Trump 'weighed in' on son's Russia attorney statement, White House says - Action News
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Trump 'weighed in' on son's Russia attorney statement, White House says

U.S. President Donald Trump had a role in producing a statement in which his son denied that a meeting he had with a Russian lawyer was related to the 2016 presidential campaign, the White House said Tuesday.

Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Tuesday Trump 'offered a suggestion like any father would do'

Donald Trump Jr. is interviewed on Fox News in this July 11 file photo. The White House said Tuesday that U.S. President Donald Trump 'weighed in' on a statement in which his son denied that a meeting with a Russian lawyer was related to the 2016 presidential campaign. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)

The White House said Tuesday that U.S. President Donald Trump had a role in producing a statement in which his son denied that a meeting he had with a Russian lawyer was related to the 2016 presidential campaign comments later shown to be misleading.

White House spokespersonSarah Huckabee Sanders told a briefing that Trump "certainly didn't dictate [the statement], but he weighed in, offered a suggestion, like any father would do."

"The statement that was issued was true and there were no inaccuracies in the statement," Sanders said, even though emails later released by Donald Trump Jr. showed that the subject of the meeting was to be possible damaging information about Trump's rival for the presidency, Hillary Clinton.

The Washington Post reported on Monday that Trump's advisers discussed the statement about the meeting and agreed that Trump Jr. should issue a truthful account of the episode so that it "couldn't be repudiated later if the full details emerged."

But the Republican president, who was flying home from Germany on July 8, changed the plan and "personally dictated a statement in which Trump Jr. said he and the Russian lawyer had 'primarily discussed a program about the adoption of Russian children,'" the Post said, citing unidentified people with knowledge of the deliberations.

Trump Jr. released emails in July that showed he eagerly agreed last year to meet a woman he was told was a Russian government lawyer who might have damaging information about Clinton as part of Moscow's official support for his father. The New York Times was first to report the meeting at Trump Tower in New York.