Thursday 30 May 2019

The New York Times/Sharon LaFraniere: Mueller, in First Comments on Russia Inquiry, Declines to Clear Trump

The New York Times

Mueller, in First Comments on Russia Inquiry, Declines to Clear Trump

Video
Video player loading

In his public remarks about the special counsel’s Russia investigation, Robert S. Mueller III suggested that he was reluctant to testify before Congress.CreditCreditDoug Mills/The New York Times

By Sharon LaFraniere

    May 29, 2019

WASHINGTON — Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel, declined on Wednesday to clear President Trump of obstruction of justice in his first public characterization of his two-year investigation of Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election.

“If we had had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so,” Mr. Mueller said, reading from prepared notes behind a lectern at the Justice Department at a hastily called public appearance.

He also noted that while Justice Department policy prohibits charging a sitting president with a crime, the Constitution provides for another remedy to formally accuse a president of wrongdoing — a clear reference to the ability of Congress to conduct impeachment proceedings.

Although it lasted less than 10 minutes, the news conference presented an extraordinary spectacle of a top federal law enforcement official publicly stating that the president’s conduct had warranted criminal investigation, even though it was impossible to indict him for any crimes. Mr. Mueller delivered his statement on his last day as special counsel, saying it was his final word on his investigation and he was returning to private life.

Democratic presidential candidates immediately seized on Mr. Mueller’s refusal to exonerate Mr. Trump to call for the president’s impeachment, intensifying pressure on Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has insisted impeachment proceedings would only play into Mr. Trump’s hands.

The president’s aides and allies tried to cast the event as not even newsworthy, just a summary of a 448-page report released weeks ago. Mr. Mueller “has closed his office and it’s time for everybody to move on,” said Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary.

[Read the full transcript of Mr. Mueller’s statement.]

Mr. Mueller, 74, who carried out the entire investigation without publicly speaking a word, walked stiffly to the lectern and began tentatively, then delivered a succinct distillation of his investigation that was distinctly more powerful than the often legalistic language of his two-volume report.

He seemed to cast the president’s conduct in a more damning light than Attorney General William P. Barr did when he discussed the investigation’s findings at a news conference in April and at a subsequent Senate hearing. Mr. Barr said that Mr. Trump was not guilty of “obstructive conduct.” He also suggested that the president may have been merely acting from frustration, not corrupt intent, when he tried to interfere with the special counsel’s investigation, including when he tried to oust Mr. Mueller.

Mr. Mueller, by contrast, stressed the gravity of the allegations against the president. Although he noted that his office did not “make a determination as to whether the president did commit a crime,” he said, “the matters we investigated were of paramount importance.”

“When a subject of an investigation obstructs that investigation or lies to investigators, it strikes at the core of their government’s effort to find the truth and hold wrongdoers accountable,” he said.

Mr. Mueller defended his decision to pursue the allegations against the president, even though, he said, charging him with a crime was “not an option we could consider.” Mr. Barr suggested at one point that the special counsel should not have collected evidence against Mr. Trump if he intended only for Congress to review it.

But Mr. Mueller said that it was important to interview witnesses while their memories were still fresh and to hold accountable anyone who might have conspired with the president and could face criminal charges. He also referred to the impeachment process, a point that is reduced to a footnote in his report.

“The Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing,” he said. He cited the same opinion from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel that states that a sitting president cannot be criminally charged.

He added that the former deputy attorney general, Rod J. Rosenstein, who appointed him as special counsel, specifically authorized him to investigate actions to interfere with his inquiry and that he kept Mr. Rosenstein apprised of his team’s work.

Mr. Mueller stressed that he would not comment further on the actions of the Justice Department or Congress. He suggested that Democrats in Congress were wasting their time in seeking his testimony because he would simply repeat what he stated in his report. “The report is my testimony,” he said.

He added: “I am making that decision myself. No one has told me whether I can or should testify or speak further about this matter.”

Mr. Trump’s aides were informed Tuesday night that Mr. Mueller intended to deliver a statement. Journalists, who had expected at most a news release announcing the end of Mr. Mueller’s tenure, had 90 minutes’ notice to get to the Justice Department’s seventh-floor briefing room, where Mr. Mueller, in a dark suit and white shirt, started on time. Mr. Barr was traveling in Alaska.
Read the Mueller Report: Searchable Document and Index

The findings from the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, are now available to the public. The redacted report details his two-year investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

White House officials and the president’s private lawyers both pointed to Mr. Barr, not Mr. Mueller, as the most important arbiter of the president’s conduct. After Mr. Mueller declined to decide whether the president was guilty of a crime, Mr. Barr decided that evidence against the president was insufficient to warrant a criminal prosecution — a decision he reached with Mr. Rosenstein.

