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6 years ago

Ex-Trump aide Nunberg refuses to comply with Russian probe

Sam Nunberg during interview with New York Post. (Internet Photo)
Sam Nunberg during interview with New York Post. (Internet Photo)

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A former campaign aide to US President Donald Trump has said that he will not co-operate with Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election.

Sam Nunberg first worked for one of Trump’s businesses and later helped advise Trump’s presidential campaign, but he was fired in August 2015 amid reports that he posted racially charged messages on Facebook.

In multiple interviews with media outlets on Monday, Nunberg said he would refuse to comply with the subpoena. If he does not comply, he would risk serving time in jail, says a Reuters report.

“I’m not going to cooperate,” Nunberg told MSNBC.

“Let’s see what Mueller does. I think it would be funny if they arrested me. I think it would be really, really funny if they wanted to arrest me because I don’t want to spend 80 hours going over emails I had with Steve Bannon and Roger Stone,” he said, referring to both the former White House chief strategist and one of Trump’s associates.

He later told AP, however, he would end up cooperating with the investigation, and that he would be more willing to comply with the subpoena if its scope was narrowed.

Mueller’s investigation arose in part from the findings of US intelligence agencies that Russia had meddled in the election and that its goals eventually included aiding Trump, who won a surprise victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Russia has denied the allegations and Trump has said there was no collusion between Moscow and his campaign.

Mueller has charged several Trump associates and more than a dozen Russians.

In a telephone call with MSNBC, Nunberg said a subpoena to appear before a grand jury was “absolutely ridiculous.” He rejected any notion that Trump had colluded with Russians.

A person who refuses to testify or produce documents can be jailed for up to 18 months for civil contempt.

The person could later be charged with criminal contempt, said Barbara McQuade, a former US Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan who teaches law at the University of Michigan.

The only ways to avoid a grand jury subpoena are invoking the Constitutional right to avoid self-incrimination or claiming attorney-client or executive privilege, but these are not always successful.

Last year, Mueller’s office won a court order forcing a lawyer for former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort to testify before the grand jury after she claimed attorney-client privilege.

“When a person uses the attorney-client relationship to further a criminal scheme, the law is well established that a claim of attorney-client ... privilege must yield to the grand jury’s investigatory needs,” Chief Judge Beryl Howell wrote on October 2, 2017.

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