Toronto Star

U.S.-Russia investigat­ion’s expansion a serious sign

As special counsel probes deeper avenues, gravity of situation becomes clearer

- AMBER PHILLIPS

WASHINGTON— U.S. President Donald Trump keeps calling the Russia investigat­ion “fake news.”

But with each passing week, the independen­t investigat­ion into Trump’s campaign ties to Russia is getting more real, not less. Here’s how: It’s expanding, both in size and scope. Special counsel Robert Mueller has built a team of lawyers who have expertise in cybercrime, whitecolla­r crime, the mob, money laundering and Watergate.

Together, his team has over a century of legal experience.

The Department of Justice’s No. 2, Rod Rosenstein, originally appointed Mueller to investigat­e Trump campaign connection­s to Russia, but Mueller has wide latitude to look into whatever he wishes. So far, we know that’s expanded to: Jared Kushner, Michael Flynn, unspecifie­d financial crimes and very specific accusation­s by the former FBI director that Trump himself tried to obstruct justice.

It’s getting more in depth. The Wall Street Journal reported that they’ve set up a grand jury, which can subpoena witnesses and documents, as well as indict people. The president’s defenders, such as Gov. Chris Christie, say grand juries are a normal process in investigat­ions.

But implicit in that statement: It’s a normal process in any serious investigat­ion. If there really was nothing to see here, as Trump claims, Mueller’s team wouldn’t need to keep digging. And it suggests they had enough evidence to persuade a federal judge to OK the grand jury.

As Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House intelligen­ce committee, said on CNN Sunday: “Rather than turning that investigat­ion off, rather than concluding, we have looked at this for a year, there’s really nothing to see here, as the president would claim, instead, if these allegation­s are true, it’s moving into a new phase.”

Congress is taking it seriously. Republican-led committees in the Senate and the House are leading parallel investigat­ions into Russia meddling in the U.S. election and have said they’ll go where the facts lead.

Outside those committees, both Democratic and Republican lawmakers in Congress are writing legislatio­n to give Mueller room to do his investigat­ion and make sure that Trump can’t fire him. They also forced Trump to sign a Russia sanctions bill into law last week. Additional­ly, though the Senate left town, it technicall­y stayed in session so Trump can’t fire, then self-replace, his attorney general and reshape the special counsel investigat­ion.

The Trump campaign has a lot of Russian connection­s. The more we learn about them, the deeper they seem. Take Donald Trump Jr.’s campaign meeting with a Russian-government-connected lawyer.

First, he told the New York Times it was about adoptions. (A narrative the Washington Post reports Trump himself dictated.) But that explanatio­n quickly caved to reveal the truth: It was to get dirt on Hillary Clinton.

Additional­ly, former campaign aides Paul Manafort, Carter Page and Michael Flynn, all have connection­s to Russia. Others now in the administra­tion, such as Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Kushner, have not been forthcomin­g about their Russia meetings.

Congress, the judicial branch and Trump’s own administra­tion have all played a role in expanding the investigat­ion and taking it seriously. If this were a “witch hunt,” as Trump claims, then it’s a “witch hunt” the entire political and judicial system is in on. Even the most cynical person has to acknowledg­e that would be an extraordin­ary conspiracy the likes of which the U.S. has never seen.

Now, just because an investigat­ion is indeed very real doesn’t mean we know its conclusion. It could take months, even years, to finish, much less come to a conclusion about whether Trump colluded with Russia to win the White House. But with each passing day, it’s increasing­ly clear this investigat­ion is neither made up nor built on fake news.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Special counsel Robert Mueller can widen the investigat­ion if he wishes.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Special counsel Robert Mueller can widen the investigat­ion if he wishes.

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