San Francisco Chronicle

Russia probe:

- By Jill Colvin Jill Colvin is an Associated Press writer.

President Trump plans to pay aides’ legal costs.

WASHINGTON — President Trump intends to spend at least $430,000 of his own money to help pay the legal bills of White House staff and campaign aides related to the investigat­ions into Russian election meddling in the 2016 election, a White House official said Saturday.

It’s the first such commitment by Trump, who has dismissed the ongoing investigat­ions into whether his campaign colluded with Russia as a “witch hunt” invented by Democrats to explain Hillary Clinton’s loss.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear exactly how the payouts would be structured or which aides would be receiving them. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the president’s plans, which were first reported by the website Axios.

Trump and his aides have been racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees as Special Counsel Robert Mueller and House and Senate committees dig deeper into Russia’s role in the campaign. Mueller’s team of investigat­ors has been interviewi­ng current and former White House officials in their probe, and Trump campaign officials and others have been turning over tens of thousands of emails and documents to federal and congressio­nal investigat­ors.

The Republican National Committee and the president’s re-election campaign have been covering some of the costs, including payments to the law firm representi­ng Trump’s oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who in June 2016 met with a Russian lawyer and others who had promised to deliver dirt on Clinton.

Trump has repeatedly denied that he colluded with Russia to win the election and has voiced skepticism about the conclusion by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that Russia had a clear preference for Trump in the 2016 campaign.

The continuing investigat­ions and attention to the issue have infuriated the president, who sees the efforts as an attempt to delegitimi­ze his presidency.

“Crooked Hillary Clinton spent hundreds of millions of dollars more on Presidenti­al Election than I did,” he tweeted Saturday. “Facebook was on her side, not mine!”

Facebook has said ads that ran on the company’s social media platform and have been linked to a Russian internet agency were seen by an estimated 10 million people before and after the 2016 election.

Norman Eisen, an ethics lawyer in the Obama administra­tion, said the offer “raises substantia­l questions under federal criminal law and federal ethics law,” including whether it might be construed as part of an effort to glean more favorable testimony and whether current federal employees are even allowed to accept such gifts.

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