This op-ed sums it all up. [View all]
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2019/05/03/this-nation-is-mercy-criminal-administration/?utm_term=.3af9088f6830
Imagine that you live in a town that has been taken over by gangsters. The mayor is a crook and so are the district attorney and police chief. You cant fight city hall. But at least you know you can turn for help to the state or federal government. Now imagine that its not a city or state that has been taken over by criminals its the federal government. Where do you turn for help? That is not a theoretical concern. After the release of special counsel Robert S. Mueller IIIs report, its our grim reality.
Even before Muellers probe ended, federal prosecutors in New York had implicated President Trump in ordering his lawyer, Michael Cohen, to violate federal campaign finance laws. Mueller then documented at least six ironclad incidents of obstruction of justice by Trump along with numerous instances of misconduct that, while not criminal, are definitely impeachable. The New York Review of Books reported that two prosecutors working for Mueller said that if Trump werent president, he would have been indicted.
Now the administration is obstructing attempts to bring the president to justice for obstruction of justice. William P. Barr isnt the attorney general; he is, as David Rothkopf said, the obstructor general. We now know that Mueller wrote (in Barrs description) a snitty letter objecting that Barrs deceptive summary of his work, designed to falsely exonerate Trump, threatens to undermine
public confidence in the outcome of the investigations.
Yet when Barr testified to Congress after receiving the Mueller letter but before releasing the Mueller report, he claimed not to know whether Mueller disagreed with his conclusions. He lied to Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) charged. But even if it could be proved that Barr committed perjury (no sure thing), who would prosecute him? Is he (or his deputy) going to appoint a special counsel to investigate himself? Unlikely. And if he did appoint a special counsel, would he heed the counsels conclusions? Also unlikely.
The rest of the article is at the link.