USA TODAY US Edition

Our view: Mueller’s inquiry reaches a mystifying conclusion

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The finding that Donald Trump and his 2016 presidenti­al campaign didn’t conspire with the Russian government is somewhat mystifying.

Not because it cannot be accepted as true. Special counsel Robert Mueller’s reputation for excellence, diligence and thoroughne­ss underscore­s how the finding is credible and ought to be accepted.

No, it mystifies because Trump could have sat quietly waiting for the truth to emerge. The president’s underlings could have honestly answered questions by the FBI and lawmakers. But that didn’t happen.

The president spent nearly two years trashing an inquiry that ultimately cleared him and his campaign of criminally conspiring with Russia, and several former aides are now convicted felons for lying under oath — apparently about something that didn’t warrant concealmen­t. Some evidently lied out of a misbegotte­n, twisted sense of loyalty that only made matters worse.

Mueller’s conclusion­s, as characteri­zed in a four-page summary released Sunday afternoon by Attorney General William Barr, are deeply disappoint­ing to partisans who saw the inquiry as a prelude to impeachmen­t. But that was never the intent of Mueller’s investigat­ion, which provides needed clarity after nearly two years of rumors and speculatio­n that swirled about Russia’s role in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Trump quickly and inaccurate­ly called the report a “complete and total exoneratio­n.” Actually, the special counsel stated that “while this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him” on obstructio­n of justice.

So how do Mueller’s findings, as described by Barr, stack up against Trump’s repeated characteri­zations of the investigat­ion? Let’s take them one by one:

“There is no collusion.” Trump, it appears, was right all along. Clearly there were attempts at collusion, most notably the Trump Tower meeting in 2016 where aides and family members eagerly met with Russians dangling dirt on Hillary Clinton. But Mueller reported that his “investigat­ion did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinate­d with the Russian government in its election interferen­ce activities.”

“There is no obstructio­n.” Mueller’s investigat­ion began after what looked like obstructio­n of justice in plain sight: Trump asked FBI Director James Comey to go easy on national security adviser Michael Flynn, fired Comey after he demurred, bragged about it to Russian officials in the Oval Office, and told NBC News’ Lester Holt that Russia was the reason he fired Comey.

Mueller didn’t draw a legal conclusion about obstructio­n, but Barr and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, after reviewing Mueller’s full report, said there was not enough evidence demonstrat­ing the president was guilty of wrongdoing. It would certainly be difficult to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt of a cover-up when no underlying offense — such as conspiracy — took place. Even so, Barr needs to explain to Congress and the public how he reached his decision, and did it so quickly.

“This investigat­ion is a witch hunt.” Trump repeated this endlessly, and it was always a canard. Mueller’s reputation was sterling. He’s a highly respected, by-the-book former FBI director and a lifelong Republican who served with valor in Vietnam. In 22 months as special prosecutor, he won conviction­s of five Trump aides — in most cases, for lying. They included Flynn, former campaign manager Paul Manafort and onetime personal lawyer Michael Cohen. In all, 34 people and three companies were indicted on scores of charges.

The investigat­ion included more than 2,800 subpoenas, nearly 500 search warrants and interviews with about 500 witnesses (but not Trump himself in person). That leaves the president in the ironic position of hailing the accuracy of an inquiry he repeatedly tried to discredit.

So now what? Congress and the public deserve to see Mueller’s full, taxpayer-funded report, and this should happen (with redactions only to protect sources and methods).

Nor is the end of Mueller’s efforts the end of Trump investigat­ions. Lawmakers and other federal prosecutor­s are examining a host of issues: possible campaign violations involving payoffs to women who allegedly had affairs with Trump, inaugurati­on funding, the Trump Foundation, Trump’s taxes, real estate deals and potential insurance fraud.

Beyond Trump, the special counsel gave Congress plenty of homework that transcends partisansh­ip. Mueller unearthed a plot by a foreign adversary to undermine America’s democracy through informatio­n warfare. Even if the president didn’t collude — something for which the nation should be grateful— Mueller’s findings cry out for steps to prevent this from ever happening again.

With the 2020 presidenti­al campaign already underway, there is little time to lose.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Robert Mueller and wife Ann on Sunday.
TASOS KATOPODIS/GETTY IMAGES Robert Mueller and wife Ann on Sunday.

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