Montreal Gazette

Charging Trump was ‘not an option’: Mueller

MUELLER’S REMARKS DO NOT EXONERATE U.S. PRESIDENT

- ERIC TUCKER, MICHAEL BALSAMO AND CHAD DAY

Special counsel Robert Mueller said Wednesday that charging U.S. President Donald Trump with a crime was “not an option” because of federal rules, but he used his first public comments on the Russia investigat­ion to emphasize that he did not exonerate the president.

“If we had had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so,” Mueller said.

His remarks, just under 10 minutes long and delivered from a Justice Department podium, were extraordin­ary given that he had never before discussed or characteri­zed his findings and had stayed mute during two years of feverish public speculatio­n.

They stood as a pointed rebuttal to Trump’s repeated claims that he was cleared and that the two-year inquiry was a “witch hunt.” They also marked a counter to criticism, including by Attorney General William Barr, that Mueller should have reached a determinat­ion on

whether the president illegally tried to obstruct the probe by taking actions such as firing his FBI director.

Mueller made clear that his team never considered indicting Trump because the Justice Department prohibits the prosecutio­n of a sitting president.

“Charging the president with a crime was therefore not an option we could consider,” Mueller said.

He said he believed such an action would be unconstitu­tional.

“Even if the charge is kept under seal and hidden from public view that, too, is prohibited.”

Mueller did not use the word “impeachmen­t,” but said it was the job of Congress — not the criminal justice system — to hold the president accountabl­e for any wrongdoing.

His statement largely echoed the central points of his 448-page report, which was released last month with some redactions.

Mueller, a former FBI director, said his work was complete and he was resigning to return to private life.

His remarks underscore­d the unsettled resolution, and revelation­s of behind-the-scenes discontent, that accompanie­d the end of his investigat­ion. His refusal to reach a conclusion on criminal obstructio­n opened the door for Barr to clear the president, who in turn has cited the attorney general’s finding as proof of his innocence.

Trump, given notice Tuesday evening that Mueller would speak the next morning, watched on television.

Shortly after Mueller concluded, the president who has repeatedly and falsely claimed that the report cleared him of obstructio­n of justice, tweeted a subdued yet still somewhat inaccurate reaction: “Nothing changes from the Mueller Report. There was insufficie­nt evidence and therefore, in our Country, a person is innocent. The case is closed! Thank you”

While claiming victory, the tone of the president’s tweet was a far cry from the refrain of “total exoneratio­n” that has dominated his declaratio­ns.

Mueller has privately vented to Barr about the attorney general’s handling of the report, while Barr has publicly said he was taken aback by the special counsel’s decision to neither exonerate nor incriminat­e the president.

Under pressure to testify before Congress, Mueller did not rule it out. But he seemed to warn lawmakers that they would not be pulling more detail out of him. His report is his testimony, he said.

“So beyond what I have said here today and what is contained in our written work,” Mueller said, “I do not believe it is appropriat­e for me to speak further about the investigat­ion or to comment on the actions of the Justice Department or Congress.”

Mueller’s comments, one month after the public release of his report on Russian efforts to help Trump defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton, appeared intended to both justify the legitimacy of his investigat­ion against complaints by the president and to explain his decision to not reach a conclusion on whether Trump had obstructed justice in the probe.

He described wide-ranging and criminal Russian efforts to interfere in the election, including by hacking and spreading disinforma­tion — interferen­ce that Trump has said Putin rejected to his face in an “extremely strong and powerful” denial. And Mueller called the question of later obstructio­n by Trump and his campaign a matter of “paramount importance.”

Mueller said the absence of a conclusion on obstructio­n should not be mistaken for exoneratio­n.

A Justice Department legal opinion “says the Constituti­on requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing,” Mueller said. That would shift the next move, if any, to Congress, and the Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, which would investigat­e further or begin any impeachmen­t effort, commented quickly.

New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler said it falls to Congress to respond to the “crimes, lies and other wrongdoing of President Trump — and we will do so.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has so far discourage­d members of her caucus from demanding impeachmen­t, believing it would only help Trump win re-election and arguing that Democrats need to follow a methodical, step by step approach to investigat­ing the president.

Her statement on Wednesday made no mention of impeachmen­t.

“The Congress holds sacred its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to investigat­e and hold the president accountabl­e for his abuse of power,” Pelosi said.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Special counsel Robert Mueller speaks at the Department of Justice Wednesday, in Washington, about the Russia investigat­ion, in his first public comments on the probe.
CAROLYN KASTER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Special counsel Robert Mueller speaks at the Department of Justice Wednesday, in Washington, about the Russia investigat­ion, in his first public comments on the probe.

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