If Trump is worried about the end of Mueller’s investigation, he's worrying about the wrong thing

Mueller’s probe was limited to Russia and the campaign. None of the other investigations are

By Lucian K. Truscott IV

Columnist

Published February 23, 2019 8:00AM (EST)

Robert Mueller; Donald Trump (Getty/Salon)
Robert Mueller; Donald Trump (Getty/Salon)

After more than 20 months of digging, issuing subpoenas, interviewing witnesses, getting indictments, making plea deals, and achieving felony convictions in federal court, Special Counsel Robert Mueller is reportedly nearing the end of his investigation into Donald Trump and his campaign for their connections to Russians during the 2016 election. Whether one week away or one month away, the Trump White House is said to be steeling itself for Mueller’s report. The end is near.

If neither Trump nor his henchmen have done anything wrong, he won’t have anything to worry about. But six men who worked for Trump in various capacities have pled guilty and have been sentenced to federal prison, or are awaiting sentencing, or have already served time. That’s not to mention the 26 Russian nationals, including 12 agents for the Russian intelligence service the GRU, who have also been indicted, along with several other individuals. There has been speculation for weeks that Mueller has more indictments to bring, and he has moved to delay sentencing for several Trump associates whom he is still interviewing or taking before his grand jury in Washington D.C., which recently received an extension of its term upon a request by Mueller.

But it’s not the report of the Special Counsel to the Attorney General that Trump should be worried about. The charter of Mueller’s investigation is narrow, limited to crimes arising out of Russian interference in the campaign of 2016 and the connections of Trump and his campaign to the Russians. Many have pointed out that the indictments Mueller has brought read like a complex narrative of the connections between the Trump campaign and Russians. We already know who stole the Democrats’ emails, how they were distributed, and who among Trump’s associates actually met with Russians during the campaign. What we don’t yet know is what took place during those meetings and whether Trump himself directed, participated in, or knew about these encounters, such as the infamous Trump Tower meeting between six Russians with connections to Kremlin intelligence and Donald Trump Jr, Jared Kushner, and Paul Manafort, then Trump’s campaign chairman.

Mueller is not going to make the mistake James Comey made as director of the FBI when he issued his report at the close of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private mail server during her time as secretary of state. In announcing that the FBI found that Clinton had committed no crimes, Comey tarred and feathered her politically, saying she had been careless and sloppy in handling her private emails.

Mueller is constrained by strict rules limiting what he can do and say as a prosecutor, and all indications are he will follow them to the letter.

He is unlikely to find that Trump committed no crimes, but report that boy, is he one shifty, lying, corrupt son of a bitch. Nor, according to legal experts, is he likely to go against Department of Justice rules and indict Trump as a sitting President. There remains the possibility that Mueller could issue new indictments outlining direct contacts between Trump campaign officials and WikiLeaks, or between Paul Manafort and the Russians through characters such as Konstantin Kilimnik, and depending on what he has learned from Trump people who are cooperating with him.  He may include Trump as an unindicted co-conspirator.

You can be certain that anything done by Mueller at the close of his investigation short of an actual indictment of Trump will be celebrated by Trump and his people as an exoneration of the president. Even being named as an unindicted co-conspirator will be treated by the Trump base as a badge of honor. See! He was right all along! The deep state was out to get him!

While Trump shouldn’t be too worried about Mueller’s report, there are other things that should keep him up at night tweeting madly.

The first is that the close of Mueller’s investigation will mark the end of the “witch hunt.” Trump has beaten that drum more than 1,100 times over the past 20 months, according to The New York Times. He has used the Mueller investigation to keep his base riled up as much as he’s used the wall. Barring any serious legal consequences for Trump himself or members of his family like Donald Jr. and Jared, the end of Mueller’s investigation will leave a hole in the base drum he’s being pounding to keep his poll numbers up.

Then there are the other investigations that are underway and will not be closing. There are probes into Trump, his company, his foundation, his campaign, his transition, and his inauguration in multiple jurisdictions including the Southern District of New York, the Eastern District of Virginia, and the District of Columbia. None of these investigations are constrained by the charter that limited what Robert Mueller could look into. There are no “red lines” to cross for the prosecutors who are looking into stuff like the Trump Moscow tower deal, the $107 million raised for Trump’s lame-ass inauguration, and the payoffs Trump made to porn stars and Playboy playmates to keep them quiet before the election. Not to mention the shenanigans Trump has run through his company and his foundation.

But the thing that should worry Trump the most is that when Mueller’s investigation ends, the muzzles come off the coterie of criminals Trump has surrounded himself with. As long as Mueller had people like Rick Gates, Michael Flynn, Michael Cohen, Felix Sater, and David Pecker cooperating with his investigation, they were constrained from what they could share with the Congress and the press about what they know.

Imagine someone like David Pecker hauled before the House Oversight Committee by Elijah Cummings. He stands up, takes the oath, sits down, and the first question he’s asked is, tell us everything about your personal meetings with Donald Trump when he was running for president about how you paid off former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal to keep silent about her year-long affair with Trump. What did Trump tell you to do? How did he describe Ms. McDougal’s appearance, or characterize her as a person? What were his exact words when he talked about their relationship?  The Access Hollywood tape is very likely to seem tame in comparison to what’s coming from Trump intimates.

Or how about Michael Cohen describing his own meetings with Trump in his office at Trump Tower about paying off Stormy Daniels. Or Cohen talking about the Trump Tower deal in detail: what Trump told him to do, who he met with, what was said, who else was involved.

You want to talk about a narrative? About novelistic details? Multiple house committees can question Flynn for hours about his contacts with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, what instructions he was given by Trump, what he and Trump talked about on his private plane when they flew from event to event during the campaign. Same for Rick Gates. As deputy campaign chairman, he had to have been in the room with Paul Manafort and Trump when they met before and during the Republican National Convention about weakening the Russia plank in the platform, why it was done, what they expected to get from the Russians in return.

Robert Mueller doesn’t need to pull a Comey to trash Donald Trump with his final report. Take the muzzle off the creeps and hustlers Trump surrounded himself with, and he’s going to come out looking like the scuzzball lying thieving lowlife he is. And none of Trump’s buddies are part of the deep state. They’re his people. He picked them. He paid them. They worked for him. Everything he said to them before, during, and after the campaign is now fair game.

The witch hunt is over, but Donald Trump is about to be burned at the stake.


By Lucian K. Truscott IV

Lucian K. Truscott IV, a graduate of West Point, has had a 50-year career as a journalist, novelist and screenwriter. He has covered stories such as Watergate, the Stonewall riots and wars in Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanistan. He is also the author of five bestselling novels and several unsuccessful motion pictures. He has three children, lives in rural Pennsylvania and spends his time Worrying About the State of Our Nation and madly scribbling in a so-far fruitless attempt to Make Things Better. You can read his daily columns at luciantruscott.substack.com and follow him on Twitter @LucianKTruscott and on Facebook at Lucian K. Truscott IV.

MORE FROM Lucian K. Truscott IV