4:46 PM 4/5/2019 - Special Counsel Mueller will be leaving the DOJ in “coming days”
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Special Counsel Mueller will be leaving the DOJ in “coming days” Quartz
Mueller’s *service* to the US government is concluding shortly, a DOJ spokesman tells Quartz; the special counsel’s office is closing.
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Mar 24, 2019 - Special counsel Robert Mueller "will be concluding his service in the coming days," ... The review process: Attorney General William Barr and Deputy Attorney Rod .... Aaron Zelinsky, the last man standing, left at 3:38 p.m. ET.
Mar 24, 2019 - THE SUMMARY: Attorney General William Barr has submitted to Congress his summary of the ... Special counsel Robert Mueller ends investigation ... Will Mueller knock down left-wing conspiracies? ... would finish his service as special counsel "in the coming days" and that the office would be closing.
Mar 22, 2019 - The attorney general, William P. Barr, will determine how much of the ... from Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel, to Attorney General ... Mr. Barr said he might be able to share with lawmakers in the coming days, .... William P. Barr, the attorney general, leaving his house on Friday morning in Virginia.
Mar 22, 2019 - Attorney General William Barr answered one of the most burning questions in American politics on Friday: When will Robert Mueller's Russia probe end? .... special counsel would be concluding his service in the “coming days” while a ... He'll go back to whatever private life he's got leftin him,” said a former ...
Mar 23, 2019 - Robert Mueller finished his investigation into Trump's campaign and ... office left that charging decision to him and the Justice Department. ... Y., said he would be calling Barr to testify before the committee in coming days.
Mar 22, 2019 - Attorney General William Barr has confirmed Robert Mueller has delivered his ... counsel would be "concluding his service in the coming days.
Feb 20, 2019 - Mueller could deliver his report to Attorney General William P. Barr next ... counsel Robert S. Mueller III's Russia investigation is up to Mueller, ... who have left the office formally but are still working on cases begun by Mueller.
Feb 22, 2019 - Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III leaves after a meeting on Capitol Hill ... [ Justice Department preparing for Mueller report in coming days].
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Robert Mueller, the special counsel who spent nearly two years investigating Donald Trump’s links to Russian interference in the 2016 US election, will be leaving the Department of Justice in “coming days” a spokesman said.
Mueller, who spent 674 days on the investigation before handing a 400 page report to attorney general William Barr, “will be concluding his service within the coming days,” DOJ spokesman Peter Carr told Quartz today. A “small staff remains to assist in closing the operations of the office,” Carr said. He said he didn’t have more information on what day, exactly, Mueller would depart, or whether his departure could coincide with Barr’s promise to distribute a redacted version of the report before mid-April.
Mueller, a long-time civil servant, was the head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 2001 to 2013; he left a private law firm to conduct the special investigation in May of 2017, after Trump abruptly fired FBI head James Comey. Carr, who served as the spokesman for the special counsel’s office since the beginning of the investigation, has returned to the department’s main Office of Public Affairs.
Even though Mueller’s departure is imminent, huge questions remain about what the investigation actually found. Barr’s four page summary of the report, made public March 24, has been criticized by Mueller associates as not accurately depicting the content of the report, and omitting “alarming” details that it unearthed, the Washington Post reports. The White House claims that the report “completely exonerates” Trump, despite the fact that Barr’s summary specifically quotes Mueller as writing “this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”
The House Judiciary Committee voted April 3 to authorize subpoenas for the full, unredacted report and its underlying evidence. Barr, and possibly Mueller, could be called to testify in front of the committee. In previous special investigations into US presidential misconduct, Congress ultimately got access to special prosecutors’ reports and the underlying information.
Senate Republicans, meanwhile, have blocked a measure to make the Mueller report public five times.
As questions grow about what, exactly, the lengthy investigation uncovered about the extent of Russian meddling in the 2016 election, and how it could be prevented in 2020, there’s plenty of people asking: Why doesn’t Mueller just come out publicly and clear things up?
