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Trump Tells CBS He's ‘Always Wanted’ Interview by Mueller

Trump said Wednesday that he’s “always wanted” to be interviewed by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Trump Tells CBS He's ‘Always Wanted’ Interview by Mueller
A U.S. President-elect Donald Trump bobble head. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he’s "always wanted" to be interviewed by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, but deflected repeated questions about whether he would do so by responding that his lawyers are addressing the issue.

"My lawyers are working on that," Trump said in an interview with CBS News. "I’ve always wanted to do an interview, because, look, there’s been no collusion. There’s been no talk of Russia."

Trump has long publicly maintained that he’d be willing to testify as part of the investigation into possible collusion between his campaign and Russia, but his lawyers are thought to be concerned that doing so could leave the president vulnerable to perjury accusations if any of his testimony proved inaccurate.

Mueller’s team warned the president’s lawyers this spring that it may use a grand jury subpoena to compel his testimony, according to a report earlier this week in the Los Angeles Times.

Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, told the Washington Post in June that he expects the president’s legal team to make a decision this month on whether to sit for an interview. In a separate interview with Bloomberg News, Giuliani said that the president’s legal team would be examining whether they believed the investigation should even exist because of the possibility the probe was politically motivated.

“We are assessing the fact as to whether or not there should even be an investigation at this point,” Giuliani said, asserting that a Justice Department inspector general report showed the investigation had been tainted by “tremendous amount of bias on the part of the agents involved."

The report concluded that there was no evidence that political bias "directly affected the specific investigative actions" reviewed, while pointing out text messages exchanged between two FBI employees who worked on Mueller’s probe had been sharply critical of Trump. Mueller removed one employee from the investigation after the texts were discovered, and the other left the bureau.

Still, Trump highlighted the behavior in the CBS interview Wednesday, saying that he believed U.S. intelligence agencies were out to get him "in the past."

"I certainly don’t have confidence in past people," Trump said. "You look at what’s happened. Take a look at all of the shenanigans that have gone on. Very hard to have confidence in that group."

To contact the reporter on this story: Justin Sink in Washington at jsink1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Wayne at awayne3@bloomberg.net, John Harney

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