Friday, July 21, 2017

Friday's Headlines: Trump’s lawyers explore pardoning powers and ways to undercut Russia investigation

Sessions plans to stay on, but his public confidence masks private tensions about his role; Sessions learns loyalty can be a one-way street with Trump; A 10-year-old's mysterious and fatal encounter with opioids ; The strange legal battle pitting the secretaries of the Treasury and State against each other;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Trump's lawyers explore pardoning powers and ways to undercut Russia investigation
President Trump's lawyers are actively building a case against what they believe to be special counsel Robert S. Mueller III's conflicts of interest. Trump has asked his advisers about his power to pardon aides, family members and even himself in connection with the probe, according to one person. A second person said Trump's lawyers have discussed pardoning powers among themselves.
Sessions plans to stay on, but his public confidence masks private tensions about his role
Since Jeff Sessions recused himself from the Russia investigation, the attorney general has rapidly lost his standing as one of Trump's most trusted advisers, according to two White House officials.
 
The Debrief
Sessions learns loyalty can be a one-way street with Trump
The attorney general, who was one of Trump's most important early supporters, became the latest ally to suddenly fall out of the president's good graces.
 
A 10-year-old's mysterious and fatal encounter with opioids
No one knows how the crisis that has ravaged the nation wound up taking Alton Banks, a happy, skinny little boy. But it's possible he came into contact with the drugs at the pool or on his walk home in Overtown, a neighborhood notorious for being Miami's busiest opioid marketplace.
 
The strange legal battle pitting the secretaries of the Treasury and State against each other
The Treasury has fined ExxonMobil $2 million for agreements signed with a Russian businessman when Rex Tillerson was the company's CEO. ExxonMobil responded with a legal complaint naming Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin as lead defendant.
 
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Opinions
 
Obama stood up to Russian interference. Now Trump must follow through.
 
Trump's breathtaking surrender to Russia
 
What to do for little Charlie Gard
 
Don't get distracted: The GOP's cruel health-care plan isn't dead yet
 
Republicans are working to keep you from your day in court
 
What a president with nothing to hide would say to the New York Times
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More News
 
Clashes expected in Jerusalem as metal detectors remain in place at holy site
Entry to the site will be restricted to women and men over 50 only but Muslim spiritual leaders have called on their followers to descend on the mosque in a form of protest over metal detectors.
Interior Dept. pulls Glacier National Park's top climate experts from Mark Zuckerberg's tour
The Trump administration's decision to remove the experts from the Facebook CEO's trip was highly unusual and capped off days of internal discussions about how to treat Zuckerberg, who has become a vocal critic of the president.
Durbin, Graham file Dream Act, hoping to ward off legal challenge to DACA
The legislation would grant permanent legal status to more than 1 million young people who arrived in the United States before they turned 18, passed security checks and met other criteria, including enrolling in college, joining the military or finding jobs.
During 'Made in America Week,' Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club applies to hire 70 foreign workers
The for-profit club, where President Trump spent numerous weekends this spring, asked permission to hire 15 housekeepers, 20 cooks and 35 waiters because it says it cannot find qualified Americans for those jobs.
Ole Miss football coach resigns amid reports of phone call to escort service
Hugh Freeze quit following reports that he used his school-issued phone to call an escort service. The call was brought to the attention of university officials by an attorney for former coach Houston Nutt, who is suing the school.
Scaramucci under consideration for White House communications director job
The New York financier is a frequent defender of the president on television and was a fixture at Trump Tower during Trump's transition.
'Unacceptable': Fatal shooting of woman by Minneapolis officer should have been recorded, mayor says
Police body cameras failed "when we needed them most," Mayor Betsy Hodges said. The cameras were turned off when an officer shot Justine Damond, who had called 911 to report a possible rape.
 
     
 
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