At a hastily arranged Wednesday press conference, Mueller proved that he was never interested in justice or the rule of law – IOTW Report

At a hastily arranged Wednesday press conference, Mueller proved that he was never interested in justice or the rule of law

The Federalist: If there were any doubts about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s political intentions, his unprecedented press conference on Wednesday should put them all to rest. As he made abundantly clear during his doddering reading of a prepared statement that repeatedly contradicted itself, Mueller had no interest in the equal application of the rule of law. He gave the game, and his nakedly political intentions, away repeatedly throughout his statement.

“It is important that the office’s written work speak for itself,” Mueller said, referring to his office’s 448-page report. Mueller’s report was released to the public by Attorney General William Barr nearly six weeks ago. The entire report, minus limited redactions required by law, has been publicly available, pored through, and dissected. Its contents have been discussed ad nauseum in print and on television. The report has been speaking for itself since April 18, when it was released.

If it’s important for the work to speak for itself, then why did Mueller schedule a press conference in which he would speak for it weeks after it was released? The statement, given the venue in which it was provided, is self-refuting.

Let’s start with the Mueller team’s unique take on the nature of a prosecutor’s job. The standard American view of justice, affirmed and enforced by the U.S. Constitution, is that all are presumed innocent absent conviction by a jury of a specific charge of criminal wrongdoing. That is, the natural legal state of an individual in this country is innocence. It is not a state or a nature bestowed by cops or attorneys. Innocence is not granted by unelected bureaucrats or federal prosecutors.

At one point in his remarks, Mueller seemed to agree. Referring to indictments against various Russian individuals and institutions for allegedly hacking American servers during the 2016 election, Mueller said that the indictments “contain allegations and we are not commenting on the guilt or innocence of any specific defendant.”

“Every defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.”

Had he stopped there, he would have been correct. But then he crafted a brand new standard.

“The order appointing the special counsel authorized us to investigate actions that could obstruct the investigation. We conducted that investigation and kept the office of the acting attorney general apprised of our work,” Mueller said. “After that investigation, if we had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.”

According to Mueller and his team, charged Russians are presumed innocent. An American president, however, is presumed guilty unless and until Mueller’s team determines he is innocent. Such a standard is an obscene abomination against the rule of law, one that would never be committed by independent attorneys who place a fidelity to their oaths and impartial enforcement of the law ahead of their political motivations.

The contradictions and double standards didn’t stop there, though.

“It would be unfair to potentially accuse somebody of a crime when there can be no court resolution of the actual charge,” Mueller said, after all but stating that Trump committed a crime for which Mueller never charged him. Just as Mueller’s own words and actions at the Wednesday press conference prove that he didn’t want his team’s report to speak for itself, the report itself proves that Mueller and his team don’t believe it’s unfair to accuse somebody of something a court cannot resolve.

If they actually believed that, then the 240-page volume II of their report on their obstruction investigation of the president would never have been authored. After all, according to Mueller’s own statement, such an operation would be patently unfair. And if it’s unfair to air dirty laundry against a target who was never charged, surely it’s doubly unfair to do so in writing and on camera during a press conference whose mere existence refutes the very claims of its host.

Mueller revealed himself as little more than a clone of James Comey—the smarmy, scheming politician who replaced Mueller as the head of the FBI. Recall that it was Comey who assumed for himself powers that did not belong to him by law when he declared at a 2016 press conference no “reasonable prosecutor” would charge Hillary Clinton with criminal wrongdoing in her mishandling of classified information and unsanctioned use of a secret, private email server to evade public records laws. Just as Mueller did in his report and Wednesday press conference, Comey followed up his declaration that Hillary would not be charged with statement after statement after statement of all the awful things Hillary Clinton did.  more

 

9 Comments on At a hastily arranged Wednesday press conference, Mueller proved that he was never interested in justice or the rule of law

  1. While speaking his lies he could hear in the distance the saws and hammers noisily building the gallows. This was his last thumb of the nose to the president.
    Now it’s Trumps turn.

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  2. Robespierre Mueller and his Committee of Public Safety have forgotten that the guillotine doesn’t get to select its victims. That decision belongs to the mob, and they can turn on their leaders faster than the time it takes to decapitate a professional prevaricator. If Mueller thinks that his performance today is going to be accepted as the last word by any of the mob on Capitol Hill, he’s too delusional to have ever been appointed to this position. Now the questions are: What did Mueller know and when did he know it?

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  3. “Your honor, the prosecution calls Robert Mueller to the stand.”

    I’ll wait – but it better happen. There’s enough on him alone to reserve a special, Federal hotel room with locked doors and steel bars on the windows.

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  4. If you were to impoverished from ’01 to ’08; of just slept through those years, I can understand why you may (I emphasize MAY ) think Rove’s boy Mueller was interested in “rule of Law”!

    Rove’s actions show he wants Don out! Ignore his words!
    Remember “Read my lips!”!

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  5. The post says that at a hastily organized Wednesday press conference, Mueller demonstrated that he was never interested in justice or the rule of law. It says that Mueller had no interest in the same submission of the rule of law and he gave the game, and his openly political intentions, away repetitively right through his statement.

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