1
VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,399 + © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 2019 U(D54G1D)y+%!z!&!=!; WASHINGTON — Robert S. Mueller III warned lawmakers on Wednesday that Russia was again trying to sabotage American de- mocracy before next year’s presi- dential election, defended his in- vestigation’s conclusions about Moscow’s sweeping interference campaign in 2016 and publicly re- jected President Trump’s criti- cism that he had conducted a “witch hunt.” The partisan war over Mr. Mueller’s inquiry reached a heated climax during nearly sev- en hours of his long-awaited testi- mony before two congressional committees. Lawmakers hunted for viral sound bites and tried to score political points, but Mr. Mueller consistently refused to accommodate them, returning over and over in a sometimes halt- ing delivery to his damning and voluminous report. Mr. Mueller remained a spec- tral presence in Washington over the past two years as the presi- dent and his allies subjected the special counsel and his team of lawyers to withering attacks. Speaking in detail for the first time about his conclusions produced occasionally dramatic moments in which he ventured beyond his report to offer insights about Mr. Trump’s behavior. When asked whether Mr. Trump “wasn’t always being truthful” in his written answers to the special counsel’s questions, Mr. Mueller responded, “I would say generally.” He called Mr. Trump’s praise of WikiLeaks dur- ing the 2016 campaign “problem- atic” and said it “gave a boost to what is and should be illegal activ- ity.” He said that he and his team chose not to subpoena Mr. Trump out of concern that a battle over a presidential interview might needlessly prolong the investiga- MUELLER DEFENDS INQUIRY AND SAYS RUSSIA ISN’T DONE Rejects ‘Witch Hunt’ Claim and Warns of New Meddling By MARK MAZZETTI NO COLLUSION, NO OBSTRUCTION! 7:55 AM . 7/24/19 Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump GARY HE/EPA, VIA SHUTTERSTOCK The company might halt production of the 737 Max as it handles the fallout of two crashes. Page B1. Still Parked at Boeing COMPTON, Calif. — It was bath time, and Rosalba Moralez heard a cry. She rushed to the bathroom and found her 7-year-old daugh- ter, Alexxa, being doused with brown, putrid water. “We kept running the tub, we turned on the sink, we flushed the toilet. All the water was coming out dirty,” Ms. Moralez said. For more than a year, discolored water has regularly gushed from faucets in the family’s bathroom and kitchen, as it has in hundreds of other households in Willow- brook, Calif., an unincorporated community near Compton in South Los Angeles. The brown water, provided by the Sativa Los Angeles County Water District, first drew public outrage and local news media at- tention last year when customers began protesting over unex- plained stomach pains and skin so itchy it had scarred from the scratching. Elected officials were soon jolted into action. Sativa’s elected board of directors was disbanded, and Los Angeles County took con- trol of the water district. The county is working furiously to re- place dilapidated pipes and wells, and this week began new con- struction to reinforce Sativa’s sys- tem. But problems persist. Over- hauling the district has taken far more time and money than any- one had expected because, by the time the county stepped in last fall, the district’s infrastructure was on the brink of collapse. Sativa is just one case, which erupted into public view after dec- ades of neglect. The rot in Califor- nia’s water system probably ex- tends far beyond it. As many as 1,000 community Water That Leaves Scars: A Crisis Lurking in Californians’ Taps By JOSE A. DEL REAL Rotting Pipes and Wells Endanger the Poorest Continued on Page A21 SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook came under siege on multiple fronts on Wednesday, agreeing to new layers of oversight and two fines to settle privacy and disclo- sure violations, even as it ac- knowledged that it was under in- vestigation from the Federal Trade Commission for antitrust concerns. Early