The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump: Russia inquiry unfair

Tweets wonder why Clinton campaign isn’t investigat­ed.

- Michael D. Shear

President Donald Trump complained Thursday about the unfairness of the Russia investigat­ion, wondering on Twitter why Hillary Clinton’s connection­s to Russia are not being similarly scrutinize­d.

Twitter users quickly responded, with many of them tweeting a version of the same thing: because you’re the president.

Moments later, Trump continued to rant about his former rival for the presidency, saying that Clinton had “destroyed phones w/ hammer, ‘bleached’ emails, & had husband meet w/AG.”

Those accusation­s were apparently references to stories that emerged during the campaign. An aide to Clinton (not Clinton herself ) told the FBI that he had disposed of Clinton’s old cellphones by “breaking them in half or hitting them with a hammer.”

An employee of the company that ran Clinton’s private email server used a program called “BleachBit” to delete files; the FBI concluded that Clinton was unaware of the deletions.

It was Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton’s husband, who had a conversati­on with Loretta Lynch, who was serving as attorney general, on Lynch’s plane, leading her to recuse herself in the email case involving Clinton.

The complaints about Clinton came after a series of morning tweets in which Trump mocked federal investigat­ors, saying they made up a “phony collusion with the Russians story” amid new reports that Robert Mueller, the special counsel, is looking into whether Trump tried to obstruct justice in the case.

“They made up a phony collusion with the Russians story, found zero proof, so now they go for obstructio­n of justice on the phony story. Nice,” Trump tweeted just before 7 a.m.

In a later tweet, the president once again called the Russia investigat­ion a “witch hunt” and called the people leading it “very bad,” apparently a reference to Mueller and others at the FBI.

Mueller has requested interviews with three current or former senior intelligen­ce officials, according to a person briefed on the investigat­ion. The move suggests he is examining whether the president sought their help in trying to get James Comey, the former FBI director, to end an investigat­ion into Michael Flynn, the former national security adviser.

The special counsel is also seeking documents from the National Security Agency relating to the intelligen­ce agency’s interactio­ns with the White House on the Russia investigat­ion.

Together, the requests from Mueller indicate new scrutiny on whether the president tried to influence the Russia investigat­ion through conversati­ons he had with Comey, whom he ultimately fired, or with other officials.

That would make Trump a subject of a sprawling inquiry that he has repeatedly said has no merit. During a Rose Garden news conference June 9, the president insisted that Comey was “a leaker” of informatio­n and said that Comey’s testimony on Capitol Hill helped clear the president of wrongdoing.

“Yesterday showed no collusion, no obstructio­n,” Trump said of Comey’s testimony.

The president’s tweet Thursday morning makes it clear that he remains dismissive of the investigat­ion. Trump reportedly considered firing Mueller as special counsel, but was talked out of it by aides who worried about the consequenc­es of taking such an action.

Christophe­r Ruddy, a longtime friend of Trump’s, had said publicly that Trump was considerin­g terminatin­g Mueller. Ruddy said the president believed that Mueller had conflicts of interest that should have made him ineligible to lead the investigat­ion.

Ruddy said, in a PBS interview, that Mueller’s previous law firm represents some members of Trump’s family. And he revealed that Trump had interviewe­d Mueller to replace Comey as FBI director the day before Mueller was selected to serve as special counsel.

 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump speaks Thursday about Apprentice­ship and Workforce of Tomorrow initiative­s.
AP President Donald Trump speaks Thursday about Apprentice­ship and Workforce of Tomorrow initiative­s.

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