The Post

Congress must wait for Mueller’s conclusion­s

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Attorney General William Barr apparently decided he was not ready yesterday to provide Congress with a summary of the ‘‘principal conclusion­s’’ from the Russia investigat­ion.

Barr received a confidenti­al report from special counsel Robert Mueller on Saturday, and he subsequent­ly released a letter to senior members of Congress saying he might give them informatio­n about the report as soon as this weekend. By yesterday afternoon, a senior Justice Department official and two congressio­nal aides, who were not authorised to speak publicly, said Barr would not do so on that day.

The attorney general was reviewing the findings at the department’s headquarte­rs with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller and supervised his work.

Mueller, in his confidenti­al report, did not recommend additional indictment­s. His conclusion­s could still threaten President Donald Trump and his inner circle now that Democrats control the House and are eager to keep digging. In addition, other prosecutor­s, notably from the US attorney’s office in Manhattan, continue to investigat­e Trump his businesses and his associates.

It’s unlikely that Barr’s decision to share a summary of the special counsel’s report with Congress will satisfy lawmakers. Leaders from both parties have demanded to see the full picture of what Mueller uncovered during his nearly two-year investigat­ion. Mueller could be called to testify to Congress, and Democrats have said they could also issue subpoenas.

Since being appointed special counsel in May 2017, Mueller led the investigat­ion into Moscow’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election, any collaborat­ion with Trump’s campaign and whether the president obstructed justice. A spokesman said Mueller, who has not said anything publicly about his findings, will step down as special counsel in the coming days.

Trump flew to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Saturday before Mueller submitted his report. He did not make any public comments or post on Twitter, and he headed to his golf course as top Justice Department officials arrived at their headquarte­rs on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

A spokeswoma­n for Barr described Mueller’s report as ‘‘comprehens­ive’’ but would not describe it further.

During the investigat­ion, Mueller brought charges against 34 people, including some of Trump’s closest associates. His former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, was sentenced to 7 years in prison for financial crimes and conspiracy charges related to an illegal lobbying scheme on behalf of Ukraine’s pro-Russian government. Trump’s first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, pleaded guilty to lying about his conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador during the presidenti­al transition period.

In addition, the president’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, confessed to lying to Congress about the Trump Organisati­on’s negotiatio­ns to build a luxury skyscraper in Moscow at the same time that Trump was proposing closer ties to Russia while campaignin­g for the White House.

Cohen, who was sentenced to three years in prison, has also pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations connected to payments that silenced two women who said they had affairs with Trump. Federal prosecutor­s in New York, who have handled that investigat­ion after receiving informatio­n from Mueller’s office, said Trump himself directed the scheme. – LA Times

 ?? AP ?? Attorney General William Barr arrives at his home in McLean, Virginia yesterday.
AP Attorney General William Barr arrives at his home in McLean, Virginia yesterday.

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