in the day, the company was penalized by the F.T.C. with a record $5 billion fine for deceiving users about their ability to control the privacy of their personal data. As part of a settlement, the com- pany was also ordered to create a new privacy committee on its board and to make other structur- al changes to increase the trans- parency and accountability of its data practices. But the agreement was criti- cized for failing to limit Face- book’s gathering, sharing and use of people’s personal information, a practice that has repeatedly raised privacy questions. And the F.T.C.’s commissioners were divid- ed on partisan lines this month when they voted 3-to-2 to approve the measures, which provide im- munity to Facebook’s officers and directors and shield the company from known claims of violations through last month — essentially giving it a pass on its past. Facebook, Penalized in 2 Inquiries, Faces a 3rd By MIKE ISAAC and NATASHA SINGER After Fines Over Data, a New Antitrust Investigation Continued on Page A20 Continued on Page A12 Allergan will stop selling a type of textured implant linked to a rare cancer that has caused 33 deaths. PAGE A20 NATIONAL A10-21 Breast Implants Recalled The delivery company ended a practice that effectively meant tips were going to it rather than to workers. PAGE B6 BUSINESS B1-7 DoorDash Changes Tip Policy Kristof Milak, 19, used to watch old tapes of his hero Michael Phelps. On Wednes- day, he broke Phelps’s world record in the 200-meter butterfly. PAGE B11 SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-11 New King of the Butterfly The South Korean military said the North had fired two missiles off its east coast on Thursday amid stalled efforts to resume nuclear talks. PAGE A9 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 More Launches in North Korea After years of struggle, the writing team of Bashir Salahuddin and Diallo Riddle is debuting TV shows on Com- edy Central and IFC. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-7 Writing Duo Strikes Twice A federal judge said the Trump adminis- tration must keep taking asylum claims from all eligible migrants. PAGE A21 Court Blocks Curbs on Asylum After two more cyclists died, the mayor said the city would add protected lanes and alter risky intersections. PAGE A22 NEW YORK A22-23 $58.4 Million Bike Safety Plan Federal and state efforts to end “sur- prise” medical expenses have left out the ambulance industry. PAGE B1 A Bill Due After the Sirens Across the country, those paid for shed- ding their clothes are organizing for fairer labor practices and entertaining new types of customers. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 Stripping in a New Era Doug Collins PAGE A25 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25 WASHINGTON — In the days leading up to the special coun- sel’s much-anticipated appear- ance before Congress, Demo- crats argued that hearing from Robert S. Mueller III on televi- sion could transform the im- peachment debate. While Ameri- cans might not read the book, the argument went, they would watch the movie. If so, the movie Americans tuned into on Wednesday was not the blockbuster Democrats had sought nor was Mr. Mueller the action star they had cast. Dignified but shaky, and at times struggling to keep up, he largely stuck to “yes” and “no” and “refer you to the report” an- swers, steadfastly refusing to dramatize his conclusions as President Trump’s critics wanted him to do. By the time he finished nearly seven hours later, Democrats were disappointed they did not get the made-for-TV accusatory moment they wanted, and the prospect for impeachment ap- peared far more difficult. Al- though the president’s critics vowed to persist, a gleeful Mr. Trump claimed he was com- pletely cleared while shouting angry insults at reporters on the South Lawn. “Much as I hate to say it, this morning’s hearing was a disas- ter,” Laurence Tribe, the Harvard law professor who has argued that the House should pursue impeachment, wrote on Twitter. “Far from breathing life into his damning report, the tired Robert Mueller sucked the life