The Arizona Republic

Report: Trump pursued action vs. Clinton, Comey

- David Jackson, Kevin Johnson and John Fritze

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump told White House attorneys that he wanted the Justice Department to prosecute Hillary Clinton and former FBI director James Comey, the latest indication that the president views the department as a potential weapon to use against political opponents, according to a report.

The New York Times, citing unnamed sources familiar with Trump’s conversati­on, said the president told former White House counsel Donald McGahn in the spring that he wanted the Justice Department to pursue Clinton and Comey.

McGahn, according to the report, rebuffed the request, saying it would prompt critics to claim the president was abusing his power.

The revelation comes weeks after Trump ousted Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whom the president frequently criticized for recusing himself from the ongoing probe into Russia’s involvemen­t in the 2016 presidenti­al election. Trump replaced Sessions with Matthew Whitaker, an interim attorney general and ally who has more readily embraced the president’s views.

McGahn left the White House in October.

The report came on what should have been a quiet week heading into the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, when Trump and the Justice Department made a series of high-profile announceme­nts. They released the long-awaited financial-disclosure forms for Whitaker, and the president’s attorneys confirmed late Tuesday that Trump had submitted written answers to questions posed by special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion.

“The questions presented dealt with issues regarding the Russia-related topics of the inquiry,” Jay Sekulow, counsel to the president, said in a statement. “The president responded in writing.”

The questions and the answers were pursuant to an agreement between Trump’s attorney’s and Mueller’s office, which is looking into whether the president tried to obstruct the investigat­ion. Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani said the president refused to entertain questions about alleged obstructio­n, or any activities since he became president.

“The questions and the answers all related to Russia,” Giuliani said. “The answer is he had no involvemen­t or knowledge of that.”

Trump has repeatedly denied obstructio­n, and his lawyers argue his actions, including the firing of Comey, were well within the president’s authority.

The Justice Department, meanwhile, released the financial-disclosure form from Whitaker, the acting attorney general appointed this month to take over on an interim basis after Sessions’ ouster. Whitaker revised the filing five times after being named to the post the day after the midterm election.

It is unclear whether Trump continued to seek the prosecutio­ns of Clinton and Comey, an idea he has often raised during his political rallies. But the president continued to discuss the idea privately, including the possible appointmen­t of another second special counsel to look into the two foes, according to the Times report.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The disclosure that McGahn advised Trump against seeking a prosecutio­n of Clinton and Comey is sure to refocus attention on the extensive cooperatio­n McGahn has provided to Mueller in his ongoing investigat­ion. That inquiry includes whether Trump sought to obstruct the probe by firing Comey last spring.

McGahn’s interviews with Mueller’s team spanned about 30 hours in total, said a person familiar with the former White House counsel’s contact with the special counsel’s office.

The New York Times first disclosed the extent of McGahn’s cooperatio­n in August.

McGahn’s cooperatio­n with Mueller was extraordin­ary because it could have been protected in part by executive privilege. Trump waived that privilege, hoping transparen­cy would quicken the pace of Mueller’s investigat­ion and thus, put an end to a query that has put a cloud over his presidency.

The person familiar with McGahn’s communicat­ions with Mueller’s team has not elaborated on the contents of his discussion­s with Mueller’s team, but as counsel to the president McGahn was privy to the most controvers­ial issues involving the White House.

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