Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Mueller probe ‘close to being completed,’ acting AG says

- By Michael Balsamo and Chad Day

WASHINGTON >> The special counsel’s Russia probe is “close to being completed,” the acting attorney general said Monday in the first official sign that the investigat­ion may be wrapping up.

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker’s comments were a departure for the Justice Department, which rarely comments on the state of the investigat­ion into whether President Donald Trump’s campaign coordinate­d with Russia during the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“The investigat­ion is, I think, close to being completed,” Whitaker said Monday at the end of an unrelated news conference in Washington. He said he had been “fully briefed” on the probe.

Whitaker did not elaborate or give any timetable for the end of a nearly twoyear investigat­ion that has shadowed Trump’s presidency.

So far, special counsel Robert Mueller has charged 34 people, including several close to the president. But he has yet to accuse anyone close to the Trump campaign of conspiring with the Kremlin to hurt Democrat Hillary Clinton and help Trump win the election.

Whitaker, who is seen as a Trump ally, took over the Justice Department — and oversight of the Mueller probe — after former Attorney General Jeff Sessions resigned at Trump’s request in November.

Whitaker has drawn criticism for not recusing himself from the Russia investigat­ion, even though he has publicly criticized it in the past. A top Justice Department ethics official advised him to step aside out of an “abundance of caution,” but Whitaker declined to do so.

According to Justice Department regulation­s, Mueller has to provide a report to the attorney general at the conclusion of his investigat­ion laying out his prosecutio­n decisions.

But it’s unclear what form the report will take or whether it will be released publicly.

And depending on when Mueller wraps up, the report may not go to Whitaker. Trump has nominated William Barr to serve as the next attorney general. His confirmati­on hearing was held this month and he’s awaiting a vote in the Senate.

Barr told the Senate Judiciary Committee earlier this month that he wants to release as much informatio­n as possible about Mueller’s findings, but he has hedged on specifics.

Trump has slammed the Russia investigat­ion as a “witch hunt” and says there was no collusion.

The evidence so far shows that a broad range of Trump associates had Russia-related contacts during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign and transition period, and several lied about the communicat­ion. Those contacts, according to Mueller’s indictment­s and U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, occurred while the Russian government carried out a multifacet­ed effort to influence the 2016 presidenti­al campaign and attempt to sway it Trump’s way.

On Friday, longtime Trump confidante Roger Stone became the sixth Trump associate to be charged by Mueller.

The others are Trump’s former national security adviser, his campaign chairman, his former personal lawyer and two other campaign aides.

Stone faces a Tuesday morning arraignmen­t in federal court, where he is expected to plead not guilty to charges that he lied to lawmakers, engaged in witness tampering and obstructed a congressio­nal investigat­ion into possible coordinati­on between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Though most defendants facing charges tend to stay quiet for fear of inflaming prosecutor­s or a judge, Stone has opted for a different tack since his pre-dawn arrest Friday.

Stone staged an impromptu news conference outside a Florida courthouse, made the rounds on weekend television interviews and mocked the probe on Instagram, posting a cartoonish image of Mueller holding a “nothing-burger” — just a hamburger bun with no meat.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker

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