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Mueller Report Thoroughly Indicts Trump
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Apr 18, 2019 16:56:21   #
Fit2BTied Loc: Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Even some Trump supporters may question their fealty to a president now revealed to operate like a mob boss, except with poorer judgment.
slatten49, I can't think of any President who - if they'd been as thoroughly investigated as President Trump was, by an opposition group as determined as these people were to ruin his Presidency, would come out shining like a diamond in a goat's @$$. Washington, Lincoln, FDR, Kennedy, Reagan - it wouldn't matter because men in positions of power are inclined to utilize that power in ways that you or I might find objectionable.

If Mueller had found a legitimate reason to prosecute, you can bet we'd be reading about the charges, but that didn't happen because a case could not be made, even after the original scope of the investigation was allowed to be stretched like the elastic in your fat Aunt's 20 year old bloomers.

But if you want to wallow in that 400 page cesspool bobbing for nuggets, be my guest. In fact, I'm looking forward to the Democrats pulling this completely apart, so that we can properly prosecute the responsible parties when the FISA warrant paperwork is released along with the IG's report. So...



Reply
Apr 18, 2019 16:56:47   #
bahmer
 
slatten49 wrote:
Reading the article would have suggested that President Trump had every reason to be worried. And, quite frankly, may still.


I would also propose that since President Trump is not a career politician as so many on the hill are that many of his tweets and statements quite possibly come from a lack of protocol and basically bumbling his way through the maze so to speak. I will accept the report that no collusion took place and put this whole report to bed and hopefully allow President Donald Trump to continue leading this great nation and also bringing more prosperity right along with his presidency. Through the years we have had all sorts of people in the office of presidency from womanizers on up to and including c*******ts so why not cut him some slack and instead of attacking him maybe say try and help him for a change. We all know that he has been under attack from the MSM and over 90% of their reporting has been negative against the President. We know that the congress has been on the attack ever since he got elected and also a good number of republicans have been on the attack as well. I do believe that a lesser man would have quit long ago and some may even have committed suicide in similar situations. I personally think that we have an outstanding person as president of these United States in Donald Trump. Is he perfect no but then the only perfect man that was ever on this earth the crucified over two thousand years ago.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 16:57:36   #
debeda
 
slatten49 wrote:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-thoroughly-indicts-trump-193651086.html

Rick Newman, Yahoo Finance. April 18, 2019

Special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence linking President Donald Trump to any crimes involving Russian interference with the 2016 U.S. e******n. And he declined to prosecute Trump for obstructing justice or interfering with prosecutors investigating the Russian interference.

But the 448-page Mueller report contains numerous damning details of Trump asking subordinates to obstruct justice on his behalf, condoning other people’s crimes, covering up facts, telling people to lie and lying himself. Trump may avoid prosecution, but critics will feast for years on the mendacity Mueller revealed. Even some Trump supporters may question their fealty to a president now revealed to operate like a mob boss, except with poorer judgment.

Anybody interested in Mueller’s findings should read the report for themselves. It’s a complicated document with threads that partisans can spin almost any way they want. And the overarching narrative is confounding, because Trump repeatedly sought ways to quash an investigation into a crime he apparently didn’t commit. Trump acted guilty of something Mueller himself found no evidence of.

It’s good news that the Trump campaign did not work deliberately with Russia during the 2016 e******n. Yet, there were numerous contacts between Trump campaign officials and representatives of Russia, with nobody from the campaign ever thinking to tell the FBI about them. Maybe Trump acted guilty because he realized at some point that his campaign’s contacts with Russia were fishy, at a minimum, and might look a lot worse than that to a zealous prosecutor.

How did Trump act guilty? Some of his paranoia was on public display, through the recurring “witch hunt” tweets and statements meant to discredit the Mueller investigation before we knew anything about its findings. And Trump seemed to publicly threaten witnesses such as Michael Cohen, who might testify against him.

