The Mercury News

House seeking Mueller info while eyeing impeachmen­t

- By Nicholas Fandos and Charlie Savage

WASHINGTON >> The House Judiciary Committee on Friday said it was asking a federal judge to unseal grand jury secrets related to Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, saying it would use the court filing to make the most explicit declaratio­n yet that lawmakers are weighing whether to impeach President Donald Trump.

In a significan­t escalation, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., the chairman of the committee, said at a news conference that the applicatio­n to the court will declare that the panel needs access to Muel

ler’s grand jury evidence — such as witness testimony — to decide whether to recommend articles of impeachmen­t against the president.

“Because Department of Justice policies will not allow prosecutio­n of a sitting president, the United States House of Representa­tives is the only institutio­n of the federal government that can now hold President Trump accountabl­e for these actions,” Nadler quoted the legal filing as telling the judge, Beryl A. Howell, who supervised Mueller’s grand jury.

Referring to the part in the Constituti­on that gives Congress the power to impeach and remove a president, the applicatio­n continues, he said: “To do so, the House must have access to all the relevant facts and consider whether to exercise all its full Article I powers, including a constituti­onal power of the utmost gravity — recommenda­tion of articles of impeachmen­t.”

Still, his account of the pending filing, which he said would be filed Friday afternoon, stopped short of explicitly declaring that it has formally opened an impeachmen­t inquiry.

The long-awaited filing comes two days after Mueller testified before Congress for the first time about the findings of his 22-month investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce and possible obstructio­n of justice by Trump. Now Democrats who control the panel are seeking to add more evidence to the trove of informatio­n they are collecting about the case.

Mueller’s report showed the Trump campaign welcomed

illegal assistance from the Russians in 2016 and expected to benefit from it, but investigat­ors did not establish that he had conspired with them in the illegal hacking and dumping of Democratic emails. It also explored several episodes in which Trump tried to impede the investigat­ion.

But the special counsel decided not to render judgment about whether Trump should be charged with obstructio­n of justice, citing a Justice Department view that sitting presidents are temporaril­y immune from indictment while they are in office.

Democrats have been divided about whether the House should formally declare that the committee is conducting an impeachmen­t inquiry — a step that launched the proceeding­s against both presidents subjected to such proceeding­s in the modern era, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton.

More than 90 House Democrats have said they support opening such proceeding­s, including Rep. Ann McLane Kuster of New Hampshire on Friday, and some Democrats see such a step as a moral imperative to leave a black mark on Trump’s historical record, even if Senate Republican­s are unlikely to remove him.

Others fear it could provoke a backlash, firing up Trump’s supporters and endangerin­g newly elected Democrats who won moderate districts in the 2018 midterm.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi has pressed caution.

“We will proceed when we have what we need to proceed,” the speaker told reporters Friday, when asked if she was trying to run out the clock on impeachmen­t. “Not one day sooner.”

Against that backdrop, some Democratic staff members and lawmakers have been arguing that it is unnecessar­y to gain the full chamber’s approval to launch an inquiry, in part because the Judiciary Committee chairman has already gained the power to issue subpoenas and take deposition­s — authoritie­s that earlier impeachmen­t inquiry resolution­s had granted.

The Judiciary Committee has been flirting with the topic of impeachmen­t for months, subpoenain­g witnesses and holding hearings designed to better understand Trump’s behavior and potentiall­y develop charges against him. In a hearing focused on Mueller’s report earlier this month, Nadler said that “articles of impeachmen­t are under considerat­ion as part of the committee’s investigat­ion, although no final determinat­ion has been made.”

By formally declaring that the panel is doing that in a court filing, Democrats are trying to get past the internal debate without forcing members from moderate districts to vote on whether to do so. Pelosi approved the language in the lawsuit, according to a person familiar with its drafting.

The specific informatio­n at issue in the court filing are the portions in the Mueller report that were redacted because the informatio­n fell under a rule in the federal criminal code that makes informatio­n presented to a grand jury secret. That rule has only limited exceptions to share it with outsiders. Democrats want the House to gain access to the redacted portions of the report, as well as the underlying transcript­s and documents that Mueller used a grand jury to gather.

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 ?? TOM BRENNER — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., right, is joined by fellow committee members during a news conference Friday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
TOM BRENNER — THE NEW YORK TIMES House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., right, is joined by fellow committee members during a news conference Friday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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