Mueller’s investigation has cost $6.7M thus far
WASHINGTON — The special counsel investigation into possible coordination between President Donald Trump’s campaign and Russia during the 2016 presidential election has cost more than $6.7 million so far, according to a financial report released Tuesday.
The release of the report by special counsel Robert Mueller’s office comes as the investigation appears to be gaining steam: Prosecutors have gained a key cooperator in their investigation and revealed that they are keenly focused on the actions of the president and his inner circle.
Of the overall price tag, only about $3.2 million was spent directly by the special counsel’s office. An additional $3.5 million was paid out by the Justice Department to support the investigation, though the special counsel’s office says that money would have been spent on ongoing probes anyway, even if Mueller had not been appointed.
Mueller incorporated several active investigations within the Justice Department, including those of Trump campaign contacts with Russia, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s business activities and former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.
The details of the expenditures related to Mueller’s investigation were laid out in a report released publicly by the special counsel’s office. The report covers from May 17, the date of Mueller’s appointment, through Sept. 30, the end of the federal fiscal year.
According to Mueller’s report, the special counsel’s office spent about $1.7 million for salaries and benefits and more than $223,000 for travel-related expenses. The majority of the travel costs stemmed from the relocation of Justice Department employees temporarily assigned to the expanding investigation.
The office also spent nearly $734,000 on equipment and about $363,000 on rent, communications and utilities.
The 4½-year investigations headed by independent counsel Kenneth Starr and his successor, Robert Ray, cost more than $52 million in taxpayer funds as they looked into President Bill Clinton and then-first lady Hillary Clinton.
A 2000 General Accounting Office report that detailed those figures said that $36 million came from congressional appropriations and $16 million from other federal agency costs.
Starr’s predecessor, Robert Fiske, spent an additional $6 million investigating the Clintons’ involvement in the Whitewater real estate deal, according to a May 1999 GAO report.