out of it. The effort to save democracy Refusal to Dramatize Findings Prevents Blockbuster Moment By PETER BAKER NEWS ANALYSIS Continued on Page A14 WASHINGTON — Soon after the special counsel’s office opened in 2017, some aides noticed that Robert S. Mueller III kept notice- ably shorter hours than he had as F.B.I. director, when he showed up at the bureau daily at 6 a.m. and often worked nights. He seemed to cede substantial responsibility to his top deputies, including Aaron Zebley, who man- aged day-to-day operations and often reported on the investiga- tion’s progress up the chain in the Justice Department. As negotia- tions with President Trump’s law- yers about interviewing him dragged on, for example, Mr. Mueller took part less and less, ac- cording to people familiar with how the office worked. That hands-off style was on dis- play on Wednesday when Mr. Mueller testified for about seven hours before two House commit- tees. Once famous for his laserlike focus, Mr. Mueller, who will turn 75 next month, seemed hesitant about the facts in his own 448- page report. He struggled at one point to come up with the word “conspiracy.” At one excruciatingly awkward moment, he stumbled over a poorly worded question about who was president when he served as a top federal prosecutor in 1986, apparently assuming the questioner meant his subsequent Justice Department post. “He didn’t have the fight in him that he used to have,” said Glenn Kirschner, who worked with Mr. Mueller as a homicide prosecutor in the mid-1990s. Mr. Mueller delivered a strong- er performance in the afternoon, when the questioning focused on Russia’s interference in the 2016 election instead of whether the president had obstructed justice, noted John S. Pistole, a former deputy F.B.I. director. Mr. Mueller called forcefully for the govern- ment to do more to combat Rus- sia’s continued efforts to meddle in American elections. Still, Mr. Pistole acknowledged, he was not “as precise as he was in his dozens of previous appear- ances as director.” For Mr. Mueller’s many Demo- cratic and Republican fans, who A Halting Delivery at Odds With a Laser Focus of the Past This article is by Sharon LaFra- niere, Michael S. Schmidt, Noah Weiland and Adam Goldman. Robert S. Mueller III, the former special counsel, testified before two congressional committees in back-to-back hearings Wednesday. ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A16 SAN JUAN, P.R. — Gov. Ricar- do A. Rosselló of Puerto Rico an- nounced his resignation on Wednesday, conceding that he could no longer credibly remain in power after an extraordinary pop- ular uprising and looming im- peachment proceedings had de- railed his administration. In a statement posted online late Wednesday, Mr. Rosselló, 40, said he would step down on Aug. 2. He said his successor for the moment would be the secretary of justice, Wanda Vázquez, a former district attorney who once headed the island’s office of women’s af- fairs. Ms. Vázquez was next in line under the territory’s Constitution after the secretary of state, who would have succeeded as gover- nor, resigned last week when he also was caught up in a chat scan- dal that enveloped Mr. Rosselló’s administration. San Juan, the capital, which had seen protesters arrive on foot, on horseback and even on motorized water scooters over the past week, burst into celebration after Mr. Rosselló’s announcement. People cheered outside La Fort- aleza, the governor’s official resi- dence. They banged drums, tam- bourines and kitchen pots, now not in anger but in revelry. “We’re not a small group. We’re Puerto Rico!” they chanted. The governor began his an- GOVERNOR IS OUT IN PUERTO RICO Quits Amid Protests and Impeachment Threat By PATRICIA MAZZEI and FRANCES ROBLES Continued on Page A19 China hinted that its troops could be used to quell protests that challenge the central government’s authority. PAGE A8 A Warning for Hong Kong Late Edition Today, mostly sunny skies, low hu- midity, high 83. Tonight, clear skies, low 70. Tomorrow, mostly sunny skies continuing, light winds, high 86. Weather map, Page A26. $3.00

