The Korea Times

Trump’s justice nominee says Mueller probe no ‘witch hunt’

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— Donald Trump’s U.S. attorney general nominee Bill Barr pledged Tuesday to protect the investigat­ion into possible election collusion with Russia and rejected the president’s characteri­zation of the probe as a “witch hunt.”

Asked in a Senate confirmati­on hearing whether he would obey an order from Trump to fire Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who leads the Russia probe, Barr replied: “Assuming there was no good cause ... I would not carry out that instructio­n.”

Barr said he was a longtime friend of Mueller and said it was “unimaginab­le” that the prosecutor would do anything in the investigat­ion that would justify reeling it in or shutting it down.

He said he had no reason to rein in or defund Mueller’s probe, both of which Trump has called for as part of his campaign against what he labels “rigged” and “illegal.”

“I don’t believe Mr. Mueller would be involved in a witch hunt,” Barr said.

Barr was testifying on the first of two days of hearings on his nomination by Trump to lead the Justice Department.

The 68-year-old was previously attorney general from 1991-1993 and then spent 25 years as a corporate lawyer, most of it advising telecommun­ications giant Verizon.

He also maintained close links to the Republican mainstream and has been a major donor to the party.

The hearing focused on whether Trump recruited Barr to replace Jeff Sessions, who was fired in November, in order to help the White House inhibit the Mueller investigat­ion.

He was interviewe­d once last year as a possible personal lawyer for the president, and later submitted a brief to the Justice Department and White House arguing that Trump could not be accused of obstructio­n over his May 2017 firing of FBI director James Comey.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Security forces help civilians flee the scene as cars burn behind, at a hotel complex in Nairobi, Kenya, Tuesday. At least 15 people were killed when an Islamist suicide bomber and gunmen stormed an upmarket hotel and office complex.
AP-Yonhap Security forces help civilians flee the scene as cars burn behind, at a hotel complex in Nairobi, Kenya, Tuesday. At least 15 people were killed when an Islamist suicide bomber and gunmen stormed an upmarket hotel and office complex.

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