Trump went much further than that, as the Mueller report now reveals. On June 14, 2017, according to the Mueller report, Trump called White House Counsel Donald McGahn and told him to have Justice Department leadership fire Mueller — which probably would have been obstruction of justice. McGahn declined to do that, one of several times people around Trump prevented overt crimes from happening. “The President's efforts to influence the investigation were mostly unsuccessful,” the Mueller report states, “but that is largely because the persons who surrounded the President declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests.”

After McGahn refused to have Mueller fired, Trump tried to have former campaign aide Corey Lewandowski pass a message to former Attorney General Jeff Sessions about Mueller. Trump wanted Sessions to publicly exonerate him of any crimes, and to limit the Mueller investigation so it excluded investigation into Trump’s personal behavior. Lewandowsky didn’t want to deliver the message and tried to get a White House advisor to do it. Neither delivered the message to Sessions, who apparently never got it.

In June 2017, news organizations began to learn of the now-notorious meeting at Trump Tower on June 9, 2016, between representatives of the Russian government and Trump campaign officials, including Trump’s son Don, Jr. That meeting was about compromising information Russia had obtained on Hillary Clinton, Trump’s general-e******n opponent, which Russia offered to share with the Trump campaign. But once news of that meeting broke a year later, Trump told press aids to lie to news organizations, saying the meeting was really about policies toward adopting Russian babies.

“Each of these efforts by the President involved his communication team and was directed at the press,” the Mueller report found. “They would amount to obstructive acts only if the President, by taking those actions, sought to withhold information from or mislead congressional investigators of the Special Counsel.” Lying to the media, in other words, isn’t a crime, so Trump is off the hook on that one, too.

In January 2018, press reports recounted Trump’s effort to have McGahn get Mueller fired seven months earlier. That story was accurate, but Trump, through a personal lawyer, asked McGahn to put out a statement denying what had, in fact, taken place. Trump, in other words, asked McGahn to lie, so Trump wouldn’t look bad. McGahn refused.

‘President knew Cohen provided false testimony’'

It’s also not a crime, evidently, if you knowingly let somebody else commit perjury on your behalf. Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer, pled guilty to lying to Congress about Trump’s pursuit of a real-estate project in Russia, saying the project ended by January 2016 when in fact it continued until at least June 2016. Cohen told Congress earlier this year that Trump knew Cohen would be lying and did nothing to discourage him.

The Mueller report corroborates that. “There is evidence … that the President knew Cohen provided false testimony to Congress about the Trump Tower Moscow project,” the Mueller report said. But “the evidence available to us does not establish that the President directed or aided Cohen's false testimony.”

Once Cohen began cooperating with prosecutors, Trump publicly called Cohen a “rat” and made what sounded like veiled threats of government legal action against his family. Obstruction? Here’s what Mueller found: “The President's statements insinuating that members of Cohen's family committed crimes after Cohen began cooperating with the government could be viewed as an effort to retaliate against Cohen and chill further testimony adverse to the President by Cohen or others.” There’s some evidence of a crime, in other words. Yet, Mueller still felt this didn’t reach the threshold required for prosecution.

There are many more examples in the Mueller report of Trump behaving in ways that might sound illegal to ordinary people, but don’t rise to what seems to be a very high Justice Department bar for prosecuting the president. Partisans, pundits, legal experts and historians will debate Mueller’s findings for a long time, and v**ers will of course get to render their own judgment once the 2020 e******n finally rolls around.

At a simpler level, however, the Mueller report reveals behavior many Americans would not normally tolerate in business executives, educators, religious leaders, local politicians or their own family members. Trump may not have committed crimes he can be prosecuted for. But he came damn close, and another prosecutor might have been less deferential. No wonder Trump tried to k**l the Mueller investigation.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-... (show quote)


I understand what's being said here. But by the same rationale used in the above essay would that not make the MSM and the Democratic party guilty of trying to execute a soft c**p?

Reply
 
 
Apr 18, 2019 17:00:54   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
You posted it and agree with it.

You must fancy yourself as The Great Carnac from Johnny Carson's old Tonight Show

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:09:44   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
debeda wrote:
I understand what's being said here. But by the same rationale used in the above essay would that not make the MSM and the Democratic party guilty of trying to execute a soft c**p?

