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		Mueller report shows evidence Trump committed crimes, House Judiciary 
		chairman says
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		 [July 22, 2019] 
		By Sarah N. Lynch 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top Democrat on 
		the U.S. House Judiciary Committee said Sunday he believes there is 
		"substantial evidence" that President Donald Trump committed high crimes 
		and misdemeanors, and he plans to ask former Special Counsel Robert 
		Mueller to present those facts at a congressional hearing on Wednesday.
 
 "The report presents very substantial evidence that the president is 
		guilty of high crime and misdemeanors, and we have to let Mueller 
		present those facts to the American people and then see where we go from 
		there," House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler said on "Fox 
		News Sunday."
 
 "The administration must be held accountable, and no president can be 
		above the law."
 
 Nadler's comments are significant because evidence of such crimes would 
		be required if Democrats pursue impeachment proceedings against the 
		president.
 
		
		 
		
 Mueller completed his nearly two-year long probe into Russian meddling 
		in the 2016 election in March, and the Justice Department released a 
		redacted copy of his report in April.
 
 In two nationally televised back-to-back hearings on Wednesday before 
		the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees, Democrats are expected 
		to try and get Mueller to focus his testimony on specific examples of 
		Trump's misconduct.
 
 By having Mueller lay bare the unflattering details of how Trump tried 
		to stymie the investigation into his campaign, Democrats hope they can 
		build support for their ongoing investigations into the president and 
		potentially, impeachment proceedings.
 
 Some Democrats in Congress support impeaching Trump, but they have not 
		managed to win traction from House Democratic leadership including 
		Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has preferred a more cautious approach that 
		entails conducting congressional fact-finding investigations into 
		Trump's conduct.
 
 Last week, the House voted 332-95 to table an impeachment resolution.
 
 The Mueller report laid out numerous contacts between Russian officials 
		and Trump's campaign, but found no evidence of a criminal conspiracy.
 
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			U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler speaks at a news conference held by 
			Democrats on the state of voting rights in America the U.S. Capitol 
			Building in Washington, U.S., June 25, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis 
            
 
            It also gave examples of 10 incidents in which Trump sought to 
			hinder the investigation, but it did not draw any conclusions on 
			whether Trump obstructed justice. Attorney General William Barr 
			later concluded he did not see enough evidence to bring obstruction 
			charges.
 Whether Democrats will get Mueller to discuss Trump's conduct in 
			detail remains to be seen.
 
 Mueller has made it clear he has no desire to appear before 
			Congress, saying the report is his testimony, and he is also 
			notorious for being tight-lipped and for giving one-word answers in 
			hearings.
 
 Adam Schiff, the Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said 
			on CBS' "Face the Nation" that part of the goal of the hearings is 
			to ensure the American people who have not read the report can hear 
			its findings.
 
 "Most Americans in their busy lives haven't had the opportunity to 
			read that report, and it is a pretty dry, prosecutorial work 
			product. We want Bob Mueller to bring it to life... It's a pretty 
			damning set of facts," he said.
 
 Nadler said on Fox that Democrats plan to ask very specific 
			questions about Trump's obstructive conduct and ask Mueller to read 
			passages from the report aloud.
 
 "We hope it won't end up being a dud," he said of the hearing.
 
            
			 
			Nadler also said on Sunday he planned to go to court "within a 
			couple of days" after the Mueller hearings to enforce a subpoena, 
			after the White House ordered former White House Counsel Don McGahn 
			not to testify about incidents he witnessed which many say show 
			Trump tried to obstruct justice.
 (Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Rosalba 
			O'Brien)
 
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