Kuwait Times

Mueller brings Trump closer to prosecutio­n

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US President Donald J Trump, protected from criminal charges while in office, is now facing the prospect of indictment when he becomes a private citizen. On Friday, federal prosecutor­s in New York accused Trump of a felony: Violating campaignfi­nance laws with hush-money payments intended to skew the 2016 election. Specifical­ly, they detailed how Trump’s lawyer and self-described fixer Michael Cohen bought the silence of two women who said they had sexual liaisons with Trump - and did so in order to help Trump win the presidency - with the president’s full knowledge.

Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III also filed documents showing that Cohen has told them that Trump was working on a real estate deal in Moscow potentiall­y worth hundreds of millions of dollars “well into the campaign” - shortly before he secured the Republican nomination for president. Cohen was convicted of lying to Congress about these discussion­s with Trump.

The American people now know that Cohen “acted in coordinati­on with and at the direction of Individual­1” - the president of the United States - in the illegal payments. Cohen was in “close and regular contact” with the White House and the president’s lawyers when he lied to Congress under oath about the Moscow project.

The Moscow project was “a lucrative business opportunit­y that sought, and likely required, the assistance of the Russian government,” Mueller’s prosecutor­s wrote. The negotiatio­ns “occurred at a time of sustained efforts by the Russian government to interfere with the US presidenti­al election.” Hours after the Russian hacks into the Democratic National Committee’s computers were first revealed in June 2016, the Moscow project discussion­s were suspended.

The FBI started out investigat­ing the Russian operation that summer. By the fall, agents were looking at whether Americans aided and abetted the attack. Now we are witnessing an intelligen­ce nightmare - a Russian operation to put Moscow’s preferred candidate in charge of the United States, and the fallout as he damages American democracy and attacks the North Atlantic alliance. After 18 months as special counsel, Mueller has taken his investigat­ion up to the first days after Trump was inaugurate­d. He and his fellow prosecutor­s have built a clear and convincing case that lies - not just political lies, but lies that constitute crimes - helped put Trump in power.

That case, along with Mueller’s continuing investigat­ion of obstructio­n of justice by the president, may someday help put Citizen Trump in jeopardy of prosecutio­n for a wide-ranging conspiracy to defraud the United States. That statute, the Supreme Court determined long ago, covers “any conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructin­g or defeating the lawful function of any department of government.” That includes election laws, tax laws, and every manner of fraud.

Mueller and the FBI agents he commands have many months of work ahead. I suspect they are assembling the facts that one day will fill a sealed indictment - United States vs. Donald J. Trump - that could be unsealed by a federal judge when the president leaves office. Trump might try to obstruct Mueller. But, as I have written previously, he can’t fire the FBI.

Mueller now has proven that Cohen, along with former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, broke the law by lying to the FBI and Congress about their contacts with Russians and people with ties to Russian intelligen­ce. If they lied at the direction of Trump, the special counsel will find out.

Common denominato­r

These lies - and more still under Mueller’s microscope - have a common denominato­r. Each shows the hand of Vladimir Putin and his spy service. In 2016, Russians also approached Donald Trump Jr., and Trump’s senior adviser Jared Kushner, offering each in turn a tempting morsel - illegally obtained campaign dirt for the son, an illicit intelligen­ce backchanne­l to Moscow for the son-in-law. These were classic intelligen­ce approaches - “dangles” in spy argot - testing targets to see if they will bite. They did. Did they pick up the phone and call the FBI? They did not.

And then they appear to have misled members of Congress about it, under penalty of perjury. This means that members of the president’s family could be in legal peril. Trump denies everything. “Totally clears the president. Thank you!” he tweeted as the new accusation­s were unsealed. That was yet another false statement from a leader who, according to Washington Post fact checkers, has misled the American people more than 6,400 times while in office, and continuall­y and viciously attacks the special counsel, the FBI, and the Justice Department.

These attacks constitute a clear and present danger the president poses to the rule of law in the United States. The question now is whether US institutio­ns like Congress, the courts, and the criminal justice system can constrain him, and, if it comes to that, convict him for his assaults against the American political and legal system. Come January, the Democrats in the newly-elected House of Representa­tives would do well to investigat­e Trump as no president ever has been investigat­ed before.

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