![]() ![]() JOHNSON: First of all, most people in the U.S. As you get ready to dig into whatever we get, what exactly are you going to be looking for? What's at the top of your list? So 400 pages - I mean, I know some of it's going to be redacted, but it's a lot of material. His letter just contained some partial quotes from this report, nothing else from the investigators themselves. And remember all we've seen so far is just that four-page letter from the attorney general, Bill Barr. We know there have been 500 search warrants, 2,800 subpoenas, 500 witness interviews. And we know it contains not only conclusions but how investigators have analyzed the evidence. That does not include tables or appendices. JOHNSON: Well, there's a lot more to this report than those two endpoints you mentioned. So with all of that in mind, what is today and this report all about? What are we going to learn? And President Trump himself is not going to be charged with obstruction of justice. No Americans have been charged with conspiring with the Russian government over the last presidential election. GREENE: So we seem to know the bottom line here. ![]() She has agreed to take a few minutes to join us this morning.ĬARRIE JOHNSON, BYLINE: Good morning, David. ![]() And our national justice correspondent, Carrie Johnson, has been practicing her speed-reading skills so she can read this report and report on it throughout the day. Washington, D.C., bars are touting drink specials. Publishing houses are getting ready to release the report in book form. The Justice Department is getting ready this morning to release a redacted version of special counsel Robert Mueller's report about 2016 election interference. Well, after a nearly two-year-long investigation and nearly a month more of waiting, people will soon be able to read some of the findings of the Russia investigation in investigators' own words. ![]()
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