Donald Trump’s legal team has begun to prepare for the possibility that the president will be called for an interview by special counsel Robert Mueller.
Mr Trump’s lawyers are exploring their possible responses to such a demand, according to NBC News, who say they are looking at options such as providing written answers to Mr Mueller’s probe into collusion by the Trump team with the Russians ahead of the 2016 election.
There is a possibility that the president could be summonsed to a face to face interview with Mr Mueller, and the president’s lawyers are seeking to find out what the parameters of any such interview would be – such as where it would take place and how long it would take – and whether Mr Trump could avoid such an encounter altogether.
Discussions within the team have been ongoing since the indictment in October 2017 of the president’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, for money laundering in connection with his business dealings with Ukraine. They met with representatives of Mr Mueller’s office late last month, although none of the president’s legal team would confirm the meeting to NBC.
One of the options on the table would be that the president would present an affidavit saying that he was innocent of any inappropriate activity and that he not colluded with any foreign powers.
It is unlikely that the tenacious Mr Mueller, a former FBI director of 12 years standing, will not attempt to interview the president as part of his investigation.
“Prosecutors want to see and hear folks in person,” Chuck Rosenberg, a former US attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia and chief of staff to FBI Director James Comey, told NBC. “They want to probe and follow up. Body language and tone are important. And they want answers directly from witnesses, not from their lawyers. The odds of prosecutors agreeing to written responses are somewhere between infinitesimally small and zero.”
Feted criminal defense attorney Alan Dershowitz said that the manoeuvres by the Trump tea were simply “gamesmanship. It's what any criminal defense attorney would do."
“I would never let the prosecution interview my client,” said Dershowitz, “but I don't represent the president of the United States, and presidents don’t want to plead the Fifth. So this route makes sense.”
GMT 22:33 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
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