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		Trump calls for end to Mueller probe 
		despite Russian campaign bid findings 
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		 [December 10, 2018] 
		By Jonathan Landay and David Morgan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President 
		Donald Trump on Saturday renewed his call to end a federal probe into 
		Russian election meddling, describing the investigation as a "witch 
		hunt" a day after U.S. prosecutors detailed a previously unknown attempt 
		by a Russian to help his 2016 presidential election campaign.
 
 "Time for the Witch Hunt to END!" Trump said in a message on Twitter. 
		His tweet also quoted television host Geraldo Rivera, a Trump friend, 
		dismissing any claim of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia 
		as "collusion illusion".
 
 It was the president's second tweet of the day about Special Counsel 
		Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 
		presidential election and whether Trump's campaign colluded with Russia. 
		Russia denies meddling allegations.
 
 "After two years and millions of pages of documents (and a cost of over 
		$30 million) no collusion!" Trump tweeted earlier on Saturday.
 
		
		 
		
 He repeated that contention later as he left the White House for the 
		annual Army-Navy game in Philadelphia, saying, "We're very happy with 
		what we are reading, because there was no collusion whatsoever."
 
 U.S. prosecutors, however, did not address in several federal court 
		filings on Friday the question of whether they have found collusion 
		between the Trump campaign and Russia.
 
 Moreover, Mueller said in one filing that Trump's former lawyer, Michael 
		Cohen, had provided his office with "useful information concerning 
		certain discrete Russia-related matters core to its investigation that 
		he obtained by virtue of his regular contact" with Trump's real estate 
		company during the 2016 campaign.
 
 Democrats and other Trump critics fear that newly appointed acting 
		Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, a Trump loyalist, could fire Mueller 
		or undermine the investigation by cutting off its funding. Prominent 
		Republicans in Congress insist that there is no danger of interference.
 
 Trump said on Friday that he would nominate former Attorney General 
		William Barr to the nation’s top law enforcement job. But with the 
		current session of Congress set to end soon, Barr may have to wait until 
		well into 2019 to be confirmed by the Senate.
 
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			President Donald Trump walks across the South Lawn after returning 
			to the White House in Washington, U.S., December 7, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Jim Young 
            
 
            In his court filing on Friday, Mueller said Cohen told them he was 
			approached in November 2015 by an unnamed Russian claiming to be a 
			"'trusted person' in the Russian Federation". The filing said the 
			contact occurred during discussions about a possible hotel bearing 
			Trump's name in Moscow.
 Cohen is to be sentenced next week for campaign finance violations, 
			financial crimes and lying to Congress about Trump's business 
			dealings in Russia. Prosecutors are seeking a substantial prison 
			sentence.
 
 Trump's current lawyer, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, also 
			took aim at Cohen in a Saturday tweet, saying that federal 
			prosecutors in New York are seeking a prison sentence for Cohen 
			"because as we have said he's still lying."
 
 Mueller said the Russian national who approached Cohen offered 
			"synergy on a government level" with the Trump campaign in pushing 
			for a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, 
			adding that Cohen said he did not follow up.
 
 Mueller said that the discussions about a potential Trump hotel in 
			Moscow were relevant to his investigation, because they occurred "at 
			a time of sustained efforts by the Russian government to interfere 
			with the U.S. presidential election."
 
 In a separate federal court filing on Friday, Mueller's office said 
			Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, lied to 
			investigators about his interactions with a Russian tied to Russian 
			intelligence services.
 
 That filing detailed why Mueller's office last week retracted a plea 
			agreement with Manafort. He pleaded guilty in September to two 
			conspiracy charges and agreed to cooperate with investigators in 
			hopes of a lighter sentence.
 
 (Reporting Jonathan Landay, David Morgan and Jan Wolfe in 
			Washington, and Gareth Jones in London; Editing by Nick Zieminski, 
			Diane Craft and Susan Thomas)
 
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