I'm sure you do, Debeda, and that's certainly within the realm of possibility. But, from where in the "above essay" do you derive that conclusion, and to what "rationale" are you referring

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:16:43   #
debeda
 
slatten49 wrote:
I'm sure you do, Debeda, and that's certainly within the realm of possibility. But, from where in the "above essay" do you derive that conclusion, and to what "rationale" are you referring


It's kind of an ongoing theme. How he "acted guilty" How, by referring to the investigation as a " witch hunt" he obstructed justice. Kinda specious. By that reasoning, the MSM and the democratic party was guilty for pushing what amounts to nothing but a lie for years. And trying to convince people it was all true. Sorry, Slat, I don't know how to copy portions like some of you are so good at (my phone is my computer) so I cant copy each example in the essay and point out the parallels I see.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:20:05   #
Reality
 
slatten49 wrote:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-thoroughly-indicts-trump-193651086.html

Rick Newman, Yahoo Finance. April 18, 2019

Special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence linking President Donald Trump to any crimes involving Russian interference with the 2016 U.S. e******n. And he declined to prosecute Trump for obstructing justice or interfering with prosecutors investigating the Russian interference.

But the 448-page Mueller report contains numerous damning details of Trump asking subordinates to obstruct justice on his behalf, condoning other people’s crimes, covering up facts, telling people to lie and lying himself. Trump may avoid prosecution, but critics will feast for years on the mendacity Mueller revealed. Even some Trump supporters may question their fealty to a president now revealed to operate like a mob boss, except with poorer judgment.

Anybody interested in Mueller’s findings should read the report for themselves. It’s a complicated document with threads that partisans can spin almost any way they want. And the overarching narrative is confounding, because Trump repeatedly sought ways to quash an investigation into a crime he apparently didn’t commit. Trump acted guilty of something Mueller himself found no evidence of.

It’s good news that the Trump campaign did not work deliberately with Russia during the 2016 e******n. Yet, there were numerous contacts between Trump campaign officials and representatives of Russia, with nobody from the campaign ever thinking to tell the FBI about them. Maybe Trump acted guilty because he realized at some point that his campaign’s contacts with Russia were fishy, at a minimum, and might look a lot worse than that to a zealous prosecutor.

How did Trump act guilty? Some of his paranoia was on public display, through the recurring “witch hunt” tweets and statements meant to discredit the Mueller investigation before we knew anything about its findings. And Trump seemed to publicly threaten witnesses such as Michael Cohen, who might testify against him.

Trump went much further than that, as the Mueller report now reveals. On June 14, 2017, according to the Mueller report, Trump called White House Counsel Donald McGahn and told him to have Justice Department leadership fire Mueller — which probably would have been obstruction of justice. McGahn declined to do that, one of several times people around Trump prevented overt crimes from happening. “The President's efforts to influence the investigation were mostly unsuccessful,” the Mueller report states, “but that is largely because the persons who surrounded the President declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests.”

After McGahn refused to have Mueller fired, Trump tried to have former campaign aide Corey Lewandowski pass a message to former Attorney General Jeff Sessions about Mueller. Trump wanted Sessions to publicly exonerate him of any crimes, and to limit the Mueller investigation so it excluded investigation into Trump’s personal behavior. Lewandowsky didn’t want to deliver the message and tried to get a White House advisor to do it. Neither delivered the message to Sessions, who apparently never got it.

In June 2017, news organizations began to learn of the now-notorious meeting at Trump Tower on June 9, 2016, between representatives of the Russian government and Trump campaign officials, including Trump’s son Don, Jr. That meeting was about compromising information Russia had obtained on Hillary Clinton, Trump’s general-e******n opponent, which Russia offered to share with the Trump campaign. But once news of that meeting broke a year later, Trump told press aids to lie to news organizations, saying the meeting was really about policies toward adopting Russian babies.

“Each of these efforts by the President involved his communication team and was directed at the press,” the Mueller report found. “They would amount to obstructive acts only if the President, by taking those actions, sought to withhold information from or mislead congressional investigators of the Special Counsel.” Lying to the media, in other words, isn’t a crime, so Trump is off the hook on that one, too.

