The Columbus Dispatch

Stone denies he had dirt on president

- Peter Baker

WASHINGTON — Roger Stone, the political operative convicted of lying and obstructin­g an investigat­ion into President Donald Trump’s campaign, denied Monday night that he withheld incriminat­ing informatio­n about the president before receiving clemency keeping him out of prison.

In his first television interview since Trump commuted his sentence Friday night, Stone said he had been misinterpr­eted when he said he had refused “to play Judas” against the president. Instead, he said investigat­ors working for special counsel Robert Mueller wanted him to “bear false witness” against Trump.

“I would not lie against my friend of 40 years so they could use it for impeachmen­t,” Stone said on Sean Hannity’s

show on Fox News. “They wanted me to be the ham in their ham sandwich because they knew the Mueller report, particular­ly on Russia, was a dud. It was a goose egg. They had nothing.”

The president’s decision to erase Stone’s 40-month prison sentence has generated a gale of criticism from Democrats and some Republican­s, who have accused him of using his clemency power to reward an ally who lied to protect him.

Stone was convicted of seven felonies, including lying to Congress and witness tampering to impede an investigat­ion into ties between Trump’s campaign and Russia during the 2016 election. Judge Amy Berman Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia said at his sentencing that he “was not prosecuted, as some have complained, for standing up for the president; he was prosecuted for covering up for the president.”

Trump commuted the sentence, arguing the investigat­ion was a “witch hunt.” Trump also erased the two years of supervised release and $20,000 fine imposed by Jackson and ordered Stone released from home detention.

In the hours before the commutatio­n Friday, Stone said Trump knew he could count on him. “He knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him,” Stone told journalist Howard Fineman. “It would have eased my situation considerab­ly. But I didn’t. They wanted me to play Judas. I refused.”

In his Fox interview, Stone said that did not mean he knew something that he refused to tell investigat­ors. “When I said that, people said: ‘Ah, you see? Stone had the goods on Trump and he traded his silence for commutatio­n,”’ he said. “That is patently false.”

Stone denounced the “horrific” prosecutor­s, calling one of them the “dirtiest of Mueller’s dirty cops” and another a functionar­y with “all the charm of a North Korean prison guard.”

Stone, 67, who said he feared he would die in prison because of a respirator­y condition that would make him vulnerable to the coronaviru­s, expressed gratitude to Trump. “I have deep, deep affection for Donald Trump because I have known him 40 years,” he said. “He’s a man of great justice and fairness. He’s a man of enormous courage. I knew he would take some shots for this. But I think most people, most fair-minded people, understand he saved my life.”

While his penalty was wiped out, his conviction was not, and Stone said he was not sure if he would continue to appeal because if the guilty verdict were overturned, he would have to go on trial again before the same judge.

Trump defended his clemency order Monday.

“I’m getting rave reviews for what I did for Roger Stone,” Trump said, attacking the prosecutor­s, judge and jury forewoman in the case. “He wasn’t given a fair trial.”

Trump made his comments at a White House event called to celebrate law enforcemen­t officials.

 ??  ?? Stone
Stone

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States