Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mueller investigat­ion adds prosecutor­s, FBI agents

- CHRIS STROHM

WASHINGTON — Special counsel Robert Mueller is tapping additional Justice Department resources for help with new legal battles as his year-old investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce with the 2016 election continues to expand.

As Mueller pursues his probe, he’s making more use of career prosecutor­s from the offices of U.S. attorneys and from Justice Department headquarte­rs, as well as FBI agents — a sign that he may be laying the groundwork to hand off parts of his investigat­ion eventually, several current and former U.S. officials said.

Mueller and his team of 17 federal prosecutor­s are coping with a higher-than-expected volume of court challenges that has added complexity in recent months, but there’s no political appetite at this time to increase the size of his staff, the officials said.

According to his most recent statement of expenditur­es, more money is being spent on work done by permanent Department of Justice units than on Mueller’s own dedicated operation. The Justice Department units spent $9 million from the investigat­ion’s start in May 2017 through March of this year, compared with $7.7 million spent by Mueller’s team.

Mueller’s probe has come under attack from President Donald Trump and his allies who say it’s going on too long, expanding too far and costing too much. But the special counsel’s charter, issued by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, includes investigat­ing whether Trump or associates colluded with Russia and “any matters that arose or may arise directly from the investigat­ion.”

Investigat­ors in New York, Pittsburgh, Alexandria, Va., and elsewhere have been tapped to supplement the work of Mueller’s team, the officials said. Mueller has already handed off one major investigat­ion — into Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen — to the Southern District of New York.

“Whatever you got, finish it the hell up because this country is being torn apart,” Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy of South Carolina told Rosenstein during a June 28 hearing. Rosenstein said Mueller knows he must move expeditiou­sly.

A heavy investigat­ive load for Mueller had been anticipate­d from the start, the officials said. The special counsel has already issued 20 indictment­s and secured guilty pleas from five individual­s, and some of the defendants are mounting stiffer-than-expected battles in court.

“I don’t think he’s getting in over his head,” said Solomon Wisenberg, who served as deputy independen­t counsel investigat­ing President Bill Clinton in the 1990s. “These things have a tendency to balloon. Yes, it may be taxing on them. No, it’s not that unusual.”

Nor is it unusual for Mueller to turn to U.S. attorneys or to Justice Department headquarte­rs, said Wisenberg, who’s now a partner at the law firm Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarboroug­h LLP.

Mueller is dealing with the legal battles as he considers whether to subpoena Trump for an interview and as he accelerate­s his investigat­ion into potential collusion.

The first — and perhaps biggest — court case for Mueller is over his indictment of Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, for an array of financial crimes. Manafort is fighting the indictment in two federal courthouse­s, and he expanded his case last week to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Both sides are now gearing up for a trial to begin later this month.

“It’s going to be all hands on deck when they go to the Manafort trial,” Wisenberg said.

Other court fights may have come as a surprise.

Mueller indicted 13 Russian individual­s and three entities in February on charges of violating criminal laws with the intent to interfere with the U.S. election through the manipulati­on of social media.

None of the targets is in the U.S., but one of them, the Internet Research Agency, has forced Mueller into another legal fight in federal court. The two sides have been sparring most recently over how to protect sensitive investigat­ive materials from disclosure. Mueller has enlisted prosecutor­s with the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington to handle the case.

Another surprise came last week when Andrew Miller, a former aide to Trump adviser Roger Stone, filed a sealed motion to fight one of Mueller’s grand jury subpoenas.

Mueller also plans to move eventually to sentencing for Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and former foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os, both of whom pleaded guilty to lying to investigat­ors.

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