In January 2018, press reports recounted Trump’s effort to have McGahn get Mueller fired seven months earlier. That story was accurate, but Trump, through a personal lawyer, asked McGahn to put out a statement denying what had, in fact, taken place. Trump, in other words, asked McGahn to lie, so Trump wouldn’t look bad. McGahn refused.

‘President knew Cohen provided false testimony’'

It’s also not a crime, evidently, if you knowingly let somebody else commit perjury on your behalf. Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer, pled guilty to lying to Congress about Trump’s pursuit of a real-estate project in Russia, saying the project ended by January 2016 when in fact it continued until at least June 2016. Cohen told Congress earlier this year that Trump knew Cohen would be lying and did nothing to discourage him.

The Mueller report corroborates that. “There is evidence … that the President knew Cohen provided false testimony to Congress about the Trump Tower Moscow project,” the Mueller report said. But “the evidence available to us does not establish that the President directed or aided Cohen's false testimony.”

Once Cohen began cooperating with prosecutors, Trump publicly called Cohen a “rat” and made what sounded like veiled threats of government legal action against his family. Obstruction? Here’s what Mueller found: “The President's statements insinuating that members of Cohen's family committed crimes after Cohen began cooperating with the government could be viewed as an effort to retaliate against Cohen and chill further testimony adverse to the President by Cohen or others.” There’s some evidence of a crime, in other words. Yet, Mueller still felt this didn’t reach the threshold required for prosecution.

There are many more examples in the Mueller report of Trump behaving in ways that might sound illegal to ordinary people, but don’t rise to what seems to be a very high Justice Department bar for prosecuting the president. Partisans, pundits, legal experts and historians will debate Mueller’s findings for a long time, and v**ers will of course get to render their own judgment once the 2020 e******n finally rolls around.

At a simpler level, however, the Mueller report reveals behavior many Americans would not normally tolerate in business executives, educators, religious leaders, local politicians or their own family members. Trump may not have committed crimes he can be prosecuted for. But he came damn close, and another prosecutor might have been less deferential. No wonder Trump tried to k**l the Mueller investigation.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-... (show quote)


Yahoo finance!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
This is news you trust? Not news just opinions. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

Reply
 
 
Apr 18, 2019 17:21:24   #
woodguru
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Like you said there will be plenty of spin, including yours.


Black and white will rule the day, what does it say?

Not spin, Mueller outlines behavior that would and should never be acceptable to people that care about this country. States that congress has the power to criminalize unacceptable behavior (which he's provided a boatload).

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:21:48   #
Liberty Tree
 
slatten49 wrote:
You must fancy yourself as The Great Carnac from Johnny Carson's old Tonight Show


If you did not agree with parts of it you should have stated that, then you would not have to try to spin your way out of it.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:24:01   #
Liberty Tree
 
woodguru wrote:
Black and white will rule the day, what does it say?

Not spin, Mueller outlines behavior that would and should never be acceptable to people that care about this country. States that congress has the power to criminalize unacceptable behavior (which he's provided a boatload).


The only thing you care about is getting Trump so you are incapable of objectivity.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:26:24   #
Wolf counselor Loc: Heart of Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-thoroughly-indicts-trump-193651086.html

Rick Newman, Yahoo Finance. April 18, 2019

Special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence linking President Donald Trump to any crimes involving Russian interference with the 2016 U.S. e******n. And he declined to prosecute Trump for obstructing justice or interfering with prosecutors investigating the Russian interference.

But the 448-page Mueller report contains numerous damning details of Trump asking subordinates to obstruct justice on his behalf, condoning other people’s crimes, covering up facts, telling people to lie and lying himself. Trump may avoid prosecution, but critics will feast for years on the mendacity Mueller revealed. Even some Trump supporters may question their fealty to a president now revealed to operate like a mob boss, except with poorer judgment.

