THE BEGINNING OF May marks the longest period of public silence from
special counsel Robert Mueller’s team since
his first charges last October—more than two months without any new plea deals, fresh indictments, or publicly “flipped” witnesses.
At the same time, though, it’s been a period of aggressive moves that continue to illustrate an investigation that is far from complete, including the raid by federal prosecutors on Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s office, court evidence that shows
Mueller’s team successfully
sought permission to expand the scope of the probe, the
release of
former FBI director James Comey’s memos documenting his interactions with the president, continual hints that the special counsel is
probing the UAE, the
odd meeting by Blackwater founder Erik Prince in the Seychelles, and numerous other aspects of the
complex, multi-part investigation.
...
Mueller’s proposed questions are primarily high-level—presumably the starting point for what would then be increasingly detailed follow-ups, backed up by specific emails, documents, telephone records, and other files Mueller’s team and FBI investigators have accumulated in an investigation stretching back more than two years. While the initial 49 questions are intriguing on their own, they primarily line up with what’s publicly known about the investigation so far. There’s nothing out of left field. Thus, the real mystery is the follow-ups: Why, precisely, is Mueller interested?
Taken as a whole, the leaked questions help shape and underscore some key takeaways:
1. Mueller always knows more than we think. ...
2. Mueller’s building a bulletproof case. ...
3. There are more loose threads than ever. ...
4. We still don’t know the biggest, most important evidence. ...
5. Mueller likely already knows how this story ends. Add up the four above points and it seems clear that Mueller might actually be relatively close to wrapping up the investigation. Given that the FBI raid on Michael Cohen’s office, stemming from an investigation by federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York, was sure to provoke a reaction from President Trump—the investigative equivalent of kicking a hornet’s nest—it seems likely that Mueller and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who approved the raid, understood that one or both of them might be fired by the president in its wake. It seems likely that before they took such a provocative step on the case that they could see their way through to the investigation's end.