both sides of the aisle, and the American public, to support the work of Special Counsel Mueller to its conclusion, whatever it may be,” reads the open letter signed by officials including former Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, former State Department counselor Eliot Cohen and former George W. Bush administra­tion ethics lawyer Richard Painter.

The letters come as Mueller’s team is facing heightened scrutiny in recent weeks following reports that two FBI officials who would later be assigned to the special counsel’s investigat­ion called Trump an “idiot” and “loathsome human” in a series of text messages last year.

Peter Strzok, a veteran FBI counterint­elligence agent, was removed from Mueller’s team over the summer following the discovery of text messages exchanged with Lisa Page, an FBI lawyer who was also detailed this year to the group of agents and prosecutor­s investigat­ing potential coordinati­on between Russia and Trump’s Republican campaign.

Allies of the president have seized on the messages and other details about Mueller’s team to allege it is biased against Trump.

Trump has repeatedly called investigat­ions into his campaign a “witch hunt” fueled by Democrats still angry about his election win.

Still, Trump and White House officials have said recently that he has no intention of firing Mueller.

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