The Daily - Why Didn’t Mueller Decide on Obstruction?
Episode Date: March 26, 2019The special counsel, Robert Mueller, was supposed to decide whether President Trump had committed a crime. Why did the attorney general, William P. Barr, do it instead? Guest: Michael S. Schmidt, who ...has been covering the special counsel investigation for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, the special counsel was supposed to make the decision
about whether President Trump committed a crime.
Why did the attorney general do it instead?
It's Tuesday, March 26th.
Mike Schmidt, it has been 48 hours since the Attorney General, Bill Barr,
sent his summary of the special counsel's report to congressional leaders.
Where are you at in your thinking about all this?
In a certain way, I'm starting to think that the special counsel regulations, the way that
this investigation was set up, has failed. And what do you mean failed? Do you mean
because this investigation didn't produce
criminal charges against the president? No, no, no. It's not about that. It's about
the perception of politics in criminal decisions. Bob Mueller, the special counsel,
operated under certain regulations that were designed to protect him and his investigation,
but also give the public assurances
that investigators who were free of politics
pursued the facts.
In this case, there's a perception problem.
What do you mean by perception problem?
The special counsel is supposed to go out, look into the issues that are in question, in this case, collusion and obstruction of justice.
And no matter how hard the questions they are looking at are,
make a determination about whether someone broke the law or not.
Because obviously Mueller did not feel comfortable making a decision in either direction on obstruction.
Mueller said, you know what, I can't decide, it's up to you.
In the case of the president, a decision in either direction on obstruction. Mueller said, you know what, I can't decide. It's up to you.
In the case of the president, Mueller made no conclusion with respect to obstruction.
I would love to learn more about what was happening behind the scenes and why Mueller decided to punt.
Prosecutors get paid to make determinations.
That's what we do.
So that meant that the special counsel, the person who had been put there to protect themselves from politics, had no determination.
That's not the job of the prosecutor.
The job of the prosecutor is to decide yes or no.
And that left it up to the political appointees, the attorney general and deputy attorney general, people who had been placed there by Donald Trump.
Barr says he and the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein,
concluded that that conduct did not reach the threshold of a crime.
So you're saying that because Mueller punted the decision
on obstruction of justice to Barr,
and it was Barr who then cleared the president of that charge. The special
counsel failed because there was no apolitical figure reaching a conclusion on one of the central
questions of the investigation. Correct. Part of the reason the special counsel is there
is to give the public the assurance that a investigator who's not politically tied to the person under
investigation is doing the work and following the facts. And in this case, that person, Mueller,
said, I can't come to a determination on this and kicked it up to the folks above him who are the political appointees. By not reaching
a conclusion, Mueller left the door open for Barr to come in and make a determination that he didn't
think there was enough to say the president broke the law. But Barr has another perception problem. What's that? Back in 2018, Bill Barr, who had been the attorney general
under George H.W. Bush and was now semi-retired, he unprompted wrote a memo that ended up in the
hands of the Trump legal team that essentially said there is a very, very high bar for a president to be
charged with obstruction of justice. And in that argument, he says that in order to prove
obstruction, you also have to prove the underlying crime, in this case, collusion.
prove the underlying crime, in this case, collusion. So to make a case, you have to be able to establish both. And Barr writes this long before he's Attorney General. What is
meaningful about that memo and that legal logic about obstruction of justice now? In the letter
he sends to Congress this weekend, in which he explains the decision on what they did with the president on obstruction, he says that one of the reasons that it's so difficult to make this case is that they can't show that the president was part of collusion.
An underlying crime that would justify a charge of obstruction of justice.
Correct.
I actually want to, can I read from it?
Yeah, yeah.
In his letter, he said, quote,
In making this determination, we noted that the special counsel recognized that the evidence
does not establish that the president was involved in an underlying
crime related to Russian election interference. And that, while not determinative, the absence
of such evidence bears upon the president's intent with respect to obstruction.
So just to translate that for us, what exactly is he saying? He's saying that unless you can show that the president was trying to obstruct to cover up another crime, then the obstruction is sort of hollow.
It doesn't really resonate because there's nothing really to cover up.
So that is a clear echo to the original Barr memo from 2018 written to the Trump administration. And it sounds like what you're saying is that because Barr wrote this memo before he was nominated as attorney general, the White House knew he held this position when it came to obstruction of justice.
being that legal interpretation that is used to help clear the president of wrongdoing
when it comes to obstructive justice,
that starts to feel quite political.
Here's the problem.
Barr may be right.
He may have come to the correct conclusion
based on the law and the fact.
