[Original title and text of this post were misleading and inaccurate. Author has corrected title and text as requested by admins. -- Daily Kos Staff]
Mueller already found a way to communicate to us.
Anticipating that the report would be the political football it has become, and from the beginning concerned that his investigation could be curtailed at any moment, Robert Mueller made sure that the American people would know as much as possible about the wrongdoings of Trump, his family and his circle of aides.
This information is now in our hands.
Much of it has been is our possession for months. It has been released online.
While Mueller has been very constrained by statute in what his final report could encompass, and to whom it could be released, as a prosecutor he has had full discretion when writing court filings, especially indictments and sentencing memos. He has used this avenue to get out to the public as much information as he could.
I have been saying all along not to expect too much from this report. Marcy Wheeler at Emptywheel has been saying the same thing:
Rosenstein: The Indictments Are the Report
The indictments are publicly available documents, as are all court filings. For your convenience Lawfareblog has put out a compendium of all Mueller case filings in one place:
Mueller’s Speaking Indictments: Barr Can’t Stop Us From Reading Them!
For your peace of mind and reading enjoyment, may I suggest this pastime:
- Pour yourself a glass of something nice (a dry Chardonnay seems appropriate)
- Turn off the cable and close all the clickbait-y tabs on your browser.
- Put on some nice music (not usually my thing, but Wagner seems fitting).
- Open the link above and begin to peruse the handiwork of Robert Mueller and his team.
- Savor the music, fine drink and the sweet aura of justice.
“Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small; Though with patience He stands waiting, with exactness grinds He all.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The moral arc of the universe bends at the elbow of justice.
―Martin Luther King, Jr.