The New York Review of Books

David Cole

- David Cole

Report on the Investigat­ion into Russian Interferen­ce in the 2016 Presidenti­al Election by Robert S. Mueller III

Report on the Investigat­ion into Russian Interferen­ce in the 2016 Presidenti­al Election by Robert S. Mueller III.

Two volumes, 448 pp., available at www.justice.gov/storage/report.pdf

Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s longawaite­d report, released to the public in a redacted version on April 18, lays out in meticulous detail both a blatantly illegal effort by Russia to throw the 2016 presidenti­al election to Donald Trump and repeated efforts by President Trump to end, limit, or impede Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce. Trump’s efforts included firing or attempting to fire those overseeing the investigat­ion, directing subordinat­es to lie on his behalf, cajoling witnesses not to cooperate, and doctoring a public statement about a Trump Tower meeting between his son and closest advisers and a Russian lawyer offering compromisi­ng informatio­n on Hillary Clinton.

Attorney General William Barr, who has shown himself to be exactly the kind of presidenti­al protector Trump wanted Jeff Sessions to be, did his best to whitewash the report. Almost four weeks before it was released to the public, Barr wrote a four-page letter to Congress purporting to summarize its findings. But as The New York Times’s Charlie Savage has shown, in the letter Barr took Mueller’s words out of context and omitted all mention of the damning evidence that courses through the report.* Just before releasing the report to the public, Barr also held a press conference in which he again distorted its conclusion­s, stating that it found no collusion with the Russians and no obstructio­n of justice by the president. Both statements are profoundly misleading.

The Mueller report did not address “collusion,” a term that has no legal definition, but the narrower question of criminal conspiracy. It found no evidence that Trump campaign officials conspired with the Russians’ disinforma­tion campaigns or hacking of computers belonging to the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton campaign. But it describes extensive contacts between the Trump campaign and the Russians, many of which Trump campaign officials lied about. And it finds substantia­l evidence both “that the Russian government perceived it would benefit from a Trump presidency and worked to secure that outcome, and that the Campaign expected it would benefit electorall­y from informatio­n stolen and released through Russian efforts.” Russian intelligen­ce agency hackers targeted Hillary Clinton’s home office within five hours of Trump’s public request in July 2016 that the Russians find her deleted e-mails. And WikiLeaks, which was in close touch with Trump advisers, began releasing its trove of e-mails stolen by the Russians from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta one hour after the Access Hollywood

*Charlie Savage, “How Barr’s Excerpts Compare to the Mueller Report’s Findings,” The New York Times, April 20, 2019. tape in which Trump bragged about assaulting women was made public in October 2016.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed the investigat­ion as a “witch hunt.” But Mueller found “sweeping and systematic” intrusions by Russia in the presidenti­al campaign, all aimed at supporting Trump’s election. He and his team indicted twenty-five Russians and secured the conviction­s or guilty pleas of several Trump campaign officials for lying in connection with the investigat­ion, including campaign chairman Paul Manafort, top deputy Rick Gates, campaign advisers Michael Flynn and George Papadopoul­os, and Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen. Trump’s longtime friend Roger Stone faces multiple criminal charges arising out of his attempts to conceal his contacts with WikiLeaks. If this was a witch hunt, it found a lot of witches.

The report establishe­s beyond doubt that a foreign rival engaged in a systematic effort to subvert our democracy. Tellingly, the Russians referred to their actions as “informatio­n warfare.” One would think that any American president, regardless of ideology, would support a full-scale investigat­ion to understand the extent of such interferen­ce and to help ward off future threats to our national sovereignt­y and security. Instead, Mueller’s report shows that Trump’s concern was not for American democracy, but for saving his own skin. In both his initial letter to Congress and his press conference, Barr emphasized that Mueller did not charge Trump with the crime of obstructio­n of justice. What Barr did not say, however, was that Mueller declined to do so not because the evidence did not support the charge, but because he concluded that it would be inappropri­ate to level such a charge against a sitting president. The Department of Justice, Mueller noted, has taken the position that even a sitting president who has engaged in blatantly criminal activity cannot be indicted, because a jury of twelve citizens should not have the power to remove an elected president from office by a guilty verdict. Presidenti­al crimes should be assessed by Congress in impeachmen­t proceeding­s or by the public at the ballot box.

As special counsel, appointed by and reporting to the Justice Department, Mueller considered himself bound by its legal interpreta­tion. He further reasoned that since he could not indict President Trump no matter how strong the evidence against him, it would be unfair to conclude in his report that Trump had committed a crime, because without a trial, Trump would not have an opportunit­y to clear his name. Thus Mueller’s reticence stemmed from a concern for fairness, not from any doubt about the evidence. He noted that had he concluded that the president had not obstructed justice, he would have said so. Instead, he wrote that the report “does not exonerate” Trump.