RUSSIA ISN T DONE INQUIRY AND SAYS MUELLER DEFENDSCOMPTON, Calif. t was bathI time, and Rosalba Moralez heard a cry. She rushed to the bathroom and found her 7-year-old daugh-ter,

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VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,399 + © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 2019

C M Y K Nxxx,2019-07-25,A,001,Bs-4C,E2_+

U(D54G1D)y+%!z!&!=!;

WASHINGTON — Robert S.Mueller III warned lawmakers onWednesday that Russia was againtrying to sabotage American de-mocracy before next year’s presi-dential election, defended his in-vestigation’s conclusions aboutMoscow’s sweeping interferencecampaign in 2016 and publicly re-jected President Trump’s criti-cism that he had conducted a“witch hunt.”

The partisan war over Mr.Mueller’s inquiry reached aheated climax during nearly sev-en hours of his long-awaited testi-mony before two congressionalcommittees. Lawmakers huntedfor viral sound bites and tried toscore political points, but Mr.Mueller consistently refused toaccommodate them, returningover and over in a sometimes halt-ing delivery to his damning andvoluminous report.

Mr. Mueller remained a spec-

tral presence in Washington overthe past two years as the presi-dent and his allies subjected thespecial counsel and his team oflawyers to withering attacks.Speaking in detail for the first timeabout his conclusions producedoccasionally dramatic momentsin which he ventured beyond hisreport to offer insights about Mr.Trump’s behavior.

When asked whether Mr.Trump “wasn’t always beingtruthful” in his written answers tothe special counsel’s questions,Mr. Mueller responded, “I wouldsay generally.” He called Mr.Trump’s praise of WikiLeaks dur-ing the 2016 campaign “problem-atic” and said it “gave a boost towhat is and should be illegal activ-ity.”

He said that he and his teamchose not to subpoena Mr. Trumpout of concern that a battle over apresidential interview mightneedlessly prolong the investiga-

MUELLER DEFENDS INQUIRY AND SAYS

RUSSIA ISN’T DONERejects ‘Witch Hunt’

Claim and Warnsof New Meddling

By MARK MAZZETTI

NO COLLUSION, NOOBSTRUCTION!7:55 AM . 7/24/19

Donald J. Trump@realDonaldTrump

GARY HE/EPA, VIA SHUTTERSTOCK

The company might halt production of the 737 Max as it handles the fallout of two crashes. Page B1.Still Parked at Boeing

COMPTON, Calif. — It was bathtime, and Rosalba Moralez hearda cry. She rushed to the bathroomand found her 7-year-old daugh-ter, Alexxa, being doused withbrown, putrid water.

“We kept running the tub, weturned on the sink, we flushed thetoilet. All the water was comingout dirty,” Ms. Moralez said.

For more than a year, discoloredwater has regularly gushed from

faucets in the family’s bathroomand kitchen, as it has in hundredsof other households in Willow-brook, Calif., an unincorporatedcommunity near Compton inSouth Los Angeles.

The brown water, provided bythe Sativa Los Angeles CountyWater District, first drew publicoutrage and local news media at-tention last year when customersbegan protesting over unex-plained stomach pains and skin soitchy it had scarred from thescratching.

Elected officials were soonjolted into action. Sativa’s electedboard of directors was disbanded,and Los Angeles County took con-trol of the water district. Thecounty is working furiously to re-place dilapidated pipes and wells,and this week began new con-

struction to reinforce Sativa’s sys-tem. But problems persist. Over-hauling the district has taken farmore time and money than any-one had expected because, by thetime the county stepped in lastfall, the district’s infrastructurewas on the brink of collapse.

Sativa is just one case, whicherupted into public view after dec-ades of neglect. The rot in Califor-nia’s water system probably ex-tends far beyond it.

As many as 1,000 community

Water That Leaves Scars: A Crisis Lurking in Californians’ TapsBy JOSE A. DEL REAL Rotting Pipes and Wells

Endanger the Poorest

Continued on Page A21

SAN FRANCISCO — Facebookcame under siege on multiplefronts on Wednesday, agreeing tonew layers of oversight and twofines to settle privacy and disclo-sure violations, even as it ac-knowledged that it was under in-vestigation from the FederalTrade Commission for antitrustconcerns.

Early in the day, the companywas penalized by the F.T.C. with arecord $5 billion fine for deceiving

users about their ability to controlthe privacy of their personal data.As part of a settlement, the com-pany was also ordered to create anew privacy committee on itsboard and to make other structur-al changes to increase the trans-parency and accountability of its

data practices.But the agreement was criti-

cized for failing to limit Face-book’s gathering, sharing and useof people’s personal information, apractice that has repeatedlyraised privacy questions. And theF.T.C.’s commissioners were divid-ed on partisan lines this monthwhen they voted 3-to-2 to approvethe measures, which provide im-munity to Facebook’s officers anddirectors and shield the companyfrom known claims of violationsthrough last month — essentiallygiving it a pass on its past.