But because Mueller took a pass in this highly weird thing
where he didn't want to make a call
about whether the president broke the law on obstruction,
it ended up in Barr's hands,
and he looks like the ultimate and only decision maker.
And he, because of politics,
has perception issues on this decision.
Well, let's talk about the actual conclusion that Barr reached. because of politics, has perception issues on this decision.
Well, let's talk about the actual conclusion that Barr reached.
What do you make, Mike, of his rationale? Is there a broad legal consensus around Barr's argument here
that obstruction of justice depends on an underlying crime?
I think prosecutors would say that they don't want to bring cases against folks
who did not obstruct an actual criminal act. Legally, you could make the case, but most
prosecutors wouldn't want to because it's not worth their time and energy to go after someone who is trying to cover up something that's not criminal.
Got it.
But in this case, I would say that there were crimes that the president may have wanted to cover up.
Hmm. Which ones?
Well.
Breaking news.
Well?
Breaking news.
President Trump's former longtime attorney and fixer Michael Cohen pleading guilty to eight counts of campaign finance violation,
including and importantly, hush money payments to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal. Hush money payments that Cohen said then candidate Donald Trump directed.
Cohen's stunning words today, and I quote, in coordination and at the direction of a candidate for federal office.
The president has been named essentially as an unindicted co-conspirator in Michael Cohen's
payments to women before the election for violating campaign finance. Prosecutors say
the hush money payments Cohen made violate campaign finance laws. President Trump calls
them a simple private transaction. Donald Trump knew about those
payments in May, June, July of 2017. So if you're the president and Bob Mueller comes along and you
know that you made these payments, you think, well, if this thing really gets out of hand,
I could have some problems. So in the summer of 2017, the president's
talking about trying to fire Mueller. Now, according to the New York Times and the Washington Post,
the White House is laying the groundwork to try to discredit or undermine Mueller's investigation.
Why was he really talking about that? Was it because of Russia? Was it because it was simply a distraction?
Or did he want to ensure that Mueller didn't go too far into his personal finances?
Multiple U.S. officials tell NBC News Mueller is gathering documents involving the financial records and businesses
of dealings close to the Trump campaign,
something the president says is a red line.
A red line, except following
the money is what Mueller does. Barr says, look, he had nothing to cover up on Russia,
but his same Justice Department has essentially said he's an unindicted co-conspirator in a
campaign finance case. The Justice Department is looking at his inaugural committee, including all
information related to inaugural donors, vendors, contractors, bank accounts.
And his businesses.
And Mueller's investigation has led to great embarrassment for the president.
President Trump's former national security advisor Michael Flynn
just hours away from finding out if he'll go to prison
for lying to the FBI about his Russia contacts.
Also breaking tonight, the president's former campaign chairman,
Paul Manafort, found guilty on eight counts.
Roger Stone, longtime Trump associate and advisor, was taken into custody by the FBI.
Even though he was cleared on collusion, more than a handful of his advisors and associates have pled guilty to different charges.
So was there really nothing to obstruct?
to obstruct? So you're saying that Barr's rationale that there is no obstruction because there were no crimes to obstruct doesn't really hold up because there were crimes. They just weren't the crimes
of coordinating with Russia to influence the election. I'm saying that a day after Barr sent
the letter, as we look at it,
that's another part of it that doesn't make complete sense yet.
Mike, is that one more way
in which by kicking the decision
to Bill Barr,
the special counsel
put this in the political realm
of interpretation
by political actors
in a political system
that might have been better left to an independent figure
as the special counsel rules envisioned.
It means that instead of Mueller explaining the determination,
Barr is doing it.
And that just exposes the decision to the politics
that Mueller was there to protect it from.
And the head scratching part of it is, so you went through this whole exercise of creating a special counsel.
To be apolitical.
To be apolitical.
And in the end, the special counsel takes a pass and it ends up right back in the hands of the political appointees.
Well, why did you need a special counsel?
Right.
And to that point, I guess the question is, why did Robert Mueller kick this question
of obstruction of justice to the attorney general, knowing full well everything you
just explained, that that would make whatever decision Barr made feel political
and in violation of the spirit of having a special counsel.
He arguably handed off his central job to a political appointee.
Well, we don't know, and we're trying to find out.
But here are two possibilities.
Maybe one, he didn't want to box in Barr.
He didn't want to put him in a situation
where he may appear to be disagreeing
with the investigators.
The second is that the legal issues around this
are very difficult to unravel
because it's caught up in the unique position
the president has as the head of the executive branch.
And it may just be so hard to untangle them
that Mueller kind of threw up his hands
and said, this is a highly unusual situation.
I'm going to let the Justice Department make the call. It's interesting. and said, this is a highly unusual situation.