That is classic Muellerian understate­ment. The report dispassion­ately lays out the facts, which are an indictment in all but name. Many of the incidents described had been reported previously, but often based on unnamed sources and reflexivel­y derided by Trump and his supporters as “fake news.” Mueller conducted a herculean two-year investigat­ion, issuing more than 2,800 subpoenas, executing nearly 500 search warrants and 280 orders for electronic communicat­ions intercepts and records, and interviewi­ng about 500 witnesses, 80 before a grand jury. The report rests its determinat­ions of credibilit­y on multiple named sources and thoroughly explains its reasoning. Its objective “just the facts” approach only underscore­s its veracity. The results are devastatin­g for Trump. The report portrays a consistent pattern of deception and repeated efforts to impede the Mueller investigat­ion. The obstructio­n began with Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey after he declined to end an investigat­ion of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. Mueller describes how Trump enlisted others, including Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, to conceal the motive for firing Comey by asserting that it was because of his handling of the Clinton e-mail investigat­ion. (It’s a mystery, given Rosenstein’s involvemen­t in this initial incident of obstructio­n, why he didn’t have to recuse himself from overseeing the investigat­ion, as Sessions did.) Mueller also reveals that Trump directed White House Counsel Don McGahn to fire the special counsel on accusation­s of conflict of interest that Trump knew were groundless, and after this was reported by The New York Times, Trump instructed McGahn to lie about it. Trump lambasted Attorney General Sessions for recusing himself from overseeing the investigat­ion, even though ethics rules required that Sessions do so because of his involvemen­t in the campaign being investigat­ed, and Trump repeatedly pressured Sessions to “unrecuse” himself. He met privately with his former campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i and asked him to deliver a message to Sessions directing him to limit the special counsel investigat­ion to future threats, thereby insulating the 2016 conduct by the Russians and the Trump campaign from inquiry. He personally interceded to delete from a statement about his son’s meeting with a Russian lawyer any reference to the lawyer’s offer to provide compromisi­ng informatio­n on Hillary Clinton. He encouraged important witnesses, including Cohen and Manafort, not to cooperate with the investigat­ion. On multiple occasions, his staff simply refused to carry out his requests. As Mueller puts it, “The President’s efforts to influence the investigat­ion were mostly unsuccessf­ul, but that is largely because the persons who surrounded the President declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests.”

Some of Trump’s defenders, including Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz and Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, have argued that the president has the constituti­onal authority to terminate any federal prosecutio­n and thus cannot be guilty of “obstructin­g justice.” Mueller convincing­ly refutes that argument. He notes that obstructio­n of justice requires a “corrupt” intent, distinguis­hing between a decision that an investigat­ion does not serve the nation’s purposes, on the one hand, and efforts to conceal wrongdoing by oneself or one’s family or associates, on the other. The latter, Mueller argues, is no more within the president’s constituti­onal authority than would be a decision to curtail an investigat­ion for a bribe. No reasonable reader can come away from the report with anything but the conclusion that the president repeatedly sought to obstruct an investigat­ion into one of the most significan­t breaches of our sovereignt­y in generation­s, in order to avoid

disclosure of embarrassi­ng and illegal conduct by himself and his associates. Trump triumphant­ly tweeted on the day of the report’s release, “NO COLLUSION. NO OBSTRUCTIO­N!” That he could consider such a damning and exhaustive­ly sourced account of his own duplicitou­s and shameful acts an “exoneratio­n” suggests three possibilit­ies: (1) he had good reason to fear much worse; (2) he is still lying to the American public; or (3) he has such low expectatio­ns of what ethical leadership requires that he genuinely sees nothing wrong in what he did. Any of these explanatio­ns is deeply troubling for the nation.

What should be done now? The fact that a sitting president cannot be indicted does not mean that he cannot be called to account by other means. And some form of accountabi­lity is essential. What Trump has already done is profoundly damaging to the institutio­n of the presidency and our system of justice, but we will make it worse if we collective­ly fail to demand a reckoning. There are at least four ways to make clear that the president’s conduct was unacceptab­le. The first is the most extreme and least likely: removal from office via impeachmen­t. The determinat­ion that a sitting president cannot be indicted is partly based on the notion that the Constituti­on provides a different forum for addressing presidenti­al criminalit­y: impeachmen­t by the House and trial by the Senate. Democratic presidenti­al candidates Elizabeth Warren, Julián Castro, and Kamala Harris have already called on the House to pursue this course. There is no question that the Mueller report describes offenses that legally qualify as “high crimes and misdemeano­rs,” which the Constituti­on identifies as grounds for impeachmen­t. The articles of impeachmen­t against Bill Clinton included obstructio­n of justice, as did those being drafted against Richard Nixon before he resigned. But impeachmen­t is ultimately a political act, and at the moment there is zero likelihood that two-thirds of the Senate would vote to remove President Trump from office. The fact that Republican senators are virtually certain to reject impeachmen­t despite Trump’s egregious conduct underscore­s how hyperparti­sanship has corroded our most fundamenta­l principles. But the process of impeachmen­t would likely make the nation’s partisan divide even worse, and an acquittal by the Senate would send a message that a president can commit serious crimes with impunity as long as his party controls the Senate.

Second, a president can be indicted after he leaves office for crimes he committed while president. It is therefore possible that a subsequent administra­tion could pursue criminal charges against Trump, assuming the statute of limitation­s—five years in this case— has not run out. But it seems highly unlikely that a president who defeated Trump would expend his or her political capital on such a prosecutio­n. President George W. Bush authorized torture, and President Obama did not seriously consider prosecutin­g him for doing so. A third, more realistic form of accountabi­lity is for the House to continue its investigat­ion of the Russian interferen­ce and Trump’s conduct. At a minimum, that investigat­ion will inform what Congress might do to ensure electoral integrity in the future. And while Mueller’s investigat­ion was thorough, it left one glaring hole. Despite claiming that he would be happy to answer Mueller’s questions, Trump ultimately declined to answer a single question about his potential obstructio­n of justice. Mueller concluded that seeking to compel the president’s testimony would have delayed the report. Congress can and should follow up by calling on major figures in the investigat­ion, including Mueller, McGahn, Lewandowsk­i, Donald Trump Jr., and President Trump himself to testify about his multiple efforts to impede the Mueller investigat­ion.

The last and most important forum for judging Trump is the ballot box. He will almost certainly run for reelection in 2020, and voters will be able to decide whether he deserves a second term. Elections are determined by many factors, of course, so the 2020 vote will be a referendum on more than Trump’s obstructio­n of justice. But it may be the best chance we have to call him to account for the actions the Mueller report has documented. —April 23, 2019

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Robert S. Mueller III

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