San Diego Union-Tribune

TRUMP PRESSES FOR END TO DURHAM RUSSIA PROBE

Says there has been ‘plenty of time’ to bring charges

- BY MICHAEL BALSAMO, ZEKE MILLER & COLLEEN LONG Balsamo, Miller and Long write for The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON

President Donald Trump on Friday pressed for the Justice Department to quickly bring criminal charges in its investigat­ion into the origins of the Russia probe, after reports that Attorney General William Barr has said not to expect conclusion­s before Election Day.

Trump and his allies had high hopes for the investigat­ion led by Connecticu­t U.S. Attorney John Durham, betting it would expose what they see as wrongdoing when the FBI opened a case into whether the Trump campaign was coordinati­ng with Russia to sway the 2016 election. Trump has also pushed to tie prominent Obama administra­tion officials to that effort as part of his campaign against Joe Biden, who was serving as vice president at the time.

But a year and a half into the investigat­ion, and with less than one month until Election Day, there has been only one criminal case: a former FBI lawyer who pleaded guilty to altering a government email about a former Trump campaign adviser who was a target of secret FBI surveillan­ce.

On Friday, Trump told conservati­ve radio host Rush Limbaugh that Justice Department investigat­ors had “plenty of time to do it. They’ve been looking at it for two years. The facts are on the table.”

Barr has communicat­ed recently to Republican lawmakers that it’s highly unlikely the report will be completed by Election Day, according to people familiar with the matter. After Limbaugh read Trump an Axios story on the topic, Trump said he’d be disappoint­ed if Barr had relayed that message to lawmakers.

“If Bill Barr actually made that statement, I would be very disappoint­ed in him. I don’t know that he made that statement,” Trump said.

Trump is increasing­ly airing his dissatisfa­ction in tweets and television appearance­s. Barr, meanwhile, has privately expressed frustratio­n over the public comments.

Despite Trump’s displeasur­e, there’s no indication Barr’s job is at risk in the final weeks of the campaign. Still, the tensions between Trump and the attorney general over the fate of the probe underscore the extent to which the president is aggressive­ly trying to use all of the levers of his power to gain ground in an election that has been moving away from him.

He also said that if he doesn’t win, the investigat­ion will go away. “If we don’t win, that whole thing is going to be dismissed,” he said.

On Thursday morning, Trump did not hide his frustratio­n in an interview on Fox News Business.

“Unless Bill Barr indicts these people for crimes — the greatest political crime in the history of our country — then we’ll get little satisfacti­on, unless I win,” he said.

The comment followed an earlier barrage of presidenti­al social media posts, including one in which Trump retweeted a doctored image of Barr superimpos­ed with the late “Saturday Night Live” actor Chris Farley in character as a motivation­al speaker yelling at him. The caption: “for the love of God ARREST SOMEBODY.”

The Justice Department declined to comment on the matter. The White House did not immediatel­y comment.

Since Durham’s appointmen­t, he has cast a broad net in interviewi­ng former government officials, including ex-CIA Director John Brennan. It is unclear when Durham plans to submit his report or how damning any of his final conclusion­s might be.

Even the outlines of the case involving FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith, who pleaded guilty in the Durham probe, were already known before he was charged. And the case against him didn’t allege any broader FBI conspiracy to go after Trump.

Though Barr is broadly in agreement with Trump on the need to investigat­e the origins of the Russia probe, he’s often bemoaned Trump’s lack of understand­ing about the intricacie­s of the legal system and the steps that need to be taken to complete an investigat­ion.

A friend of Barr’s said there has been obvious “tension” between the president and the attorney general, and while Barr himself believes deeply in the importance of the Durham investigat­ion and in the president’s authority to exercise control over federal agencies, he will not tolerate interferen­ce in specific investigat­ions.

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