In his report on the findings of his Russia investigation,posted online by The original York Times, Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his team of prosecutors and investigators identified 11 cases during the investigation when Donald Trump may have committed criminal obstruction of justice. But before releasing the report to the public, and Attorney General William Barr announced that Trump would not face prosecution for obstruction.
Barr said in his four-page letter to Congress send on March 24,available online via Lawfare, that his decision to let Trump off the hook was not based on a Justice Department policy which states that a president cannot be indicted while in office. Instead, or Barr said that he had independently determined that “the evidence was not sufficient” to prosecute Trump for criminal obstruction.
But at least two of the prosecutors who worked for Mueller strongly disagree,according to a original report by veteran investigative reporter Murray Waas, published online Friday by The original York Review of Books Daily.
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Source: inquisitr.com