Mueller tells House panel Trump asked staff to falsify records

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by fatcIemenza

Former special counsel Robert Mueller Robert (Bob) Swan MuellerGOP senator: Americans should remember Mueller from 'his prime' Ken Starr says Mueller has done 'a grave disservice' to his country Mueller Day: What to watch for MORE confirmed in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday that President Trump Donald John TrumpMcConnell, Paul offer bill to cement tax provision benefiting bourbon makers Creating opportunity for all Scarborough implores Democrats: Go hard after Trump or he'll win in 2020 MORE directed staffers to falsify records connected to Mueller’s investigation.

Asked by Rep. Cedric Richmond Cedric Levon RichmondThe Memo: Mueller's stumbles distract from substance Mueller tells House panel Trump asked staff to falsify records Live coverage: Mueller testifies before Congress MORE (D-La.) whether it was “fair to say” Trump “tried to protect himself by asking staff to falsify records relevant to an ongoing investigation,” Mueller responded, “I would say that's generally a summary.”

Richmond then asked if, in giving the order, Trump intended to “hamper the investigation.” In response, Mueller referred Richmond back to his office’s report.

The Louisiana congressman went on to specifically ask Mueller about Trump’s attempts to get then-White House counsel Don McGahn to create a written record falsely asserting Trump had not directed him to fire Mueller, which McGahn refused.

Richmond asked if the attempts “were related to President Trump's concerns about your obstruction of justice inquiry,” to which Mueller responded, “I believe that to be true.”

"So it's accurate to say the president knew that he was asking [Don McGahn] to deny facts that McGahn 'had repeatedly said were accurate.' Isn't that right?" Richmond asked Mueller, with the special counsel responding in the affirmative.

Rep. Cedric Richmond: "So it's accurate to say the president knew that he was asking [Don McGahn] to deny facts that McGahn 'had repeatedly said were accurate.' Isn't that right?"

Robert Mueller: "Correct" https://t.co/jFAp2RJoaI #MuellerHearings pic.twitter.com/PzanT0cNT8 — ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) July 24, 2019

The exchange between Trump and McGahn was one of 10 episodes Mueller’s team investigated as possible obstruction of justice, a frequent topic during the marathon hearing.

Mueller, who wrote in the report that the probe could not exonerate Trump on obstruction, repeatedly demurred on whether the behavior described in the report met the legal definition during the hearing.

Jodabomb24 on July 25th, 2019 at 16:48 UTC »

Disclaimer: I only watched about an hour of the testimony so far

It seemed like a number of the congressmen on the right kept doing the same thing: talking at Mueller rather than actually asking him any questions. Then they'd just say "my time is limited" and plow on. Almost like they didn't even care about what the report says.

cyneverdie on July 25th, 2019 at 14:27 UTC »

I can't believe that...

BBC News - Donald Trump wrote own health letter, says physician Harold Bornstein http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-43970908

phishtrader on July 25th, 2019 at 13:49 UTC »

"Very legal and very cool."