After the April 12 conversation with Rosenstein, Trump told
advisers that he was not inclined to seek the ouster of either
man since he is not the target of Mueller's probe.
The conversation was first reported by Bloomberg.
The Justice Department told Reuters it does not comment on
conversations with the president. The White House did not
respond to a request for comment.
Mueller is investigating allegations of Russian interference in
the 2016 U.S. election and possible collusion with the Trump
campaign.
Russia has denied meddling in the election. Trump has said there
was no collusion and has repeatedly called the Mueller probe a
"witch hunt," raising concerns he might try to fire the special
counsel or Rosenstein, who oversees the investigation.
Under Justice Department policy, a target is someone who is
believed to have committed a crime and is likely to face
charges, while a subject is someone whose conduct is within the
scope of an investigation, said Lisa Kern Griffin, a former
federal prosecutor and a professor at Duke University School of
Law.
The Washington Post reported earlier this month that Trump is a
subject of the probe.
Griffin said the assurance from Rosenstein is not significant
because the president could yet become a target of the
investigation.
"It is possible to progress from being a subject to being a
target if the necessary substantive and structural support
emerges later," she said.
Griffin said one reason Trump is being treated as a subject,
rather than a target, may be that Rosenstein is operating under
assumption that a sitting president cannot be indicted.
(Reporting by Steve Holland in West Palm Beach, Florida;
Additional reporting by Jan Wolfe in New York; writing by
Mohammad Zargham; editing by Eric Beech and Dan Grebler)
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