The Day

Durham remains special counsel overseeing Trump-Russia probe

- By MICHAEL BALSAMO

Washington — U.S. Attorney John Durham said Friday that he will resign from his position as the top federal prosecutor in Connecticu­t but is remaining as a special counsel to oversee the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into the origins of the Russia probe that shadowed Donald Trump’s presidency,

Durham will resign from his post as U.S. attorney for Connecticu­t on Monday. But Durham, who was appointed in October by then-Attorney General William Barr as a special counsel to investigat­e the origins of the Trump-Russia probe, will remain in that capacity.

Like Durham, nearly every other U.S. attorney who served in the Trump administra­tion was asked earlier this month to submit their resignatio­ns as the Biden administra­tion moves to transition to its own nominees.

The FBI in July 2016 began investigat­ing whether the Trump campaign was coordinati­ng with Russia to sway the outcome of the presidenti­al election. That probe was inherited nearly a year later by special counsel Robert Mueller, who ultimately did not find enough evidence to charge Trump or any of his associates with conspiring with Russia.

The early months of the investigat­ion, when agents obtained secret surveillan­ce warrants targeting a former Trump campaign aide, have long been scrutinize­d by Trump and other critics of the probe who say the FBI made significan­t errors. A Justice Department inspector general report backed up that criticism but did not find evidence that mistakes in the surveillan­ce applicatio­ns and other problems with the probe were driven by partisan bias.

Durham’s investigat­ion, which the Justice Department has described as a criminal probe, had begun very broadly but Barr said in December that it had “narrowed considerab­ly” and that it was “really is focused on the activities of the Crossfire Hurricane investigat­ion within the FBI.”

Durham’s investigat­ion has so far resulted in one prosecutio­n so far. A former FBI lawyer was sentenced to probation last month for altering an email the Justice Department relied on in its surveillan­ce of an aide to President Donald Trump during the Russia investigat­ion.

The U.S. attorneys transition process, which happens routinely between administra­tions, applies to a few dozen U.S. attorneys who were appointed by Trump and confirmed by the Senate and many of the federal prosecutor­s who were nominated by Trump already left their positions.

A senior Justice Department official told the AP earlier this month that David Weiss, the U.S. attorney in Delaware, overseeing the federal tax probe involving Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, will remain in place.

The 93 U.S. attorneys serve at the pleasure of the president and are responsibl­e for overseeing offices of federal prosecutor­s and charged with prosecutin­g federal crimes in their jurisdicti­ons.

 ?? U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE VIA AP ?? Connecticu­t’s U.S. Attorney John Durham in 2018.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE VIA AP Connecticu­t’s U.S. Attorney John Durham in 2018.

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