“We consider this case closed,” Ms. Sanders told reporters. She said that further investigations by Congress were unnecessary because “it’s already been done.”

Congressional Democrats said Mr. Mueller’s remarks only underscored the need for Congress to follow up with subpoenas and hearings.

“If he had any evidence that the president was not guilty, he would have let us know,” Ms. Pelosi said. “But he didn’t. He didn’t. And I think that was very, very important.”

She said Congress should continue to press for more information, including for passages in the report that were redacted to protect grand jury material, current criminal investigations or classified information.

[After Mr. Mueller’s statement, more 2020 Democrats called for impeachment.]

Mr. Mueller began his statement by reviewing the highlights of how Russia had tried to influence the results of the 2016 election. He detailed how Russian operatives hacked into Democratic computers and released documents through WikiLeaks to damage the campaign of Hillary Clinton, whom he described as a presidential candidate.

He returned to that theme at the end of his speech, emphasizing the gravity of Russia’s attacks on the American political system.

“I will close by reiterating the central allegation of our indictments — that there were multiple, systematic efforts to interfere in our election,” he said. “And that allegation deserves the attention of every American.”

Although his comments suggested he was more troubled by Mr. Trump’s actions than Mr. Barr, Mr. Mueller took pains to defend how the attorney general handled his report — a subject of previous disagreement between the two men. In a brief letter in late March, Mr. Mueller had criticized Mr. Barr for sowing “public confusion” in his initial summary of the report, and had asked him to release his own executive summaries to clarify misimpressions.

Instead, Mr. Barr waited more than three weeks while the report was being redacted, then released it nearly in full in mid-April. The president’s allies took advantage of that interim to cast the findings in Mr. Trump’s favor, prompting complaints that Mr. Barr was allowing them to shape the public narrative before the facts came out.

Mr. Mueller acknowledged that he and Mr. Barr had differed over whether to release his team’s summaries. But he said, “I certainly do not question the attorney general’s good faith in that decision.” He also complimented Mr. Barr’s decision to make almost the entire report public.

While he made no reference to Mr. Trump’s repeated denunciations of his work as a “political hoax” carried out by “angry Democrats,” Mr. Mueller described his investigation as “fair and independent.” He said the prosecutors and F.B.I. agents on his team were public servants “of the highest integrity” and thanked them for their work.

Despite Mr. Mueller’s comments, Democratic House leaders vowed to continue to seek his testimony.

“Given that the president has not been cleared of wrongdoing, and given the seriousness of Russia’s interference in our democracy, I believe that the American people deserve to hear testimony from the special counsel about his report and the report’s conclusions,” said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 House Democrat.

Republicans said they were looking ahead to the results of a review into the origins of the counterintelligence investigation that ultimately prompted Mr. Mueller’s appointment. Mr. Barr has assigned the review to the United States attorney in Connecticut but is personally overseeing it.

Department officials say he wants to understand on what basis the F.B.I. began investigating ties between the Trump campaign and Russia in summer 2016.

Mr. Barr has also said he is concerned about the justification for “spying on Americans.” The F.B.I. sought a court order to conduct surveillance on a former Trump campaign aide, partly on the basis of research that was paid for by a law firm hired by Democrats.

Mr. Trump has praised the review, saying the investigation into him and his campaign was never justified.

After watching Mr. Mueller on television, the president declared on Twitter that “nothing changes.” There was insufficient evidence to charge him with a crime, Mr. Trump wrote, “therefore, in our Country, a person is innocent.”

Katie Benner and Eileen Sullivan contributed reporting.
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Breaking Silence, Mueller Declines to Absolve Trump. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Related Coverage

What Will Mueller Do? The Answer Might Lie in a By-the-Book Past
Aug. 25, 2018
Image

White House Insider Account Has Feel of an Outside View, and Prompts a Mueller Denial
May 28, 2019
Image

Tracking 29 Investigations Related to Trump
May 13, 2019
Image

Advertisement
Site Index
Go to Home Page »
news
opinion
arts
living
listings & more
Site Information Navigation

    © 2019 The New York Times Company

    Contact UsWork with usAdvertiseYour Ad ChoicesPrivacyTerms of ServiceTerms of SaleSite MapHelpSubscriptions

No comments: