President Trump's attorney resigns from legal team
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump's lead lawyer in the special counsel's Russia investigation resigned Thursday, shaking up the legal team just as Trump intensifies attacks on an inquiry he calls nothing more than a witch hunt.
The departure of attorney John Dowd removes the primary negotiator and legal strategist who had been molding Trump's defense. It also comes just days after the Trump legal team added a new lawyer, former U.S. Attorney Joseph diGenova, who has accused FBI officials of being involved in a "brazen plot" to exonerate Hillary Clinton in the email investigation and to "frame" Trump for nonexistent crimes.
Dowd confirmed his decision in an email to The Associated Press, saying, "I love the President and wish him well." Dowd said he made the decision voluntarily and he denied reports that his departure had to do with Trump ignoring his legal advice. Dowd said he formally resigned Thursday morning.
It already was a delicate time in special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation. Trump's attorneys, including Dowd, have been negotiating with Mueller over the scope and terms of an interview of the president. Trump has told reporters that he was eager to speak with Mueller, but Dowd has been far more apprehensive, and the lawyers have not publicly committed to making Trump available for questioning.
Asked Thursday whether he still wants to speak with Mueller's team, Trump told reporters, "Yes, I would like to."
Dowd's exit nearly a year into Mueller's tenure threatens to undo the cooperation between prosecutors and Trump's lawyers, and may herald a stark shift in strategy as the investigation reaches closer into the White House and the president's inner circle.
Over the weekend, Dowd issued a statement calling for an end to the investigation. The White House and later Dowd had to clarify the statement, saying the president's legal team wasn't calling for Mueller to be fired.
But Trump has stepped up his public criticism of Mueller.
In a series of tweets since last week, the president has said the investigation never should have started, that it was based on "fraudulent activities," that it was a "WITCH HUNT" and that it is being led by "13 hardened Democrats, some big Crooked Hillary supporters."
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said this week that the tweets were a reflection of Trump's frustration with the process of the investigation. She said the White House did not think firing Mueller would be "the most productive step forward."
Speaking on a panel Thursday at the Financial Times "Future of News" event in New York, former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon said the president has clearly decided to take a more aggressive approach with the special counsel.
"I think President Trump is going to war on this," Bannon said, noting that while in the White House he warned Trump that Dowd and White House lawyer Ty Cobb were being too soft.
This is at least the second major reshuffling of Trump's legal team in the last year. Dowd had taken over the lead lawyer role last summer from New York attorney Marc Kasowitz, who has long been by Trump's side.
Dowd has been working closely with another Trump lawyer, Jay Sekulow, who remains on the team.
"John Dowd is a friend and has been a valuable member of our legal team. We will continue our ongoing representation of the President and our cooperation with the Office of Special Counsel," Sekulow said.
Dowd is a veteran defense lawyer perhaps best known for producing a report for Major League Baseball on star player Pete Rose's gambling habits. Dowd also has played a role in some of the defining legal quagmires of the past four decades, including the Iran-Contra affair, the Keating Five, the Enron collapse and a scandal over the firing of U.S. attorneys.
As the investigation progressed, Dowd has cited the cooperation of the White House and Trump campaign with Mueller's investigation, calling it "the most transparent response in history."
His work on behalf of Trump has previously raised eyebrows.
In December, he took ownership of a tweet from Trump that said former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn was dismissed months earlier for having lied to the FBI. The tweet appeared to confirm for the first time that the White House knew at the time of Flynn's firing that he had misled the FBI. That was important because fired FBI Director James Comey has alleged that Trump, in a private Oval Office conversation, had encouraged him to end an investigation into Flynn.
Amid media scrutiny of the tweet, Dowd claimed to have written it himself.
___
Associated Press writers Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire contributed to this report.