Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump’s lawyers send Mueller counteroff­er for terms of interview

- By Shannon Pettypiece

Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s lawyers sent a written response Wednesday to special counsel Robert Mueller with their latest counterpro­posal for the terms of a possible interview with the president as the two sides move into the final stages of negotiatio­ns.

Attorney Jay Sekulow confirmed that the letter was sent but declined to provide details on the content of the letter. Speaking earlier Wednesday on his daily radio show, he said he expects Mr. Mueller’s team to take severalday­s to respond.

“Our response is thoughtful and includes issues raised under the Constituti­on,” Mr. Sekulow said, adding that the letter has “wellthough­t-out legal positions that have implicatio­ns not justfor this president, but for thepreside­ncy.”

Mr. Trump’s lawyers told Mr. Mueller last month that the president would be willing to answer questions about whether his campaign coordinate­d with Russian efforts to interfere in the election but not about whether he obstructed justice. The lawyers were concerned Mr. Trump could be charged with lying to investigat­ors if his account is contradict­ed by other witnesses.

Mr. Sekulow said he thinks the interview — the subject of months of negotiatio­ns — will be “the last major decision point” in Mr. Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Mr. Mueller responded to that proposal with a counteroff­er last week that narrowed the scope of questionin­g, but still include questions around obstructio­n.

Mr. Trump’s other lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who was also on Mr. Sekulow’s radio show Wednesday, said he believes Mr. Mueller should wrap up his investigat­ion by the beginning of September with or without an interview. He said Mr. Mueller should take several days to review the Trump legal team’s response and then make a determinat­ion on whether he will proceed with an interview.

Ultimately, it will be Mr. Trump’s decision on whether he will answer questions, Mr. Sekulow said. Mr. Trump’s lawyers have argued that Mr. Mueller should be able to conclude his investigat­ion without questionin­g the president based on Mr. Trump’s public statements, documents the White House has provided and testimony of other witnesses.

If talks break down, Mr. Mueller could issue a subpoena to force Mr. Trump to testify before a grand jury under oath without his lawyers by his side. Mr. Trump’s lawyers have previously signaled they would fight a subpoena because of his executive authority as president, citing prior Justice Department guidelines on the issue and a Clinton-era court ruling. But the issue could go all the way to the Supreme Court.

“If they were to issue a subpoena that raises a constituti­onal issue that is very significan­t,” Mr. Sekulow said.

President Bill Clinton agreed to testify to a grand jury convened by independen­t counsel Ken Starr after he was issued a subpoena.

 ??  ?? People line up outside the Albert V. Bryan U.S. Courthouse on the seventh day of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s trial in Alexandria, Va. Mr. Manafort has been charged with bank and tax fraud as part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.
People line up outside the Albert V. Bryan U.S. Courthouse on the seventh day of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s trial in Alexandria, Va. Mr. Manafort has been charged with bank and tax fraud as part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

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