U.S. Vice
President Mike Pence has hired a lawyer known for defending government
officials in high-profile investigations to help him with probes into whether
there w
ere ties between the election campaign of U.S. President Donald Trump
and Russia, his office said on Thursday.
U.S.
intelligence agencies have concluded that Moscow interfered in last year's
presidential campaign to try to tilt the vote in Trump's favor.
Trump, who
hired his own lawyer last month for probes by a special counsel and
congressional committees, lashed out on Thursday after a report that he was
under investigation for possible obstruction of justice.
He dismissed
as "phony" the idea that his campaign colluded with any Russian
effort to sway the 2016 election. Moscow denies meddling in the campaign.
Pence hired
Richard Cullen, chairman of law firm McGuireWoods, to help him respond to
inquiries from special counsel Robert Mueller, a spokesman said.
Cullen is a
former federal prosecutor who has long ties to former FBI Director James Comey,
whom Trump fired on May 9. He represents former FIFA President Sepp Blatter in
the corruption probe into world soccer's governing body. U.S. prosecutors have
not accused Blatter of wrongdoing.
Cullen, who
supported Trump's rival Jeb Bush during the race for the Republican
presidential nomination, also represented Tom DeLay, a Texas Republican and
former majority leader of the U.S. House of Representatives, during the
investigation into corrupt Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff. DeLay was not
charged.
Pence had
been looking at hiring his own counsel for several weeks, and made his decision
earlier this week after interviewing several candidates, his office said.
"The
vice president is focused entirely on his duties and promoting the president's
agenda and looks forward to a swift conclusion of this matter," Pence
spokesman, Jarrod Agen, said in a statement.
Pence has
seldom addressed the Russia issue, which has overshadowed Trump's efforts to
overhaul the healthcare system, cut taxes and boost jobs - priorities that
Pence has worked on intensively with Republican lawmakers.
The
Washington Post first reported the Cullen hire. Just before the story broke,
Trump wrote a pair of angry tweets, suggesting that Hillary Clinton, his
Democratic opponent in the election, should be under investigation instead of
him.
Earlier on
Thursday, Trump called the probe a "witch hunt" on Twitter.
"They made up a phony collusion with the Russians story, found zero proof,
so now they go for obstruction of justice on the phony story. Nice," Trump
wrote.
LINES OF
INQUIRY
Mueller is
investigating whether anyone on Trump's campaign, or associated with it, with
him or any of his businesses, may have had any illegal dealings with Russian
officials or others with ties to the Kremlin, said one U.S. official familiar
with the rough outlines of the probe and who spoke on condition of anonymity.
That
includes the finances and business dealings of Jared Kushner, who is married to
Trump's daughter Ivanka, and is a senior adviser at the White House, the
Washington Post reported on Thursday, citing unnamed officials familiar with
the matter.
Mueller is
also looking at a second line of inquiry: whether, if any potential offenses
were committed, Trump or others attempted to cover them up or obstruct the
investigation into them, the source said.
An
examination of possible obstruction of justice charges was
"unavoidable" given testimony by Comey, although the issue may not
become the main focus of the probe, the source said.
Comey told a
Senate panel last week he believed Trump fired him to undermine the FBI's
Russia probe. He also told the Senate Intelligence Committee in his June 8
testimony that he believed Trump had directed him to drop a related agency
investigation into the president's former national security adviser, Michael
Flynn.
White House
officials, including Pence, initially gave differing reasons for Comey's
dismissal, including that he had lost the confidence of the FBI.
Pence said
on Twitter on May 10 that Trump had "made the right decision at the right
time to remove Comey as the head of the FBI" and praised him for showing
"strong & decisive leadership to restore trust & confidence of the
American people in the FBI."
Trump later
contradicted his own staff, saying on May 11 he had the Russia issue in mind
when he fired Comey.
Examining
the possibility of obstruction charges will allow investigators to interview
key administration figures including Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and possibly Trump himself, said the source
familiar with the Mueller investigation.
While a
sitting president is unlikely to face criminal prosecution, obstruction of
justice could form the basis for impeachment. Any such step would face a steep
hurdle as it would require approval by the U.S. House of Representatives, which
is controlled by Trump's fellow Republicans.
REUTERS*
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