Trump
attorney
Jay
Sekulow
said in
a
statement
that
Washington
lawyers
Joseph
diGenova
and
Victoria
Toensing
have
conflicts
that
won’t
allow
them to
represent
the
president
regarding
special
counsel
Robert
Mueller’s
investigation.
Sekulow
had
announced
diGenova’s
appointment
last
week.
(TV
screenshot)
2
lawyers
not
joining
Trump
legal
team
after
all By
KEN
THOMAS
and
CHAD DAY
APNews.com
PALM
BEACH,
Fla. -
President
Donald
Trump
will not
be
adding
two new
lawyers
to the
legal
team
defending
him in
the
special
counsel’s
Russia
investigation
after
all, one
of the
president’s
attorneys
said
Sunday.
Trump
attorney
Jay
Sekulow
said in
a
statement
that
Washington
lawyers
Joseph
diGenova
and
Victoria
Toensing
have
conflicts
that
won’t
allow
them to
represent
the
president
regarding
special
counsel
Robert
Mueller’s
investigation.
Sekulow
had
announced
diGenova’s
appointment
last
week.
Sunday’s
announcement
came
just
hours
after
Trump
used
Twitter
to push
back
against
reports
that
he’s
having
difficulty
adding
to his
legal
team,
saying
he was
“very
happy”
with his
current
attorneys.
“Many
lawyers
and top
law
firms
want to
represent
me in
the
Russia
case,”
he
wrote,
adding:
“Fame &
fortune
will
NEVER be
turned
down by
a
lawyer,
though
some are
conflicted.”
Neither
the
president
nor
Sekulow
specified
the
conflict
regarding
diGenova
and
Toensing,
who are
married
to each
other
and law
partners,
but
their
firm has
represented
other
clients
in the
special
counsel’s
investigation,
including
former
Trump
campaign
adviser
Sam
Clovis.
Sekulow
said
Trump
was
“disappointed”
that
diGenova
and
Toensing
won’t be
defending
him in
the
special
counsel
investigation,
but
“those
conflicts
do not
prevent
them
from
assisting
the
President
in other
legal
matters.”
“The
President
looks
forward
to
working
with
them,”
he
added.
On
Sunday,
diGenova
and
Toensing
released
a joint
statement,
saying,
“We
thank
the
president
for his
confidence
in us,
and we
look
forward
to
working
with him
on other
matters.”
DiGenova,
who
provided
the
statement
to The
Associated
Press,
declined
to
answer
additional
questions
about
the
nature
of his
and
Toensing’s
representation
of the
president.
DiGenova
had been
expected
to usher
in a new
strategy
for the
president
after
Trump’s
lead
attorney,
John
Dowd,
resigned
last
week.
Dowd had
touted
the
cooperation
of the
White
House
and
Trump
campaign
with
Mueller.
DiGenova,
a former
U.S.
attorney,
has been
a fierce
defender
of Trump
on
television
and
accused
the FBI
of
trying
to
“frame”
the
president
for
nonexistent
crimes.
Dowd
was the
primary
negotiator
and
legal
strategist
who had
been
putting
together
the
president’s
legal
defense
in the
Russia
probe
led by
Mueller.
The
legal
team
shake-up
also
comes as
Trump’s
attorneys
have
been
negotiating
with
Mueller
over the
scope
and
terms of
an
interview
with the
president.
Mueller
is
investigating
Russian
interference
in the
2016
presidential
election
and
whether
there
was any
collusion
with the
Trump
campaign.
The
president
tweeted
Sunday,
“there
was NO
COLLUSION
with
Russia,”
pointing
instead
to his
2016
Democratic
rival,
Hillary
Clinton.
Sen.
Mark
Warner,
D-Va.,
said on
NBC’s
“Meet
the
Press”
that the
Russians
hacked
into the
election
and
every
one of
the
president’s
top
security
advisers
has said
they’ll
be back.
But he
said the
White
House is
providing
no
direction
on
making
election
security
a top
priority.
Warner
was
asked if
the
president
is
acting
like he
has been
“compromised”
when it
comes to
Russian
President
Vladimir
Putin.
Trump
congratulated
Putin on
his
re-election
last
week and
failed
to bring
up the
U.S.
election
meddling
or the
poisoning
of a
former
Russian
spy on
British
soil
during
the
conversation.
“It’s
more
than
bizarre
that 14
months
into
this
president’s
administration,
he has
failed
to ever
call out
Russia.
He has
failed
to ever
condemn
Putin,”
said
Warner,
the
leading
Democrat
on the
Senate
Intelligence
Committee.
“There
is
something
just
strange
about
this,
and I
think
it’s one
of the
reasons
why
Mueller’s
investigation
has to
continue
and why
our
investigation
has to
continue.”