After all, former FBI officials including Comey and deputy director Andrew McCabe, who was fired daysbefore his pension kicked in after a decades-long government career, embarked on media blitzes after their departures. They wrote books about their experience and talked them up to cable news networksand morning talk shows.
Even after Mueller departs the DOJ, he’s unlikely to launch into a round of interviews with news media on the investigation, or even the unique role he’s played in America’s democracy. First of all, that’s not his style, former colleagues told Quartz.
And while any contract Mueller signed with the Department of Justice to conduct the investigation is unlikely to have a specific non-disclosure agreement that prevents him from discussing the investigation publicly at all, he’s still ethically prohibited from divulging privileged information, such as information about the internal workings of the executive branch that is normally protected from disclosure by the common law principle known as “deliberative process privilege,” or anything that came from grand jury testimony. Carr didn’t respond to questions about Mueller’s plans after he departs, or whether he would be able to speak freely about the non-classified parts of the investigation.
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Attorney General William Barr attends the 2019 Prison Reform Summit and First Step Act Celebration in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Monday, April 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
MUELLER REPORT UNDER SCRUTINY: The Mueller report - and everyone involved in its handling, from Attorney General William Barr to Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his investigators - are under scrutiny as Democrats demand that Barr release the full, unredacted report ... On Thursday, the attorney general - who is expected to release entire Mueller report, with redactions, by mid-April - defended his handling of the 400-page document, saying it contains sensitive grand jury material.
Meanwhile, amid reports that Mueller's findings were more damaging to President Trump than Barr indicated, Fox News has learned Republican lawmakers had concerns about Mueller's investigators before the probe ended. Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., alerted Barr to what they described as the "selective" use of emails in Mueller court filings -- as well as potential “improper political influence, misconduct, and mismanagement” in the FBI's original Russia probe.
EX-TRUMP FIXER MAKES LAST-MINUTE PLEA TO DEMS: With a little more than a month to go until he is slated to report to prison, former Trump fixer Michael Cohen is asking House Democrats to help keep him out of the big house ... In a letter sent to lawmakers Thursday, Cohen's legal team said he was still sorting through documents in his personal files that might be of interest to House Democrats investigating President Trump, including emails, voice recordings, images and other documents on a hard drive. The letter was sent to a who's-who of Trump opponents in the Democratic Party, including Reps. Adam Schiff of California, Jerry Nadler of New York, Maxine Waters of California and Elijah Cummings of Maryland.
HOWARD SCHULTZ: TRUMP WINS RE-ELECTION IF SANDERS IS HIS OPPONENT - Potential independent 2020 White House contender Howard Schultz predicted outright that President Trump will win re-election if Democrats nominate a self-described socialist like Bernie Sanders, during Fox News' "America's Election HQ" Town Hall Thursday night in Kansas City, Mo. ... At the town hall event, co-hosted by Fox News' Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, Schultz separately denied he would play a "spoiler" in the race -- and suggested instead that someone like Sanders could unwittingly play that role. He addressed a variety of topics, such as the immigration crisis at the U.S-Mexico border, allegations of inappropriate conduction leveled by seven women against Joe Biden, Trump's withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and more. (Click on the video above for a highlight from the Schultz townhall.)
FILE - In this March 26, 2019, file photo, actor Jussie Smollett smiles and waves to supporters before leaving Cook County Court after his charges were dropped in Chicago. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty, File)
CHICAGO VERSUS SMOLLETT: Chicago is vowing a civil suit against Jussie Smollett after the "Empire" actor "refused to reimburse" the city for the cost of investigating his controversial case ... In a statement obtained by Fox News, the city's law department said that Smollett, 36, "has refused to reimburse the City of Chicago for the cost of police overtime spent investigating his false police report on Jan. 29, 2019." The statement said that the law department "is now drafting a civil complaint that will be filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County."
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THE SOUNDBITE
'TRUMP IS RIGHT' - "The issue that we have to recognize is this: President Trump is correct, and the Republican leadership is correct that we need fierce, strict levels of control on that border to keep bad people from coming in; illegal immigrants should not come in." – Howard Schultz, addressing the illegal immigration crisis, at Fox News' "America's Election HQ" Town Hall. (Click the image above to watch the full video.)
