https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/factc...ony/ar-AAEV6CT
Democratic Rep. Jerrold Nadler selectively cited former special  counsel Robert S. Mueller’s testimony to misleadingly claim that Mueller  said he didn’t indict President Donald Trump only because he couldn’t  indict a sitting president.
© Provided by FactCheck.orgMueller clarified in his July 24 congressional testimony that “we did not make any determination with regard to culpability.”
During a 
press conference on July 26, Nadler said that Mueller “told  us in a remarkable exchange with [Democratic Rep. Ted] Lieu that but  for the Department of Justice policy prohibiting [him] from doing so, he  would have indicted President Trump. Indeed it is clear that any other  citizen of this country who behaved as the president has would have been  charged with multiple crimes. Notably, my Republican colleagues were  unable to refute a single one of these facts.”
But Nadler, chairman of the judiciary committee, ignores some of the facts.
During Mueller’s testimony, in response to a question from Lieu, Mueller provided an eyebrow-raising 
answer  that seemed to suggest that it was an Office of Legal Counsel decision —  which found that a sitting president cannot be indicted — that alone  prevented him from charging Trump. But soon after, Mueller explicitly  corrected himself — twice.
Lieu: Thank  you. So to recap what we’ve heard, we have heard today that the  president ordered former White House Counsel, Don McGahn, to fire you.  The president ordered Don McGahn to then cover that up and create a  false paper trail. And now we’ve heard the president ordered Corey  Lewandowski to tell Jeff Sessions to limit your investigation so that he  — you stop investigating the president. I believe any reasonable person  looking at these facts could conclude that all three elements of the  crime of obstruction of justice have been met. And I’d like to ask you  the reason, again, that you did not indict Donald Trump is because of  OLC opinion stating that you cannot indict a sitting president, correct?
Mueller: That is correct.
That suggestion would have gone much further than what Mueller said in his final report on the investigation.
Mueller’s 
448-page report  noted that his team “determined not to make a traditional prosecutorial  judgment” regarding potential obstruction of justice and therefore “did  not draw ultimate conclusions about the President’s conduct.” Factoring  into that decision to not consider prosecution, Mueller wrote, was the  OLC opinion regarding the indictment of a sitting president. (Attorney  General William P. Barr later told Congress in a 
letter that there would be no charges, saying that “the  evidence developed during the Special Counsel’s investigation is not  sufficient to establish that the President committed an  obstruction-of-justice offense.”)
At the start of the following congressional hearing, before the House intelligence committee, Mueller in his 
opening remarks corrected his earlier response to Lieu — again citing his report’s explanation.
Mueller:Now,  before we go to questions, I want to add one correction to my testimony  this morning. I want to go back to one thing that was said this morning  by Mr. Lieu, who said, and I quote, “You didn’t charge the president  because of the OLC opinion.” That is not the correct way to say it. As  we say in the report and as I said at the opening, we did not reach a  determination as to whether the president committed a crime.
And he later did so again when 
asked about the matter by Republican Rep. John Ratcliffe of Texas.
Ratcliffe: So  to that point, you addressed one of the issues that I needed to, which  was from your testimony this morning, which some construed as a change  to the written report. You talked about the exchange that you had with  Congressman Lieu. I wrote it down a little bit different. I want to ask  you about it so that the record’s perfectly clear. I recorded that he  asked you, quote, “The reason you did not indict Donald Trump is because  of the OLC opinion stating you cannot indict a sitting president,” to  which you responded, “That is correct.” That response is inconsistent, I  think you’ll agree, with your written report. I want to be clear that  it is not your intent to change your written report. It is your intent  to clarify the record today.
Mueller:  Well, as I started today, this afternoon, and added either a footnote  or an endnote, what I wanted to clarify is the fact that we did not make  any determination with regard to culpability in any way. We did not  start that process down — down the road.
Nadler is not the only one to misrepresent Mueller’s testimony regarding the OLC decision.
   
 The cherry-picking has surfaced on social media, as well. A viral meme 
shared  by a page called the Trump Resistance Movement, for example, cites a  limited portion of the Mueller-Lieu exchange to also suggest that the  OLC decision is the only thing that stood in the way of Trump’s  prosecution.
As we said, Mueller made clear that that was not what he meant.
Update, July 27:  A spokesman for Nadler, Daniel Schwarz, director of strategic  communications for the House Judiciary Committee, told us he “didn’t  take [Mueller] to be changing a stance on any of his responses to Lieu.  He just came back to it to reaffirm that he did not [reach] a  declination decision.”
But Mueller said he wanted “to add one  correction to my testimony.” He quoted Lieu as saying, “You didn’t  charge the president because of the OLC opinion,” and Mueller said,  “That is not the correct way to say it.” He said that “we did not reach a  determination as to whether the president committed a crime.” Not  reaching a determination on whether a crime was committed isn’t the same  as saying, in Nadler’s words, “he would have indicted” the president  “but for” the OLC opinion.
In a 
CNN interview,  Lieu acknowledged Mueller had “walked it back,” but said, “I believe he  fully understood my question. It was a logical extension of me getting  him to establish the three elements of obstruction of justice were met  and I think it’s what he actually believes.” That’s Lieu’s opinion.
But the record shows Mueller did make a “correction” to his response to Lieu. 
The usual McCarthyite BS from Nadler and Schiff. 
Unable to give up the Russian collusion Narrative.