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AFP
Washington
US Attorney General Bill Barr is expected to hand Congress as early as Saturday the key findings of the Russian meddling probe as Washington waits tensely to see if it implicates President Donald Trump in serious wrongdoing.
Chronic tweeter Trump, who was at his Florida residence for the weekend, remained uncommonly silent after spending two years repeatedly labeling Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation an illegal witch hunt -- suggesting the White House has still not seen the report.
Meanwhile Democrats in Congress, many of who are hoping for evidence to support a presidential impeachment, were pressing hard to ensure its full contents are made public, and not just a summary prepared by the Trump-appointed Justice Department chief.
The secret report, the result of a 22-month investigation by Mueller into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia and obstruction of justice, was handed to Barr Friday with the announcement that no new indictments were forthcoming.
That produced sighs of relief from the White House, where members of Trump’s family -- Don Jr and son-in-law Jared Kushner in particular -- had been feared possible targets of the probe.
With Mueller prevented by longstanding Justice Department policy from indicting the president himself, there were no hints on whether the report damns or clears Trump of criminal behavior.
In a brief letter to Congress late Friday, Barr announced that the long-awaited report had been submitted to him and that he would send its “principal conclusions” for Congress as early as this weekend. Mueller, a 74-year-old veteran criminal prosecutor and former FBI chief, was required to produce a confidential report that explained why he decided to indict or not indict subjects of the probe.
Barr though has discretion on how much of the report he releases to Congress and to the public, though he said in his letter Friday that he is “committed to as much transparency as possible.”
The special counsel regulations “give Barr lots of discretion about what to disclose to Congress and the public,” said Andrew Coan, a University of Arizona law professor.
“The selective release of exculpatory material is a possibility worth watching for.”
Mueller investigated whether members of Trump’s 2016 election campaign colluded with Russians to skew the election.
In addition, he studied whether actions by Trump, including the May 2017 firing of FBI director James Comey, amounted to criminal obstruction of justice.
But what he has concluded remained a mystery Saturday.
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24/03/2019
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