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#TheFlashback
1974: Stephen King's first published novel, "Carrie," is released by Doubleday
1964: Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur dies in Washington, D.C., at age 84.
1955: British Prime Minister Winston Churchill resigns for health reasons.
1974: Stephen King's first published novel, "Carrie," is released by Doubleday
1964: Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur dies in Washington, D.C., at age 84.
1955: British Prime Minister Winston Churchill resigns for health reasons.
Fox News First is compiled by Fox News' Bryan Robinson. Thank you for joining us! Have a good day and weekend! We'll see you in your inbox first thing Monday morning.
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'I was targeted for supporting Israel, opposing Obama' Arutz Sheva
Former Trump advisor George Papadopoulos says State Department officials, Mueller investigation targeted him for his pro-Israeli positions.
Despite the fact that William Barr had made public comments denigrating the Mueller investigation and clearly auditioned for the job with a spurious memo suggesting that it was almost impossible for a president to obstruct justice, he was confirmed as Donald Trump’s new attorney general with little difficulty. After what had happened with Jeff Sessions, it was understood that Trump would never again stand for an AG recusing himself from any investigation of the president. So everyone knew that Robert Mueller’s report on Russian interference in the 2016 election would be in the hands of someone who was unlikely to be an honest broker.
Nonetheless, most of us gave Barr the benefit of the doubt. I wrote about Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski, who had been a conservative supporter of Richard Nixon. He was coerced into taking the job by White House chief of staff Alexander Haig, who told him, “We need you, Leon” — assuming he would be loyal to the president. When Jaworski saw the evidence against Nixon, however, he was appalled and moved forward with the investigation. I thought maybe that could happen with Barr too.
I should have known better. Barr was a very political attorney general during George H.W. Bush’s administration, recommending pardons for all the guilty players in the Iran-Contra case, showing that he wasn’t going to be one of those weaklings who saw the Nixon pardon as setting a bad example for the country. I should have realized that this wasn’t a case of someone who’d spent too much time watching Sean Hannity and was slightly out of it. Barr’s been a rock-solid right-winger for decades.
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I characterized Barr’s initial four-page summary of the Mueller report as an elegant little political document and it was. It elicited exactly the response he and the White House wanted. He validated Trump’s slogan, “No Collusion, No Obstruction” while cleverly obscuring the fact that there is obviously much more to that story. After a couple of weeks of careful parsing and reconsideration of the implications by the press and various experts, Barr has now lost control of the storyline. He is promising to deliver the full report after he redacts whatever he deems necessary, but because of the game he’s been playing, there is no longer much trust that he’s acting in good faith.
Unlike Ken Starr’s investigations of the Whitewater and Monica Lewinsky scandals, the Mueller team didn’t use friendly members of the press to pressure witnesses and try their cases in the court of public opinion. In fact they said nothing at all outside the courtroom. But now that the investigation is over and the attorney general has taken it upon himself to summarize their conclusions they have reportedly begin to express their distress about how he’s handled that.
Numerous news outlets have confirmed that members of Mueller’s team say that Barr has mischaracterized the evidence of obstruction of justice, which by all accounts is substantial.
They have also told associates that they carefully prepared summaries for different sections of the report, assuming they would be released to the public. Those summaries should not require all this concern from Barr about redactions. This certainly comports with many experts’ assumptions about how such a report would be organized. While Barr and the Justice Department are now saying that the summaries are labeled as containing grand jury and other confidential information, therefore requiring careful review and redactions, many professionals have suggested that’s just pro forma.
I think we all knew that the question of obstruction was going to be a problem for President Trump, simply because so much of it was happening right out in the open. But according to NBC News, it’s not just that issue that has the Mueller team agitated. The “collusion” case is also being somewhat misrepresented. The special counsel decided not to charge Trump or his campaign with conspiring with the Russian government in its election interference, but that is far from the whole story. Members of the team say that “the findings paint a picture of a campaign whose members were manipulated by a sophisticated Russian intelligence operation.”