Anybody interested in Mueller’s findings should read the report for themselves. It’s a complicated document with threads that partisans can spin almost any way they want. And the overarching narrative is confounding, because Trump repeatedly sought ways to quash an investigation into a crime he apparently didn’t commit. Trump acted guilty of something Mueller himself found no evidence of.

It’s good news that the Trump campaign did not work deliberately with Russia during the 2016 e******n. Yet, there were numerous contacts between Trump campaign officials and representatives of Russia, with nobody from the campaign ever thinking to tell the FBI about them. Maybe Trump acted guilty because he realized at some point that his campaign’s contacts with Russia were fishy, at a minimum, and might look a lot worse than that to a zealous prosecutor.

How did Trump act guilty? Some of his paranoia was on public display, through the recurring “witch hunt” tweets and statements meant to discredit the Mueller investigation before we knew anything about its findings. And Trump seemed to publicly threaten witnesses such as Michael Cohen, who might testify against him.

Trump went much further than that, as the Mueller report now reveals. On June 14, 2017, according to the Mueller report, Trump called White House Counsel Donald McGahn and told him to have Justice Department leadership fire Mueller — which probably would have been obstruction of justice. McGahn declined to do that, one of several times people around Trump prevented overt crimes from happening. “The President's efforts to influence the investigation were mostly unsuccessful,” the Mueller report states, “but that is largely because the persons who surrounded the President declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests.”

After McGahn refused to have Mueller fired, Trump tried to have former campaign aide Corey Lewandowski pass a message to former Attorney General Jeff Sessions about Mueller. Trump wanted Sessions to publicly exonerate him of any crimes, and to limit the Mueller investigation so it excluded investigation into Trump’s personal behavior. Lewandowsky didn’t want to deliver the message and tried to get a White House advisor to do it. Neither delivered the message to Sessions, who apparently never got it.

In June 2017, news organizations began to learn of the now-notorious meeting at Trump Tower on June 9, 2016, between representatives of the Russian government and Trump campaign officials, including Trump’s son Don, Jr. That meeting was about compromising information Russia had obtained on Hillary Clinton, Trump’s general-e******n opponent, which Russia offered to share with the Trump campaign. But once news of that meeting broke a year later, Trump told press aids to lie to news organizations, saying the meeting was really about policies toward adopting Russian babies.

“Each of these efforts by the President involved his communication team and was directed at the press,” the Mueller report found. “They would amount to obstructive acts only if the President, by taking those actions, sought to withhold information from or mislead congressional investigators of the Special Counsel.” Lying to the media, in other words, isn’t a crime, so Trump is off the hook on that one, too.

In January 2018, press reports recounted Trump’s effort to have McGahn get Mueller fired seven months earlier. That story was accurate, but Trump, through a personal lawyer, asked McGahn to put out a statement denying what had, in fact, taken place. Trump, in other words, asked McGahn to lie, so Trump wouldn’t look bad. McGahn refused.

‘President knew Cohen provided false testimony’'

It’s also not a crime, evidently, if you knowingly let somebody else commit perjury on your behalf. Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer, pled guilty to lying to Congress about Trump’s pursuit of a real-estate project in Russia, saying the project ended by January 2016 when in fact it continued until at least June 2016. Cohen told Congress earlier this year that Trump knew Cohen would be lying and did nothing to discourage him.

The Mueller report corroborates that. “There is evidence … that the President knew Cohen provided false testimony to Congress about the Trump Tower Moscow project,” the Mueller report said. But “the evidence available to us does not establish that the President directed or aided Cohen's false testimony.”

Once Cohen began cooperating with prosecutors, Trump publicly called Cohen a “rat” and made what sounded like veiled threats of government legal action against his family. Obstruction? Here’s what Mueller found: “The President's statements insinuating that members of Cohen's family committed crimes after Cohen began cooperating with the government could be viewed as an effort to retaliate against Cohen and chill further testimony adverse to the President by Cohen or others.” There’s some evidence of a crime, in other words. Yet, Mueller still felt this didn’t reach the threshold required for prosecution.

