The Sentinel-Record

Trump hires lawyer who represente­d Bill Clinton in impeachmen­t process

- CHAD DAY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday hired a veteran attorney who represente­d Bill

Clinton during his impeachmen­t process as the White

House shifted to a more aggressive approach to the Russia investigat­ion that has reached a critical stage.

The White House announced the hiring of lawyer Emmet Flood after disclosing the retirement of Ty Cobb, who for months has been the administra­tion’s point person dealing with special counsel Robert Mueller.

It’s the latest shake-up for a legal team grappling with unresolved questions on how to protect the president from legal and political jeopardy in Mueller’s Russia probe, which is nearing its one-year anniversar­y.

White House spokesman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that Cobb had been discussing the decision for weeks and would retire at the end of May, and that Flood would be joining the White House staff to “represent the president and the administra­tion against the Russia witch hunt.”

The replacemen­t of Cobb with Flood may herald a more adversaria­l stance toward the Mueller team as Trump’s lawyers debate whether to make the president available for an interview with the special counsel and brace for the prospect of a grand jury subpoena if

they refuse.

Though Cobb did not personally represent the president, he functioned as a critical point person for Mueller’s document and interview requests, coordinate­d dealings with prosecutor­s and worked closely with Trump’s personal lawyers. He had repeatedly urged cooperatio­n with the investigat­ion in hopes of bringing it to a quick end, and viewed his role as largely finished now that interviews with dozens of current and former White House official have been completed.

Yet Flood, who was embroiled in the bitterly partisan Clinton impeachmen­t fight 20 years ago, may well advocate a more confrontat­ional approach. His law firm, Williams & Connolly, is one of Washington’s most prominent, with a reputation for aggressive advocacy for its clients and a history of tangling with the government — but also representi­ng senior White House officials, including presidents.

Flood, a former law clerk to the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, has defended former Vice President Dick Cheney in a lawsuit brought by former CIA official Valerie Plame and represente­d George W. Bush in executive-privilege disputes with Congress — suggesting he is well-versed in the powers of the presidency and may invoke those authoritie­s as the Mueller investigat­ion moves forward.

Flood was always the top choice of White House counsel Don McGahn for the job Cobb was given last summer, according to a person familiar with the hiring decision who described Flood as a “fighter.” The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

Cobb and McGahn had different views on how cooperativ­e the White House should be with the special counsel investigat­ion.

Cobb’s retirement, though not a surprise, was nonetheles­s the latest evolution for a legal team marked by turnover.

Trump’s lead personal lawyer, John Dowd, left in March. Another attorney who Trump tried to bring on ultimately passed because of conflicts, and the president two weeks ago added former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and a pair of former prosecutor­s, Martin and Jane Raskin, to work alongside mainstay lawyer Jay Sekulow.

Critical decisions lie ahead. The president’s legal team has not committed him to an interview with Mueller, who has dozens of questions on a broad array of topics he’d like to ask. Trump initially said he was eager for an interview, but he hasn’t said so recently. His view of Mueller soured further after raids last month that targeted one of his personal lawyers, Michael Cohen, in a separate investigat­ion.

Those interview negotiatio­ns are hugely consequent­ial, especially after Dowd confirmed to The Associated Press this week that Mueller’s team in March raised the prospect of issuing a grand jury subpoena for Trump, an extraordin­ary idea that would seek to force a sitting president to testify under oath.

It was not immediatel­y clear in what context the possibilit­y of a subpoena was raised or how serious Mueller’s prosecutor­s were about such a move. Mueller is probing not only Russian election interferen­ce and possible coordinati­on with Trump associates but possible obstructio­n of justice by Trump after he took office.

If Mueller’s team decides to subpoena Trump as part of the investigat­ion, the president could still fight it in court or refuse to answer questions by invoking his Fifth Amendment protection from self-incriminat­ion.

Trump lashed out against the investigat­ion in familiar fashion Wednesday, saying on Twitter: “There was no Collusion (it is a Hoax) and there is no Obstructio­n of Justice (that is a setup & trap).”

Also Wednesday, Trump echoed the concerns of a small group of House conservati­ves who have been criticizin­g the Justice Department for not turning over certain investigat­ion documents.

“What are they afraid of?” Trump tweeted. “At some point I will have no choice but to use the powers granted to the Presidency and get involved!”

It was unclear what Trump meant by “get involved.”

Several Republican House committee chairmen have recently negotiated deals with the Justice Department to turn over documents related to Russia investigat­ions into Trump and also a 2016 investigat­ion into Democrat Hillary Clinton’s emails.

The Justice Department says that “dozens of members and staff from both parties” have viewed thousands of classified documents and House staff members have temporary office space in the department to review additional materials.

But some lawmakers who sit on those committees remain unsatisfie­d, particular­ly members of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus. Some of them have asked for an unredacted version of a Justice Department document that sets out the scope for Mueller’s probe, a request that the department immediatel­y denied because it pertains to an ongoing investigat­ion.

 ??  ?? Flood
Flood

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States