Explainer: What can Mueller tell U.S. lawmakers that we do not already
know?
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[July 23, 2019]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When Robert Mueller
testifies to the U.S. Congress on Wednesday, Democratic lawmakers are
expected to try to pin down the former special counsel on a crucial
question: did he intend for them to carry on where he left off in his
investigation of President Donald Trump and the Russians?
As Democrats craft their agenda heading into the 2020 elections in which
the Republican president is seeking a second four-year term, they will
be eager to hear from Mueller about the findings of his 22-month inquiry
before deciding how they should tackle its unanswered questions.
It is unclear how cooperative Mueller, a 74-year-old former FBI director
and federal prosecutor, will be and whether he will stray far from the
text of his 448-page report on the investigation, which Trump's Justice
Department released only in redacted form in April.
The report found that Russia interfered with a campaign of hacking and
propaganda in the 2016 presidential election to boost Trump's candidacy.
It found that people in Trump's election campaign had numerous contacts
with Russians. But it concluded there was insufficient evidence to
establish a criminal conspiracy between Trump's team and Moscow.
The report also described numerous instances in which Trump tried to
impede Mueller's inquiry, but made no judgment on whether that amounted
to criminal obstruction of justice by the president.
Mueller is due to testify before two Democratic-controlled House of
Representatives committees.
Here are some of the lines of questioning that lawmakers may pursue with
Mueller, according to congressional aides and committee members.
MUELLER AND BARR
Democrats are expected to ask whether Mueller was told to end his
investigation by Attorney General William Barr, a Trump appointee who
they have accused of acting to protect the president.
They will want to hear Mueller's views on how Barr presented the report
as an exoneration of Trump and Barr's conclusion after receiving the
report that the president did not commit obstruction of justice.
Democrats have accused Barr of deceptively spinning the report's
findings to protect his boss.
Mueller himself has criticized Barr's initial public account of the
report's conclusions, saying in a letter that the attorney general did
not fully capture the context, nature and substance of the
investigation. Barr's initial description of the conclusions was
contained in a March 24 letter to Congress that prompted Trump to claim
"complete and total exoneration." The report was not released until
April 18.
Republicans, in the minority in both committees that will hear from
Mueller, may look to underscore Barr's obstruction determination to
emphasize their view that the matter should be dropped.
House Democrats are deeply divided over whether to launch the
impeachment process set out in the U.S. Constitution for Congress to
remove a president from office for "high crimes and misdemeanors."
Longstanding U.S. Justice Department policy bars criminal charges
against a sitting president.
OBSTRUCTION AND CONGRESS
Democrats will be keen to pry out of Mueller any indication of whether
his work on the obstruction issue was meant to furnish Congress with
evidence for subsequent investigations.
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U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller departs after delivering a
statement on his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016
U.S. presidential election at the Justice Department in Washington,
U.S., May 29, 2019. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo
They are also expected to ask Mueller about passages in the report
that stress the authority of Congress to protect the U.S. judicial
system against corrupt acts by a president.
Trump has claimed that Mueller found "no collusion" with Russia.
Republicans have asserted that Mueller meant only for Congress to
consider reforming laws concerning obstruction of justice.
The report describes a series of episodes relating to potential
obstruction of justice by Trump, especially his efforts to oust
Mueller. The report said the special counsel sought to "preserve the
evidence" in case of future investigations.
The report stated that "if we had confidence after a thorough
investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit
obstruction of justice, we would so state. ... Accordingly, while
this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime,
it also does not exonerate him."
The two-part report's section on obstruction refers to the corrupt
exercise of presidential powers and the authority of Congress to
protect against obstructive acts.
One reference contains the Mueller team's conclusion that Congress
has the authority to impose obstruction-of-justice statutes "on the
president's official conduct." The report also concludes with a
curious reference to U.S. case law: "the protection of the criminal
justice system from corrupt acts by any person - including the
president - accords with the fundamental principle of our government
that 'no person in this country is so high that he is above the
law.'"
NO CONSPIRACY?
Along with the claim of "no collusion," Trump and his Republican
allies have said Mueller concluded there was "no conspiracy" between
the president's campaign and Russia. That is not exactly what
Mueller found. His report concluded that the investigation "did not
establish" that the campaign engaged in a criminal conspiracy with
Russia but that this "does not mean there was no evidence of those
facts."
The Mueller team said the inquiry did not assemble "a complete
picture" of what occurred because of difficulties in obtaining
admissible evidence and testimony. Trump himself refused to submit
to a sit-down interview with the special counsel.
Several people affiliated with the Trump campaign lied to
investigators or gave incomplete evidence. Others invoked their
right against self-incrimination under the U.S. Constitution's Fifth
Amendment. Some information was subject to legal privilege and
"screened" from investigators. Campaign affiliates deleted
communications or used encrypted phone apps that prevented long-term
data retention.
As the Mueller report concluded: "given these identified gaps, the
Office cannot rule out the possibility that the unavailable
information would shed additional light on (or cast in a new light)
the events described."
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Will
Dunham)
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