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Prosecutor looking into the origins of Russia probe resigns

Connecticut prosecutor Nora R. Dannehy gets into a cab as she leaves the Law offices of Patton & Boggs after interviewing Karl Rove May 15, 2009, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal prosecutor who was helping lead the investigation into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe has resigned from the Justice Department, a spokesman said Friday.

Nora Dannehy was a top prosecutor on a team led by U.S. Attorney John Durham of Connecticut, who was appointed last year to lead an investigation into how the FBI and other federal agencies set out to investigate Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and whether the Trump campaign had coordinated with the Kremlin.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s
office in Connecticut confirmed Dannehy’s departure, which was first
reported by The Hartford Courant, but declined to comment further.

Her
departure could complicate the final stretch of an investigation
already slowed by the coronavirus pandemic but eagerly anticipated by
President Donald Trump and his supporters to uncover what they see as
wrongdoing within the FBI. It leaves the investigative team without one
of its veteran prosecutors as key decisions presumably await before the
probe wraps up.

Durham’s appointment by Attorney General William Barr was made public soon after the release of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report
into Russian election interference. In the year and a half since, he
has questioned former law enforcement and intelligence officials — former CIA Director John Brennan among them — about decisions made during the course of the Russia probe.

The
investigation has not yet produced the results that Trump supporters
had been hoping for. There is also pressure to wrap up given that
Justice Department policy frowns on investigative steps that could
affect an election, though Barr has said that would not apply here since
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is not a target of the probe.
It’s also not clear that Durham’s work would be permitted to continue
if Trump loses in November and Democratic leadership assumes control at
the Justice Department.

Trump himself has indicated that he wants
results soon, saying at a White House press conference on Thursday that
Durham was a “very, very respected man” and that his work would involve a
“report or maybe it’s much more than that.”

The investigation
has produced one criminal charge so far, against a former FBI lawyer
accused of doctoring an email related to the surveillance of a former
Trump campaign aide. But that prosecution did not allege a broader
conspiracy within the FBI, and the conduct it involved had largely been
laid out in a Justice Department inspector general report from last
December.

It is not clear if Durham will be able to wrap up before
the election, though Barr did not rule out the possibility of
additional criminal charges.