Houston Chronicle

Mueller turns in Russia probe report

Congress may get briefed by AG this weekend

- By Sharon LaFraniere and Katie Benner

WASHINGTON — Special counsel Robert Mueller on Friday delivered a report on his inquiry into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election to Attorney General William Barr, the Justice Department said, bringing to a close an investigat­ion that has consumed the nation and cast a shadow over President Donald Trump for nearly two years.

Barr told congressio­nal leaders in a letter that he may brief them on the special counsel’s “principal conclusion­s” as early as this

weekend, a surprising­ly fast turnaround for a report anticipate­d for months. The attorney general said he “remained committed to as much transparen­cy as possible.”

In an apparent endorsemen­t of an investigat­ion that Trump has relentless­ly attacked as a “witch hunt,” Barr said Justice Department officials never had to intervene to keep him from taking an inappropri­ate or unwarrante­d step. The department’s regulation­s would have required Barr to inform the leaders of the House and Senate Judiciary committees about any such interventi­ons in his letter.

A senior Justice Department official said Mueller would not recommend new indictment­s, a statement aimed at ending speculatio­n that Trump or other key figures might be charged down the line. With department officials stressing that Mueller’s inquiry was over and his office closing, the question for both Trump’s critics and defenders was whether the prosecutor­s condemned the president’s behavior, exonerated him in their report — or neither. Trump’s lawyers were already girding for a possible fight over whether they could assert executive privilege to keep parts of the report secret.

Since Mueller’s appointmen­t in May 2017, his team has focused on how Russian operatives sought to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidenti­al race and whether anyone tied to the Trump campaign, wittingly or unwittingl­y, cooperated with them. While the inquiry, started months earlier by the FBI, unearthed a far-ranging Russian influence operation, no public evidence emerged that the president or his aides illegally assisted it.

Indictment­s, conviction­s

Nonetheles­s, the damage to Trump and those in his circle has been extensive. A half-dozen former Trump aides were indicted or convicted of crimes, mostly for lying to federal investigat­ors or Congress. Others remain under investigat­ion in cases that Mueller’s office handed off to federal prosecutor­s in New York and elsewhere. Dozens of Russian intelligen­ce officers or citizens, along with three Russian companies, were charged in cases that are likely to languish in court because the defendants cannot be extradited to the U.S.

Republican­s immediatel­y seized upon the news that no more indictment­s are expected as a vindicatio­n of Trump and his campaign. “The reports that there will be no new indictment­s confirm what we’ve known all along: There was never any collusion with Russia,” Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the second-highest-ranking House Republican, said.

Democrats, including some of those hoping to supplant Trump in the White House in the 2020 election, insisted that Mueller’s full report be made public, including the underlying evidence. In a joint statement, Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the top Senate Democrat, warned Barr not to allow the White House a “sneak preview” of the document.

“The White House must not be allowed to interfere in decisions about what parts of those findings or evidence are made public,” they said.

Not since Watergate has a special prosecutor’s inquiry so mesmerized the American public. Polls have shown that most Americans want to know its findings, and the House unanimousl­y passed a nonbinding resolution to publicize the report.

Barr’s letter said he would decide what to release after consulting with Mueller and Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general who has overseen his investigat­ion. Justice Department officials emphasized that the White House had been kept at a distance.

Only a handful of law enforcemen­t officials have seen the report, said Kerri Kupec, a department spokeswoma­n.

Although a White House lawyer was notified that Mueller had delivered it to Barr, no White House official has seen the report or been briefed on it, according to Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary. “The next steps are up to Attorney General Barr, and we look forward to the process taking its course,” she said.

Active related inquiries

Even though Mueller’s report is complete, some aspects of his inquiry remain active and may be overseen by the same prosecutor­s once they are reassigned to their old jobs in the Justice Department. For instance, recently filed court documents suggest that investigat­ors are still examining why former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort turned over campaign polling data in 2016 to a Russian associate who prosecutor­s said was tied to Russian intelligen­ce.

Mueller looked extensivel­y at whether Trump obstructed justice to protect himself or his associates. But despite months of negotiatio­ns, prosecutor­s were unable to personally interview him.

In court, the evidence amassed by the Mueller team has held up. Every defendant who is not still awaiting trial either pleaded guilty or was convicted by a jury. Although no American has been charged with illegally plotting with the Russians to tilt the election, Mueller uncovered a web of lies by former Trump aides.

Five of them were found to have deceived federal investigat­ors or Congress about their interactio­ns with Russians during the campaign or the transition. They include Manafort; Michael Flynn, the president’s first national security adviser; and Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and longtime fixer. A sixth former adviser, Roger Stone, is to stand trial in November on charges of lying to Congress.

 ??  ?? William Barr will decide what to make public from Robert Mueller’s report.
William Barr will decide what to make public from Robert Mueller’s report.
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