Rudy Giuliani, personal attorney to President Trump, said on Sunday that House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., should get all of the information in Robert Mueller’s report on collusion between the Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia.
“I would like him to get all the information,” Giuliani said. “Everything,” he added, including grand jury material.
Attorney General William Barr has been preparing the roughly 400-page report for Congress with redactions said he expected to be sent to Congress by the end of this month. But congressional Democrats have demanded the full, unredacted Mueller report, and the House Judiciary Committee voted to approve a subpoena to get it.
Nadler, who said Congress could obtain the full report by the end of the next, and other congressional Democrats have suggested Mueller’s findings could include damning information on actions that do not rise to the level of criminal conspiracy but could jeopardize Trump’s presidency.
“There could be grounds for impeachment. There could be grounds for other action. There could be things the American people ought to know,” Nadler said Sunday on CBS.
.@realDonaldTrump‘s lawyer @RudyGiuliani says: “Except for little quibbles, I’m not worried about the report at all.” pic.twitter.com/bnRgwRdcJJ
— Face The Nation (@FaceTheNation) April 7, 2019
Giuliani brushed off concern about the full report producing damning information on Trump, pointing to Barr’s four-page summary to Congress on the main findings in the report that said there is no information that rises to the level of criminal conspiracy or criminal obstruction of justice.
“I guarantee you, except for little quibblers, I’m not worried about the report at all. There is no way those two good lawyers would have written that kind of letter if there is any issue,” Giuliani said.
Although Barr’s summary said Mueller did not find Trump committed obstruction of justice, it was also noted that Mueller did not exonerate Trump on this charge. However, Barr said he concluded there was insufficient evidence to establish a crime.