obstruction of justice

During his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, the former special counsel agreed that the president could be charged with obstruction of justice.
Former special counsel Robert Mueller testified before Congress on Wednesday regarding his investigation into the 2016 election and obstruction of justice.
Former Special Counsel Robert Mueller said that his report doesn’t exonerate President Donald Trump.
Former Special Counsel Robert Mueller delivers his opening remarks before testifying before the House Judiciary Committee on his investigation into the President Donald Trump and the 2016 presidential election.
Action could "be taken up by the Congress while the president is still in office — or by the courts after his term is complete," warned the Fox News host.
The senator told "The NPR Politics Podcast" that the department under her presidency “would have no choice" given Robert Mueller’s report.
Rep. Nadler said the Justice Department agreed to turn over some evidence from the report, including files used to assess whether the president obstructed justice.
As Robert Mueller himself said last week, his investigation didn't clear the president of obstructing justice.
The behavior of this president "ought to concern anyone that cares about the honest workings of government,” warns a Reagan administration official.
"If we had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said that,” special counsel Robert Mueller said Wednesday.