I have long been willing to believe that Trump and his minions were simply so unethical, corrupt and uninformed that they were easy marks for the Russian election sabotage campaign. We know that they behaved idiotically when Russians approached them. Donald Trump Jr. writing an emails saying, “if it’s what you say, I love it!” upon hearing that Russian emissaries want to give him dirt on Hillary Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump” is not the language of a sophisticated conspirator. It’s almost as if they were testing to see if Junior was even sentient. But that doesn’t get him or Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort or Donald Trump himself off the hook. This isn’t a game. Trump is president of the United States.
Trump and his team were almost certainly compromised by the lies they told about the Trump Tower Moscow negotiations. Trump knew that could be revealed at any time and his obsequious behavior toward Vladimir Putin the could easily be interpreted as bowing to an unspoken threat. Trump is conversant in blackmail threats, as we all know. We also know that he pays up when he deems it necessary.
Mueller found that none of this was prosecutable and it is vital we find out why he reached that conclusion. But to say that there was nothing there amounts to sweeping some of the worst judgment calls in the history of presidential campaigns under the carpet. And that’s really saying something.
These were outrageous decisions regardless of the criminal liability or lack thereof. I’m not sure if rank stupidity and reckless greed qualify as high crimes and misdemeanors but we should probably know the whole story before deciding about that. Even if Trump and his close advisers were suckered by the “Russian election interference activities” it’s quite clear that once Trump realized that the FBI and the intelligence community thought he might have done something illegal, he tried to cover it up. If that’s so, it’s not William Barr’s place to make the decision about criminal obstruction of justice. If the Department of Justice has concluded that it cannot charge a sitting president with a crime, it cannot clear one of wrongdoing either. It’s up to the Congress to decide what to do about Donald Trump. It seems as though the Mueller investigators agree.
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Life is so much harder with the new guy! Angela Merkel gives Barack Obama a very warm welcome in Germany amid cooling Trans-Atlantic relations with Trump
- German Chancellor hugged Barack Obama during a visit to Cologne and Berlin
- They had meeting at Chancellery where they discussed Trans-Atlantic relations
- Comes as Merkel/Trump relations at low over Germany's Nato spending amount
Published: 17:37 BST, 5 April 2019 | Updated: 19:06 BST, 5 April 2019
Angel Merkel is a leader that has always made her feelings clear.
And now it seems the German chancellor cannot hide her feelings towards US presidents.
Ms Merkel, 64, played host to former US president Barack Obama in Berlin today - and the pair were spotted in a warm embrace after a meeting at the German Chancellery.
Angela Merkel says goodbye to Barack Obama at the German chancellery in Berlin today
The former US president kisses the German chancellor after their meeting - believed to be about Trans-Atlantic relations
Ms Merkel leans across a table as President Trump looks on during the second day of the G7 meeting in Charlevoix, Canada, on June 9
This is in stark contrast to the reception she has given President Donald Trump in the past, with an awkward stare across a table being a recent example.
Obama, 57, has even said Ms Merkel was one of his 'favourite partners' during his time in office and his last international trip as president was to Germany in November 2016.
A year later, the former Democratic Party leader told a crowd in Berlin of the 'outstanding work' across the world Ms Merkel had undertaken.
Obama arrived in Germany yesterday and made a speech to 14,000 people at the World Leadership Summit in Lanxess Arena, Cologne, German newspaper Bild reported.
Obama and Ms Merkel share a laugh during their meeting today. During his three-day visit to Germany, Obama will also meet with a group of young people tomorrow
Today, the pair were believed to have discussed Trans-Atlantic relations during the hour and a half exchange - and Ms Merkel showed her appreciation with a hug and a kiss on Obama's cheek.
It comes as a turbulent relationship has evolved between Germany and the US, with President Trump lashing out at Ms Merkel for lowering the country's military spending to below Nato targets.
The latest German budget plans, revealed last month, showed defence spending drop well below the two per cent of GDP expected from Nato members.
