obstruction of justice

"No one parodies Susan Collins more viciously than Susan Collins," says one damning tweet.
The Judiciary Committee plans to investigate charges of obstruction of justice against the president that were laid out in the redacted Mueller report.
Even the redacted version of Mueller’s report lays out the Trump campaign’s eagerness to use Russian-stolen material and its attempts to shut down the probe.
Instead of just releasing the special counsel's findings, the U.S. attorney general spun the report to the benefit of President Trump.
The special counsel did not "exonerate" President Trump and implied that Congress should decide his fate.
They won't even acknowledge the report's damning conclusion that the president may have obstructed justice.
Several top aides "declined to carry out orders or accede to his requests" to limit the Russia investigation, according to the special counsel's report.
Attorney General William Barr has released a redacted version of Robert Mueller's special counsel report to Congress and the public.
Facts may "weigh heavily in favor of a prosecution" on obstruction — but for the fact you can’t charge a sitting president, says former DEA head Chuck Rosenberg.