The Palm Beach Post

Trump declares he’s under investigat­ion

In a tweet, president blasts Justice official for a ‘witch hunt.’

- Michael D. Shear and Charlie Savage ©2017 The New York Times

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed publicly for the first time Friday that he was under investigat­ion in the expanding inquiry into Russian influence in the election, and he appeared to attack the integrity of the Justice Department official in charge of leading it.

In an early morning tweet, the president declared that he was “being investigat­ed” for his decision to fire James Comey, the former FBI director. And he seemed to accuse Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, of leading a “witch hunt.”

The tweet was the first explicit concession by the president that Robert Mueller, the special counsel for the Russia inquiry, had begun examining whether Trump’s firing of Comey last month was an attempt to obstruct the investigat­ion.

And Trump’s apparent reference to Rosenstein, who oversees the Russia investigat­ion because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from it, came just hours after an oddly worded statement from Rosenstein complainin­g about leaks in the case.

In the statement, Rosenstein wrote that “Americans should exercise caution before accepting as true any stories attributed to anonymous ‘officials,’ particular­ly when they do not identify the country — let alone the branch or agency of government — with which the alleged sources supposedly are affiliated.”

He added: “Americans should be skeptical about anonymous allegation­s. The Department of Justice has a long-establishe­d policy to neither confirm nor deny such allegation­s.”

Rosenstein’s statement followed two articles by the Washington Post that cited unnamed officials, one saying that Mueller’s investigat­ion had widened to include whether Trump committed obstructio­n of justice, the other that it was looking at financial transactio­ns involving Jared Kushner, the president’s adviser and sonin-law. After the statement, The Post updated the Kushner article so that its first sourcing reference was to “U.S. officials.”

The highly unusual statement by the deputy attorney general raised the question of whether Trump or some other White House official had asked him to publicly discredit the reports. Part of the revelation­s surroundin­g the Russia investigat­ion and the firing of Comey has been that Trump repeatedly pushed top intelligen­ce officials to say in public that Trump was not personally under investigat­ion and that there was no evidence of collusion between his campaign and Russia in its interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

But there was some evidence that Rosenstein’s moti- vation may instead have been his own mounting frustratio­n at seeing details of the law enforcemen­t investigat­ion appear nearly daily in the news media.

A Justice Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters, said that no one had asked Rosenstein to make the statement and that he acted on his own.

Still, the statement, followed by Trump’s tweet, demonstrat­ed the pressure on the deputy attorney general.

This week, a friend of Trump’s said the president was considerin­g firing Mueller — a task that would be complicate­d by Justice Department regulation­s, which say that only the attorney general may fire a special counsel and only if there is good cause. Rosenstein is acting as the attorney general in the inquiry because Sessions recused himself from investigat­ions that touch on the 2016 presidenti­al campaigns.

According to people briefed on his thinking, while Trump has left open the possibilit­y of dismissing Mueller, his anger has been mostly trained on Sessions and Rosenstein. The presi- dent blames Rosenstein for appointing Mueller and Sessions for recusing himself from any part of the Russia investigat­ion.

Separately, the apparent expansion of Mueller’s investigat­ion into whether Trump obstructed justice, including by firing Comey, has raised the question of whether Rosenstein, as a witness to and participan­t in the events in 2017 that culminated in that ouster, may have to also recuse himself.

If Rosenstein recuses himself from overseeing the special counsel investigat­ion or were to resign or be fired by Trump — acting attorney general duties for the inquiry would fall to the department’s No. 3 official, Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand.

Brand has never served as a prosecutor.

 ??  ??
 ?? AL DRAGO / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Vice President Mike Pence (right) has hired a personal criminal defense lawyer to guide him through the various investigat­ions encircling the White House, according to one of his aides on Thursday.
AL DRAGO / NEW YORK TIMES Vice President Mike Pence (right) has hired a personal criminal defense lawyer to guide him through the various investigat­ions encircling the White House, according to one of his aides on Thursday.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States