US ambassador Richard Grenell said the cuts were a 'worrisome signal', while President Trump repeatedly accused Germany of freeloading on US military might.
But Ms Merkel rejected the criticism, saying Germany will not cut foreign aid to raise military spending.
Obama arrived yesterday at around 5pm and addressed the World Leadership Summit in Lanxess Arena, Cologne
And this month, President Trump - while complaining about how Germany does not pay its fair share - claimed his father was from the country.
Trump repeated an error he has made in public at least twice, this time adding to the story of his father's supposed European birth.
He made the claim while seated next to Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, the Norwegian politician who has publicly praised the president for encouraging allies to spend more on defence.
The president said: 'I have great respect for Angela and I have great respect for the country.'
He added: 'My father is German, right? Was German.
'Born in a very wonderful place in Germany, so I have a great feeling for Germany.'
But Fred Trump, the president's father, was born in New York - it was his grandfather Friederich Trump who was born in the German village of Kallstadt.
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US ambassador Richard Grenell said the cuts were a 'worrisome signal', while President Trump repeatedly accused Germany of freeloading on US ...
2:17 PM 4/5/2019 - Obama meets Germany's Merkel at chancellery in Berlin
Obama Meets Germany's Merkel at Chancellery in Berlin
Voice of America-1 hour ago
Chancellor Angela Merkel has received former U.S. President Barack Obama at her office in Berlin for a meeting characterized by German ...
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Berlin's consistent calls to protect multilateralism in the wake of President Donald ... And forget too that it was Merkel who, at the NATO summit in Wales in 2014, ... or has his sights on the Chancellery, Germany's credibility inside NATO is being dented. ... (Former U.S. president Barack Obama tried that too.) ...
'Already an Exception': Merkel's Legacy Is Shaped by Migration and ...
New York Times-Dec 6, 2018
Ms. Merkel has been both chancellor of Germany and the leader of Europe. ... But like her friend andally President Barack Obama — America's first black ... Ms. Merkel was standing at the window of the chancellery in Berlin, ...
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The New Yorker-Dec 17, 2018
“What good is NATO if Germany is paying Russia billions of dollars for gas .... Obama and Merkel had not started out as good friends, but they had .... in her glass-walled office on the seventh floor of the Chancellery, in Berlin.
11 photos show how close Merkel was with Obama, and how different ...
Business Insider-Jul 11, 2018
Merkel and Obama not only shared perspectives on various issues — they ... Obama upon his arrival at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany on ...
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Obama Meets Germany's Merkel at Chancellery in Berlin
Voice of America-1 hour ago
Chancellor Angela Merkel has received former U.S. President Barack Obama at her office in Berlin for a meeting characterized by German ...
Miami Herald
The Credibility of German Multilateralism
Carnegie Europe-Mar 19, 2019
Berlin's consistent calls to protect multilateralism in the wake of President Donald ... And forget too that it was Merkel who, at the NATO summit in Wales in 2014, ... or has his sights on the Chancellery, Germany's credibility inside NATO is being dented. ... (Former U.S. president Barack Obama tried that too.) ...
'Already an Exception': Merkel's Legacy Is Shaped by Migration and ...
New York Times-Dec 6, 2018
Ms. Merkel has been both chancellor of Germany and the leader of Europe. ... But like her friend andally President Barack Obama — America's first black ... Ms. Merkel was standing at the window of the chancellery in Berlin, ...
How Trump Made War on Angela Merkel and Europe
The New Yorker-Dec 17, 2018
“What good is NATO if Germany is paying Russia billions of dollars for gas .... Obama and Merkel had not started out as good friends, but they had .... in her glass-walled office on the seventh floor of the Chancellery, in Berlin.
11 photos show how close Merkel was with Obama, and how different ...
Business Insider-Jul 11, 2018
Merkel and Obama not only shared perspectives on various issues — they ... Obama upon his arrival at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany on ...
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U.S. News & World Report-Feb 1, 2019
BERLIN (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Friday ... and that can only happen via new elections in our view," Merkel told a ...
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