There are many more examples in the Mueller report of Trump behaving in ways that might sound illegal to ordinary people, but don’t rise to what seems to be a very high Justice Department bar for prosecuting the president. Partisans, pundits, legal experts and historians will debate Mueller’s findings for a long time, and v**ers will of course get to render their own judgment once the 2020 e******n finally rolls around.

At a simpler level, however, the Mueller report reveals behavior many Americans would not normally tolerate in business executives, educators, religious leaders, local politicians or their own family members. Trump may not have committed crimes he can be prosecuted for. But he came damn close, and another prosecutor might have been less deferential. No wonder Trump tried to k**l the Mueller investigation.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-mueller-report-... (show quote)





Reply
 
 
Apr 18, 2019 17:43:15   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
If you did not agree with parts of it you should have stated that, then you would not have to try to spin your way out of it.

Really. Disclaimers should be required to post anything that differs in any degree from what he/she poster believes to be true How many opening disclaimers have you read from OPP'ers? Just lately, LT.

Those revelations generally surface during the ongoing exchanges during discussion of the thread topic. Of course, that assumes the conversation stays on topic.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:44:58   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
My day is complete. We have heard from Mr. Peanut, a prince among goobers.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 17:45:02   #
padremike Loc: Phenix City, Al
 
slatten49 wrote:
Much of the "spin" is, was and will continue from the White House.

BTW, I said nothing about spin. Mr. Newman did in writing his article above.


19 lawyers worked with Mueller the majority of which were anti-Trump Democrats - 13, I believe, was the number; one of which is a proven evil Svengali. Mueller also included a statement that his team could find no clear evidence of obstruction but would leave that determination up to others. That is not just dirty pool, that's filthy. He is not allowed to put that sort of poison in his report. If there is not sufficient evidence then a Special Prosecutor must treat it as a not guilty conclusion if he follows the rule of law and cannot indict. But no, Mueller left this poison pill intentionally. And the Russians, who wanted to divide Americans by interfering in our e******n, are giggling in their vodka. Yes Indeed, Progressive are unintentionally colluding with Russia over a crime that never was except by their own making.

Reply
Apr 18, 2019 18:27:40   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
padremike wrote:
19 lawyers worked with Mueller the majority of which were anti-Trump Democrats - 13, I believe, was the number; one of which is a proven evil Svengali. Mueller also included a statement that his team could find no clear evidence of obstruction but would leave that determination up to others. That is not just dirty pool, that's filthy. He is not allowed to put that sort of poison in his report. If there is not sufficient evidence then a Special Prosecutor must treat it as a not guilty conclusion if he follows the rule of law and cannot indict. But no, Mueller left this poison pill intentionally. And the Russians, who wanted to divide Americans by interfering in our e******n, are giggling in their vodka. Yes Indeed, Progressive are unintentionally colluding with Russia over a crime that never was except by their own making.
19 lawyers worked with Mueller the majority of whi... (show quote)

John Dean, the former White House counsel for President Nixon, said Thursday that special counsel Robert Mueller's report was "more damning" than the Watergate report.

"I looked on my shelf for the Senate Watergate Committee report, I looked at the Iran Contra report. I also looked at the Ken Starr report," Dean said on CNN's "The Lead."

"In 400 words, this report from the special counsel is more damning than all those reports about a president, this is really a devastating report."

The Department of Justice on Thursday released a redacted copy of Mueller's report on his investigation into possible collusion between President Trump's campaign and Russia.

The report did not uncover evidence to conclude that Trump's 2016 campaign coordinated with Russia in efforts to interfere in the p**********l e******n.

Mueller was also unable to "conclusively determine" that no criminal conduct occurred in regard to obstruction of justice.

"While this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him," the report states.

While the Justice Department concluded that the evidence in the report was insufficient to establish obstruction of justice, Dean said Thursday that he thought the violation was clear.

"As far as obstruction goes, this is clear obstruction," Dean said. "The obstruction statute is an endeavor statute ... if you endeavor to obstruct you've violated the obstruction statute."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ex-nixon-white-house-counsel-mueller-report-more-damning-than-watergate/ar-BBW52uw?ocid=sparta

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