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Interference

The Inside Story of Trump, Russia, and the Mueller Investigation

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Interference uncovers the explosive revelations of the Mueller investigation, detailing the behind-the-scenes efforts to expose Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election to favor Donald Trump and the ways Trump interfered in the ongoing investigation, as recounted by Robert Mueller's closest colleagues, and including an introduction by Mueller himself. The team also shares new and important insights about the role of a special counsel and a criminal investigation in holding a president accountable.
Interference is the "essential" (Kirkus Reviews) true history of the most important and consequential decisions, obstacles, and quandaries Mueller and his team faced when investigating Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. For the first time, Mueller's only deputy, his most senior counselor who served on the Watergate Special Prosecution Force, and the lead prosecutor looking into obstruction of justice and Russian interference, have come together to tell a highly relevant and readable account of their investigation into election interference and the connections between various Russians and members of the 2016 Trump campaign. Mueller himself wrote the book's preface.

Interference highlights the many actions Russia took as it favored candidate Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton, offering a powerful reminder of how committed Russia was to influence the election outcome. Ultimately, the special counsel brought indictments against thirty-four individuals and entities, including Trump's campaign chairman; his deputy campaign chairman; a campaign advisor; his first national security advisor; a longtime Trump associate; and over two-dozen Russian nationals. Every case that was able to proceed to a conclusion resulted in a guilty verdict or plea.

Interference explains the motivations and actions of Russia (which has not stopped exploiting American weaknesses), the importance and limitations of a special counsel, and the urgent need for people to make principled decisions even when being pushed from all directions not to do so. Much can be learned from the experiences faced by Mueller's team as they broke ground on some of the most complicated challenges facing our country—then and now. Their findings are essential to an understanding of America's current struggle to preserve the rule of law and strike the balance between presidential immunity and presidential accountability. The narrative carries special relevance following the Supreme Court's 2024 decision granting broad immunity to a president, a decision that sharply limits the conduct for which a president can be prosecuted—or even investigated.
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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from November 1, 2024
      Prosecutors meticulously correct the record on Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election. The authors, who worked under special counsel Robert S. Mueller III during his high-profile federal investigation, aim to clear up lingering "confusion" about their findings. Recognizing that portions of the 448-page report they completed in March 2019 were "not as clear as we had hoped," they don't equivocate: "It is beyond dispute that the Russians interfered in the 2016 election to support [Donald] Trump," using social media and emails stolen from Democratic Party computers in an effort to boost Trump and villainize his opponent, Hillary Clinton. There's no way to measure "the effect, if any," this had on the result, yet "it is undeniable" that Trump's campaign "organized a press strategy" based on information pilfered and released by Russian military hackers. The authors argue that persistent misinterpretations of their findings stem from statements that William Barr, Trump's attorney general, made after Mueller filed his report. Mueller cited multiple "episodes" in which Trump potentially obstructed justice. But because the Justice Department holds that Congress, not prosecutors, must decide whether to allege wrongdoing on the part of a sitting president, Mueller declined to make a "traditional prosecutorial determination" on charging Trump. Crucially, Mueller's report is neither a criminal indictment of Trump nor an exoneration. Barr, however, declined for weeks to publish "our analysis and our words" on potential obstruction, instead releasing his own "inaccurate and incomplete" summary, which omitted Russia's backing of Trump and wrongly stated that Mueller's report "identifies no actions" by Trump that "constitute obstructive conduct." This "fundamentally undermined" the report's conclusions "and made it more difficult" for citizens to understand what Mueller, in a preface, calls Russia's "multiple, systematic attacks" on democracy. With another election drawing near, "Russia is interfering again," the authors write, declining, alas, to elaborate. An essential account of Russia's ongoing attempts to disrupt American elections.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 18, 2024
      From 2017 to 2019, Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his team (headed by this book's authors) grappled with with the question of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign and whether or not Donald Trump tried to obstruct investigations into Russian collusion. Billed as a behind-the-scenes look, there are only a few previously unknown disclosures here as the authors discuss the hows and whys of the investigators' decision-making, where they got it right, and where they got it wrong. Although obviously meant to show how diligent and thoughtful the team was as it plowed through often uncharted territory, readers can be forgiven if they see the attorneys as debating their theories and procedures in an ivory tower while in the real world the administration muddies the waters at every opportunity. And when Attorney General Bill Barr misrepresents Mueller's final report, paving the way for Trump to declare himself cleared, the only shocking thing is that the Special Counsel's office is shocked by what Barr did. The book is at its most thoughtful in discussing the rule of law, especially in light of the recent Supreme Court decision that gave presidents almost unfettered immunity. The warning about continued Russian interference in our elections is also, of course, timely.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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