Yuma Sun

Analysis: Legal clouds over Trump grow with new disclosure­s

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WASHINGTON — The more that special counsel Robert Mueller and federal prosecutor­s reveal, the darker the legal clouds over President Donald Trump grow.

Trump’s own Justice Department has now implicated him in a crime, accusing him of directing illegal hush-money payments to women during his 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Mueller keeps finding new instances of Trump associates lying about their contacts with Russia during an election the Kremlin worked to sway in the Republican’s favor.

The president hasn’t been charged with any crimes. He may never be. Whether a president can be prosecuted while in office remains a matter of legal dispute.

But Trump also hasn’t been cleared of wrongdoing. Each new legal filing underscore­s that the president is a central figure in investigat­ions that already have brought down several people who worked closely with him and remain a threat to others in Trump’s orbit.

Even if the president is never charged with illegal activity, the months of investigat­ions and legal wrangling have cast a pall over his administra­tion and exposed the culture of lying that has surrounded Trump, both in and out of office.

Trump’s moniker in some of the filings: “Individual-1.”

Trump allies argue that if Mueller had informatio­n that Trump broke the law, the special counsel would have made his case against him by now. To the president and his supporters, the fact that the special counsel has been working for well over a year without making a direct accusation against Trump means the investigat­ion is simply an effort to damage the president politicall­y.

“AFTER TWO YEARS AND MILLIONS OF PAGES OF DOCUMENTS (and a cost of over $30,000,000), NO COLLUSION!” Trump tweeted early Saturday morning.

Despite Trump’s declaratio­ns, Mueller hasn’t ruled out that the prospect of election season coordinati­on between Moscow and the Trump campaign, and only recently received written answers from the president about possible Russian interferen­ce. Mueller also is still pursuing whether Trump obstructed justice while in office.

Yet the most precarious legal situation for Trump appears to be separate from Mueller’s inquiry: an assertion by federal prosecutor­s in New York that Trump directed his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, to make illegal payments during the campaign to silence women alleging extramarit­al affairs.

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