- Income tax or insurance fraud? That's in the past.
There is no statute of limitations on either that I am aware of. Regardless, it was still a crime.
- Obstruction of Justice? Mueller didn't say Trump obstructed justice.
Yes, he did. In legal terms, he affirmed it in the negative. Here is an excellent piece on Vox the explains it:
The scientific maneuver Mueller used that implicates the president.
- Wire and banking fraud, campaign finance violations? Mueller didn't say that was a crime.
Not quite. He
said that courts had not found uncompensated opposition research to be a "thing of value" and that he didn't find Kushner and Trump Jr knew that accepting such information would be a crime and that members of the Trump team had “general knowledge of the illegality of their conduct" (which Mueller claimed was a requirement to charge them) and that “the investigation has not developed evidence that the participants in the meeting were familiar with the foreign-contribution ban" and:
“[L]ater efforts to prevent disclosure of the nature of the June 9 meeting” mostly came from people that did not attend the meeting and has more to do with “avoid[ing] political consequences rather than any prior knowledge of illegality.”
Basically, he found them too ignorant to understand what they were doing was illegal and subsequent actions were not intended to cover up a willful act, but instead were done to cover their asses politically.
I don't agree (nor do others), but that was the reasoning and:
Brendan Fischer, director of federal reform at the Campaign Legal Center, said the FEC could still pursue penalties against Trump Jr. for the Trump Tower meeting. He explained that while Mueller couldn’t determine willfulness of Trump Jr. or the value of the information, that doesn’t prevent the FEC from acting.
Mueller often states in the report that it was difficult to discern intent and knowledge of activity, which he then uses to argue generally that it's up to Congress to decide such matters, not him. It's possible (and I would argue highly likely) that he did this deliberately as part of the strategy to get around Barr and the fact that Mueller certainly knew that Barr would automatically dismiss or redact anything that hit too close to Trump directly.
That, or, he legitimately did not find that these idiots knew what they were doing.
- Emoluments Clause violation? SCOTUS needs to review it.
Congress could still easily act on this without SCOTUS.
Regardless and no matter what, it's doubtful a super majority of Congress will convict, but that really isn't the issue. The issue is fully investigating the truth.