Rome News-Tribune

Trump ignores Barr’s plea to back off tweeting

- By Michael Balsamo, Colleen Long and Zeke Miller

Unbowed by a public rebuke from his attorney general, President Donald Trump on Friday declared he has the “legal right” to intervene in criminal cases and sidestep the Justice Department’s historic independen­ce. At the same time, it was revealed federal prosecutor­s have been ordered to review the criminal case of his former national security adviser.

A day after Attorney General William Barr said the president’s tweets were making it “impossible for me to do my job,” Trump declared he had the right to ask the agency to intervene in cases but so far has “chosen not to.” It was a rare public flare-up of tensions, simmering for weeks at the upper echelon of the Trump administra­tion, as Barr

WASHINGTON —

marked one year on the job Friday.

While Barr complained that Trump’s tweets undermine the department’s perception as independen­t from political interferen­ce, he has proven to be eager to deliver on many of the president’s investigat­ive priorities — often laid out by Trump for all to see on Twitter.

The attorney general stepped in this week to alter the sentencing recommenda­tion that Trump had denounced as too harsh for his ally Roger Stone. Also, Justice Department prosecutor­s are reviewing the handling of the federal investigat­ion into Trump’s former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Friday. And Barr has appointed a U.S. attorney who is conducting a criminal investigat­ion into the origins of the FBI’S probe of the 2016 election that morphed into special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of possible Trump-russia cooperatio­n.

Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI during its probe of ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, but his sentencing has been postponed several times after he complained he was misled during his questionin­g. The U.S. attorney in St. Louis, Jeff Jensen, is working with Brandon Van Grack, a member of Mueller’s team, to review the Flynn case, a Justice Department official said.

As president, Trump technicall­y has the right to compel the Justice Department, an executive branch agency, to launch investigat­ions. But historical­ly, when it comes to decisions on criminal investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns, Justice has functioned independen­tly, unmoved and unbound by political sway. And that reputation is important to Barr, as he made clear in an interview Thursday on ABC News.

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