Former US prosecutor on Trump-Russia investigation: 'People will be going to jail'
'There may already be people cooperating' in the investigation
- Clark Mindock New York
- @ClarkMindock
- Sunday 16 July 2017 14:47 BST
A former federal prosecutor says that he believes the investigation into the Donald Trump campaign’s ties to Russia is going to land some people in jail.
The various Congressional and FBI investigations into the apparent Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election to help Mr Trump, and any possible ties to Mr Trump's campaign team, have been rumbling for months. But they have been thrown back into sharp focus by the release of emails showing Mr Trump's oldest son, Donald Jr, agreeing to a meeting with a Kremlin-connected attorney who claimed to have damaging information on Hillary Clinton.
“It’s a really serious investigation, and there are people that are going to go to jail,” Harry Litman, who used to work at the Department of Justice in the 1990s, told The Independent. “The whole atmosphere in the White House has to be paranoid.”
Mr Trump Jr was joined at the meeting with Natalia Veselnitskaya and a Russian-American lobbyist named Rinat Akhmetshin, by President Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner, and former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort during that meeting. Mr Akhmetshin is said to have possible to Russian military intelligence, something he denies.
Mr Trump Jr says the meeting was “a nothing,” while Ms Veselnitskaya has denied that she was at the meeting working for the Russian government and says she had no information on Ms Clinton to give Mr Trump Jr. The White House has repeatedly denied allegations of collusion with Russia.
Mr Litman said that even without the drip-drip of information over members of his team's contact with Russia, the President’s relationship with the Department of Justice and FBI — and the Washington apparatus that has granted members of those institutions power to push back against the White House historically — is unique. And, he’s already shown that he’s unconcerned with the sorts of norms that his predecessors were sensitive to in his firing of former FBI Director James Comey.
That firing led to the establishment of a special counsel to investigate the Trump administration, headed by the widely respected and diligent former FBI Director Robert Mueller.
Of course, Mr Trump could decide to instruct Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein — who has authority on that matter after Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from matters related to investigation — to fire Mr Mueller. That instruction could likely result in Mr Rosenstein’s refusal to do so and, Mr Litman said, either a firing or a resignation if the President insisted on moving forward to have Mr Mueller removed.
There are a couple potential problems for Mr Trump should he decide to take this route - and it's not at all certain that he would attempt to do so anyway.
First is that firing Mr Comey itself sparked cries that the President had obstructed justice, an allegation that was fanned by Mr Trump himself when he said on live television that he had made the decision to fire him in part because he thought the Russia investigation was bogus. Mr Comey, in the weeks that followed, also released memos detailing private conversations with the President in which Mr Trump had asked him to “let go” of investigations into a former member of the White House staff caught up in the Russia scandal.
There’s also the concern with historical precedent. Back during the Nixon administration, as the Watergate scandal was gaining steam, former President Richard Nixon instructed his Justice Department to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox, leading to the resignations of Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus. Mr Nixon then ordered then Solicitor General of the United States Robert Bork — who became the acting attorney general — to fire Mr Cox, which he did.
Independent
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