USA TODAY US Edition

‘We expect the full report’

Lawmakers demand Mueller deliver his all

- Bart Jansen USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election might be nearing an end, but the political and legal battle over his work has barely begun.

Lawmakers from both parties plan to press for access not just to his report but also to the evidence he gathered during an investigat­ion that spanned nearly two years and pried deeply into Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and administra­tion. The demands would almost certainly set up a battle between Congress and the Justice Department.

Mueller has indicted 34 people, including Russian intelligen­ce operatives and some of Trump’s closest aides and advisers. In doing so, he revealed a wealth of details about a sophistica­ted Russian effort to influence the 2016 election and about a campaign eager to reap the benefits of that activity.

“We expect the full report,” said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. “If we don’t get it, we’ll do what we have to do to get it. If that means subpoenain­g it, we’ll subpoena it.”

The first move belongs to Mueller’s boss, Attorney General William Barr.

He must decide how much of Mueller’s final report will become public. Justice Department rules say that the special counsel must give Barr a confidenti­al report when he is done, explaining why he charged some people and not others. Barr said he will determine how much of Mueller’s work Congress sees.

“This is going to be a legal battle,” said Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee.

House committees have begun requesting documents from the White House as part of broad inquiries into Trump and his namesake business. Lawmakers have taken testimony from Trump’s former personal lawyer

Michael Cohen and opened a corruption investigat­ion by sending document requests to 81 people and organizati­ons associated with the president, including the White House, his private business and his children.

Trump has dismissed the investigat­ions as “presidenti­al harassment.”

House Democrats intend to intensify and expand their investigat­ions, building on what they expect to be the relatively narrow foundation of the Mueller report about Russian election interferen­ce into a broader search for public corruption, obstructio­n of justice and foreign influence on U.S. policy.

“We’ll certainly be bringing in any number of witnesses, some of them new, others who have been before the committee before,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. Schiff heads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, which is investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the election, efforts by foreign powers to influence Trump, and Trump’s financial entangleme­nts.

“We have a lot of work to do.” Republican­s, who bristle at House investigat­ions they see as fishing for reasons to impeach the president, nonetheles­s embraced the idea of obtaining Mueller’s conclusion­s. After two years of anticipati­on, Collins said, he expects a report that will reveal no wrongdoing by Trump.

“All of a sudden, Christmas came and no present,” Collins said.

Attorney general as gatekeeper

“I also believe it is very important that the public and Congress be informed of the results of the special counsel’s work,” Barr told senators at his confirmati­on hearing in January. “My goal will be to provide as much transparen­cy as I can consistent with the law.”

Barr said he would withhold classified informatio­n, grand jury informatio­n and informatio­n subject to executive privilege. Barr told lawmakers he would “not tolerate an effort to withhold such informatio­n for any improper purpose, such as to cover up wrongdoing.”

Barr said the Justice Department should not release “derogatory” informatio­n about people who are not charged with crimes. Its Office of Legal Counsel has taken the position that a sitting president cannot be charged. Democrats worried that the combinatio­n of those policies would justify withholdin­g informatio­n about Trump. Barr said he wouldn’t let political interests influence his judgment.

“I would be very surprised if Barr didn’t publish a good portion of whatever is prepared by Mueller,” said Bruce Udolf, a former federal prosecutor. “To the extent that he does not, I would think there would be a good reason.”

One reason is that some of the informatio­n is protected by other federal laws. Mueller’s investigat­ion has made extensive use of grand juries to gather evidence, but federal law puts strict limits on the disclosure of the evidence they obtain. Some of the subjects Mueller is investigat­ing have drawn on classified informatio­n; even the lists of subjects covered by the inquiry was classified.

“This notion that Congress is going to throw a subpoena on Bob Mueller and say, ‘Box up all the grand jury stuff, and give it to me’: I think that’s a fantasy,” said Patrick Cotter, a former federal prosecutor.

Democratic lawmakers said they will have little patience with those arguments. The Justice Department gave the Republican majority in Congress more than 880,000 pages of documents through last June about the investigat­ion into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s email server, a case in which no one was prosecuted, Schiff noted.

“The Justice Department cannot now maintain a different policy,” Schiff said.

‘Every single thing’

Lawmakers of both parties are eager to hear what Mueller found, either because they expect his work to exonerate the president or to implicate him.

“If he does put out a report, you’re going to see people claiming that we have to make it public. That’s fine. But I want everything that Mueller did made public,” Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., the top Republican on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, told an audience at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference.

“I want every email. I want everybody that they wiretapped. Every warrant that they got. Every single thing that Mueller used needs to be made public for all of America to see.”

Collins said Republican­s aren’t trying to release classified or grand jury evidence but rather informatio­n that illustrate­s Democrats are overreachi­ng for wrongdoing that doesn’t exist.

Schiff, who has clashed repeatedly with Nunes, largely agreed on releasing as much informatio­n as possible from the Mueller investigat­ion. Schiff said the special counsel has seized so much evidence from so many people in the inner ring of Trump’s political orbit – including adviser Roger Stone and former campaign chairman Paul Manafort – that the only way for Congress to see the details is to obtain them from the Justice Department.

Udolf cautioned against lawmakers wading into grand jury evidence because prosecutor­s should be trusted to do their jobs.

“It’s likely to discredit an otherwise righteous investigat­ion by adding a political taint that shouldn’t otherwise be there,” Udolf said. “People tend to view things that politician­s do with a jaundiced eye.”

Six House chairmen of committees wrote to Barr on Feb. 22 saying there is significan­t public interest in full disclosure of informatio­n “about the nature and scope of the Russian government’s efforts to undermine our democracy.”

“We write to you to express, in the strongest possible terms, our expectatio­n that the Department of Justice will release to the public the report Special Counsel Mueller submits to you – without delay and to the maximum extent permitted by law,” the chairmen said.

Congress’ most potent tool for obtaining that informatio­n would be a subpoena, but subpoenain­g Mueller’s report or his evidence could trigger a court battle with the Justice Department, which could try to persuade a judge to keep some records secret.

“There is certain evidence only in possession of the special counsel,” Schiff said. “If it is not shared, then the American public will never get the full story.”

Collins said the department has long fought to avoid releasing informatio­n that is classified, from a grand jury or as part of an ongoing investigat­ion. He said prosecutor­s might want to keep other details secret because they are pursuing other investigat­ions related to Trump that will continue after Mueller wraps up.

“This is historical­ly something that DOJ has fought back on,” Collins said. “They have never released this informatio­n, and we don’t expect that to happen now.”

Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., said there might have been cases in which Mueller couldn’t prove a crime beyond a reasonable doubt, but Congress could still take action.

“At the end of the day, our job is to tell the American people what Russia did, how they did it, who they worked with, what the government response was and whether it was adequate,” Swalwell said. “And then, learning from all of that, recommend reforms to prevent it from ever happening again.”

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