The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Source: Sessions was asked to stay in probe

Trump’s lawyer had conversati­on before AG stepped aside.

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump directed his White House counsel to tell Attorney General Jeff Sessions not to recuse himself from the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into potential ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The conversati­on between Don McGahn, the president’s White House counsel, and Sessions took place on the president’s orders and occurred just before the attorney general announced that he would step aside from the ongoing inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election, according to a person with knowledge of the interactio­n. Two other people confirmed details of the conversati­on between McGahn and Sessions.

All three people spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press to avoid publicly discussing an ongoing investigat­ion.

The episode is known to special counsel Robert Mueller and his team of prosecutor­s and is likely of interest to them as they look into whether Trump’s actions as president, including the May firing of FBI Director James Comey, amount to improper efforts to obstruct the Russia investigat­ion. Investigat­ors recently concluded a round of interviews with current and former White House officials, including McGahn and former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus.

The New York Times first reported that Trump had McGahn lobby Sessions against a recusal.

Reached Thursday evening, Trump personal attorney John Dowd said, “I know nothing about that,” and hung up. Jay Sekulow, another of the president’s personal lawyers, did not immediatel­y respond to a phone message seeking comment.

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

Sessions announced on March 2 that he would recuse himself from the Russia probe. He said at the time that he should not oversee any investigat­ion into a campaign for which he was an active and vocal supporter, though the recusal also followed the revelation that he had had two previously undisclose­d interactio­ns during the 2016 campaign with the Russian ambassador to the United States. At his Jan. 10 confirmati­on hearing, he had said he had had no meetings with Russians.

But soon before the announceme­nt, with White House officials anticipati­ng that Sessions might be poised to step aside, McGahn spoke to Sessions by phone and urged him against recusing himself from the investigat­ion. During the conversati­on, according to people familiar with the matter, McGahn argued to Sessions that there was no reason or basis at that time for him to recuse. One person said McGahn also told him that recusal would do nothing to resolve concerns over whether Sessions had given a misleading answer at his confirmati­on hearing.

Sessions ultimately declined the urging, and McGahn ultimately accepted the conclusion of officials who believed that Sessions should recuse.

Sessions’ recusal left Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein in charge of the Russia investigat­ion. But once Trump fired Comey two months later, Rosenstein appointed Mueller, the former FBI director, to run the investigat­ion and to report to him.

Four people, including Trump’s former campaign chairman and national security adviser, have been charged so far in the investigat­ion. The Sessions recusal has been a sore spot for Trump for months, with the president publicly deriding the decision and lamenting his selection of the former Alabama senator as his attorney general.

In a July interview with The Times, Trump said, “Well, Sessions should have never recused himself, and if he was going to recuse himself, he should have told me before he took the job, and I would have picked somebody else.”

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