I'm going to let the Justice Department make the call.
It's interesting.
You said that maybe Mueller doesn't want to box in Bill Barr,
but it feels like it also puts Barr in a very weird position because Barr's options are all about degrees of political
once Mueller kicks the decision to him.
If Barr makes a decision about obstruction,
yes, that seems political.
But if he sends Mueller's findings along
to Congress with an open-ended question
of whether or not the president obstructed justice,
he leaves it to a democratically controlled House
to answer the question.
And honestly, that feels as political,
maybe even more political
than the attorney general making the call himself. In a sense, maybe Barr was damned if he did and
damned if he didn't. I don't know. Do you think that Mueller would have anticipated
all of this, that this would put Barr in a political position and would essentially violate the spirit of what the special counsel was all about.
It's one of the mysteries right now.
It's one of the questions we're trying to answer.
Why is it that Mueller couldn't come to a conclusion?
Came to a conclusion on collusion.
Right.
Said it didn't happen.
But obstruction wouldn't exonerate the president.
Said it didn't happen, but an obstruction wouldn't exonerate the president.
Mike, it seems like before this report came out over the weekend, the main concern from Congress about Attorney General Bill Barr was whether he would ever release the full Mueller report to Congress.
Not that he would actually weigh in on whether the president committed crimes, because the idea that Mueller would not reach a conclusion wasn't really conceivable. In retrospect, was that a mistake,
that we weren't focused enough on the possibility that Barr might weigh in on something like this,
and that he had already kind of told us how he would act in this situation?
had already kind of told us how he would act in this situation.
Like the folks who put the special counsel regulations together 20 years ago, we, just a few weeks ago, couldn't predict the future.
And we couldn't come up with the idea that Mueller, who's been there for two years, would at the end of the day throw up his hands
and say, I can't make a determination on this. I spoke to a former senior Justice Department
official today who said he had never seen an example in his entire career of prosecutors
saying, we just can't make a call here.
Hmm.
I wonder if the way that this is played out
in such a political manner,
Mueller sends a decision to Barr,
Barr decides not to pursue obstruction,
how much does that influence what comes next?
How Congress now conducts its side of this investigation
and how it treats the Mueller report.
Well, if Mueller had said there was no obstruction
and Barr put that out,
then the Democrats would really have nothing to work with.
But because Mueller didn't make a decision,
it now opens the door for the Democrats to say, we really need to take a look at everything that
was here. Why was it that Mueller couldn't make a decision? How did Bill Barr assess this?
Hmm. How did Bill Barr assess this?
And they actually have something to work with.
It gives them an issue to continue to prod on the obstruction of justice.
Mm-hmm.
Because if Mueller had cleared the president, the Barr, no pun intended, for them
to overcome, to even investigate it, would have been pretty high.
So counterintuitively, because of the way this played out,
because of what Mueller did or didn't do,
and what Barr did as a political figure in all this,
he has given someone like Jerry Nadler,
the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
a reasonably good reason to keep pushing forward for as much evidence as possible.
Correct. And I think that's what we'll see.
Thank you, Mike.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham,
the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
said he had invited the Attorney General, William Barr,
to testify before his committee about the Mueller report
and that Barr had said he was willing to do so.
And just to clarify, you said you want Attorney General Barr to testify? about the Mueller report, and that Barr had said he was willing to do so.
And just to clarify, you said you wanted Attorney General Barr to testify?
I love Mr. Mueller.
But when asked if he would invite the special counsel to testify to explain his decision-making, Graham seemed less enthusiastic.
I'll leave that up to Mr. Barr as to whether or not he thinks that would be helpful.
I don't know the answer to that about the special counsel himself. I'll leave that up to Mr. Barr as to whether or not he thinks that would be helpful.
I don't know the answer to that about the special counsel himself.
Let's start with Mr. Barr, who's in charge of the Department of Justice.
And.
In his latest attack on the special counsel investigation,
President Trump described Democrats who had accused him of coordinating with Russia as, quote, treasonous and guilty of evil things, and said that they
should be investigated themselves. Those people will certainly be looked at. I've been looking
at them for a long time, and I'm saying, why haven't they been looked at? They lied to Congress.
Many of them, you know who they are. The president's remarks suggested that rather than embracing the findings of the special
counsel's report as a vindication, he is seeking to use them as a weapon against his opponents.
What they did, it was a false narrative. It was a terrible thing.
Around the same time, the president's re-election campaign
sent a list of Democrats to TV news producers,
saying that they should no longer appear on their shows
because they had misrepresented the president's conduct
in light of the Mueller report's conclusion.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.