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As the special counsel report makes clear,
the Russian government sought to interfere
in our election process.
But thanks to the special counsel’s
thorough investigation,
we now know that the Russian operatives who perpetrated
these schemes did not have the cooperation of
President Trump or the Trump campaign.
The report details efforts by the Internet Research Agency,
a Russian company with close ties
to the Russian government, to sow social discord
among American voters through disinformation
and social media operations.
The special counsel found no evidence
that any American, including anyone associated
with the Trump campaign,
conspired or coordinated with the Russian government
or the I.R.A.
in this illegal scheme.
The special counsel’s
investigation also examined Russian efforts
to publish stolen emails and documents on the internet.
The special counsel found that after the G.R.U.
disseminated some of the stolen documents
to entities that it controlled, DCLeaks and Guccifer 2.0,
the G.R.U. transferred some of the stolen materials
to WikiLeaks for publication.
WikiLeaks then made a series of document dumps.
Under applicable law,
publication of these types of material
would not be criminal unless the publisher also
participated in the underlying hacking conspiracy.
Here too, the special counsel’s report
did not find that any person associated with
the Trump campaign illegally participated
in the dissemination of the materials.
After finding no underlying collusion with Russia,
the special counsel’s report goes on
to consider whether certain actions of the president
could amount to obstruction
of the special counsel’s investigation.
The special counsel did not make
a traditional prosecutorial judgment
regarding this allegation.
Instead, the report recounts 10 episodes involving
the president and discusses potential legal theories
for connecting those activities to the elements
of an obstruction offense.
And as the special counsel’s report acknowledges,
there is substantial evidence to show
that the president was frustrated and angered
by his sincere belief that the investigation was undermining
his presidency,
propelled by his political opponents
and fueled by illegal leaks.
Nonetheless, the White House fully cooperated
with the special counsel’s investigation.
But again, the special counsel’s report
did not find any evidence that members of the Trump campaign,
or anyone associated with the campaign,
conspired or coordinated with the Russian government
in these hacking operations.
In other words, there was no evidence
of the Trump campaign collusion
with the Russian government’s hacking.