Page:Report On The Investigation Into Russian Interference In The 2016 Presidential Election.pdf/305

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U.S. Department of Justice

Attorney Work Product // May Contain Material Protected Under Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)

President raised his previous request and asked if Lewandowski had talked to Sessions.[1] Lewandowski told the President that the message would be delivered soon.[2] Lewandowski recalled that the President told him that if Sessions did not meet with him, Lewandowski should tell Sessions he was fired.[3]

Immediately following the meeting with the President, Lewandowski saw Dearborn in the anteroom outside the Oval Office and gave him a typewritten version of the message the President had dictated to be delivered to Sessions.[4] Lewandowski told Dearborn that the notes were the message they had discussed, but Dearborn did not recall whether Lewandowski said the message was from the President.[5] The message "definitely raised an eyebrow" for Dearborn, and he recalled not wanting to ask where it came from or think further about doing anything with it.[6] Dearborn also said that being asked to serve as a messenger to Sessions made him uncomfortable.[7] He recalled later telling Lewandowski that he had handled the situation, but he did not actually follow through with delivering the message to Sessions, and he did not keep a copy of the typewritten notes Lewandowski had given him.[8]

3. The President Publicly Criticizes Sessions in a New York Times Interview

Within hours of the President's meeting with Lewandowski on July 19, 2017, the President gave an unplanned interview to the New York Times in which he criticized Sessions's decision to recuse from the Russia investigation.[9] The President said that "Sessions should have never recused himself, and if he was going to recuse himself, he should have told me before he took the job, and I would have picked somebody else."[10] Sessions's recusal, the President said, was "very unfair to the president. How do you take a job and then recuse yourself? If he would have recused himself before the job, I would have said, 'Thanks, Jeff, but I can't, you know, I'm not going to


  1. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 5.
  2. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 5.
  3. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 6. Priebus vaguely recalled Lewandowski telling him that in approximately May or June 2017 the President had asked Lewandowski to get Sessions's resignation. Priebus recalled that Lewandowski described his reaction as something like, "What can I do? I'm not an employee of the administration, I'm a nobody." Priebus 4/3/18 302, at 6.
  4. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 5. Lewandowski said he asked Hope Hicks to type the notes when he went in to the Oval Office, and he then retrieved the notes from her partway through his meeting with the President. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 5.
  5. Lewandowski 4/6/18 302, at 5; Dearborn 6/20/18 302, at 3.
  6. Dearborn 6/20/18 302, at 3.
  7. Dearborn 6/20/18 302, at 3.
  8. Dearborn 6/20/18 302, at 3-4.
  9. Peter Baker et al., Excerpts From The Times's Interview With Trump, New York Times (July 19, 2017).
  10. Peter Baker et al., Excerpts From The Times's Interview With Trump, New York Times (July 19, 2017).

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