Hints, but no proof of crime, in
Mueller's hunt for a Trump-Russia conspiracy
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[April 15, 2019]
By Nathan Layne and Mark Hosenball
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As recently
as February, Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team dropped hints that
the inquiry into Russia's role in the 2016 U.S. election might unearth
evidence of active cooperation between Moscow and President Donald
Trump's campaign.
That turned out not to be the case, according to Attorney General
William Barr, who has said he hopes to release Mueller's nearly 400 page
report this week. Barr told U.S. lawmakers on March 24 that the special
counsel investigation "did not establish that members of the Trump
campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its
election interference activities."
To be sure, the investigation documented numerous contacts between Trump
campaign figures and Russia, a willingness on the part of the campaign
to accept help from Moscow, and no indication that the campaign told the
Kremlin to keep out of an American presidential race.
No criminal conspiracy was documented, according to Barr. But court
statements by members of Mueller's team and evidence disclosed in
various prosecutions by the special counsel had suggested on several
occasions during the 22-month investigation that they were investigating
a possible conspiracy.
Frank Montoya, a former senior FBI official with extensive experience in
counterintelligence investigations, said the words "did not establish"
are commonly used in national security cases as language merely ruling
out a chargeable offense.
"It doesn't mean a subject is innocent. It means investigators didn't
find enough evidence to charge a crime," Montoya said.
A recent indication that the special counsel was investigating a
Trump-Russia conspiracy came on Feb. 4 during a closed-door court
hearing in Washington. Prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said Mueller was
still investigating interactions between former Trump campaign chairman
Paul Manafort and his Russian business partner Konstantin Kilimnik as
critical to the inquiry.
"This goes to the larger view of what we think is going on, and what we
think the motive here is," Weissmann said, according to a transcript
released days later. "This goes, I think, very much to the heart of what
the Special Counsel's Office is investigating."
Mueller's team said Manafort shared political polling data from the
campaign with Kilimnik, who the special counsel has said had ties to
Russian intelligence. The two also discussed proposals for a Ukrainian
client to solve the Crimea conflict in a Kremlin-friendly way, Mueller
said.
Three weeks after Weissmann made his comments, Mueller's office
backtracked. It said in a court filing it needed to correct its
assertions about Manafort's interactions with Kilimnik. Partially
redacted court filings indicated the correction may relate to the
polling data.
When Mueller's report is released - with parts blacked out by Barr to
protect certain sensitive information - it is unclear how harsh a light
it will shine on the contacts between Trump campaign figures and
Russians. Those making contacts included the president's son Donald
Trump Jr., son-in-law Jared Kushner, former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen
and campaign figures Manafort, Jeff Sessions, Michael Flynn and George
Papadopoulos.
Mueller and U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded Russia employed
hacking and propaganda to sow division in the United States, harm
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton and boost Trump's candidacy. Moscow
has denied election interference.
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Special Counsel Robert Mueller departs after briefing members of the
U.S. Senate on his investigation into potential collusion between
Russia and the Trump campaign on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
June 21, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
A key event in the question of conspiracy was a June 2016 meeting at
Trump Tower in New York in which Manafort, Kushner and Trump Jr. met
with Kremlin-connected lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya, who had offered
damaging information about Clinton. After being promised "dirt" on
Clinton, Trump Jr. wrote in an email, "I love it."
Alan Futerfas, a lawyer for Trump Jr., declined to comment.
Mueller charged 34 people and three Russian entities. He convicted
or secured guilty pleas from Trump aides including Manafort, Flynn,
Cohen and Papadopoulos, and charged Russian intelligence officers
and a Russian "troll farm."
Another avenue related to potential conspiracy was Mueller's pursuit
of longtime Trump political adviser Roger Stone, who had suggested
he had a relationship with the WikiLeaks website and advance
knowledge of its release of Democratic emails the special counsel
said were stolen by Russians to hurt Clinton.
But when Mueller indicted Stone in January, the seven criminal
counts did not refer to conspiring with Russians and there was no
allegation of close ties to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who
separately was charged with conspiracy to commit computer intrusion
related to a 2010 hack of U.S. government computers.
Mueller questioned more than a half dozen Stone associates to
establish if he had acted as a go-between for the campaign with
WikiLeaks. Two Stone associates who spoke to Reuters said Stone had
struggled to make contact with Assange rather than having an inside
track.
Randy Credico, a New York comedian associated with Stone who
appeared before Mueller's grand jury, is a case in point. Text
messages between Stone and Credico seen by Reuters show Stone sought
to use the comedian as an intermediary with Assange and urged
Credico to feed WikiLeaks anti-Clinton research. Credico told
Reuters he never made good on the request.
Stone, who has been ordered by a judge not to talk about the case,
is declining comment on the investigation.
Mueller's investigation was aided by witnesses including Flynn, the
former national security adviser who pleaded guilty in December 2017
to lying about his communications with Russian ambassador Sergei
Kislyak in 2016, and Samuel Patten, a political consultant and
former Kilimnik business partner sentenced to probation on Friday
after prosecutors credited him for assisting Mueller and other
probes.
It is unclear to what extent Mueller's inability to secure
cooperation from others impeded him.
A spokesman for Mueller declined to comment.
A judge found that Manafort, after agreeing to cooperate, repeatedly
lied to prosecutors about interactions with Kilimnik and other
matters, breaching a plea deal. Kilimnik, charged along with
Manafort with conspiring to tamper with witnesses, was believed to
be in Russia, out of reach.
There also are witnesses like Papadopoulos, the first former Trump
aide charged by Mueller who initially cooperated but became
increasingly critical of the special counsel, especially after
completing a two-week prison term in December.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne and Mark Hosenball; Editing by Will
Dunham and Daniel Wallis)
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