Facebook, Penalized in 2 Inquiries, Faces a 3rdBy MIKE ISAAC

and NATASHA SINGERAfter Fines Over Data,

a New AntitrustInvestigation

Continued on Page A20

Continued on Page A12

Allergan will stop selling a type oftextured implant linked to a rare cancerthat has caused 33 deaths. PAGE A20

NATIONAL A10-21

Breast Implants RecalledThe delivery company ended a practicethat effectively meant tips were goingto it rather than to workers. PAGE B6

BUSINESS B1-7

DoorDash Changes Tip PolicyKristof Milak, 19, used to watch old tapesof his hero Michael Phelps. On Wednes-day, he broke Phelps’s world record inthe 200-meter butterfly. PAGE B11

SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-11

New King of the Butterfly

The South Korean military said theNorth had fired two missiles off its eastcoast on Thursday amid stalled effortsto resume nuclear talks. PAGE A9

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

More Launches in North KoreaAfter years of struggle, the writingteam of Bashir Salahuddin and DialloRiddle is debuting TV shows on Com-edy Central and IFC. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-7

Writing Duo Strikes Twice

A federal judge said the Trump adminis-tration must keep taking asylum claimsfrom all eligible migrants. PAGE A21

Court Blocks Curbs on AsylumAfter two more cyclists died, the mayorsaid the city would add protected lanesand alter risky intersections. PAGE A22

NEW YORK A22-23

$58.4 Million Bike Safety PlanFederal and state efforts to end “sur-prise” medical expenses have left outthe ambulance industry. PAGE B1

A Bill Due After the Sirens

Across the country, those paid for shed-ding their clothes are organizing forfairer labor practices and entertainingnew types of customers. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

Stripping in a New Era

Doug Collins PAGE A25

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25

WASHINGTON — In the daysleading up to the special coun-sel’s much-anticipated appear-ance before Congress, Demo-crats argued that hearing fromRobert S. Mueller III on televi-sion could transform the im-peachment debate. While Ameri-cans might not read the book, theargument went, they wouldwatch the movie.

If so, the movie Americanstuned into on Wednesday wasnot the blockbuster Democratshad sought nor was Mr. Muellerthe action star they had cast.Dignified but shaky, and at timesstruggling to keep up, he largelystuck to “yes” and “no” and“refer you to the report” an-swers, steadfastly refusing todramatize his conclusions asPresident Trump’s critics wantedhim to do.

By the time he finished nearlyseven hours later, Democratswere disappointed they did notget the made-for-TV accusatorymoment they wanted, and theprospect for impeachment ap-peared far more difficult. Al-though the president’s criticsvowed to persist, a gleeful Mr.Trump claimed he was com-pletely cleared while shoutingangry insults at reporters on theSouth Lawn.

“Much as I hate to say it, thismorning’s hearing was a disas-ter,” Laurence Tribe, the Harvardlaw professor who has arguedthat the House should pursueimpeachment, wrote on Twitter.“Far from breathing life into hisdamning report, the tired RobertMueller sucked the life out of it.The effort to save democracy

Refusal to Dramatize FindingsPrevents Blockbuster Moment

By PETER BAKER

NEWS ANALYSIS

Continued on Page A14

WASHINGTON — Soon afterthe special counsel’s office openedin 2017, some aides noticed thatRobert S. Mueller III kept notice-ably shorter hours than he had asF.B.I. director, when he showed upat the bureau daily at 6 a.m. andoften worked nights.

He seemed to cede substantialresponsibility to his top deputies,including Aaron Zebley, who man-aged day-to-day operations andoften reported on the investiga-tion’s progress up the chain in theJustice Department. As negotia-tions with President Trump’s law-yers about interviewing himdragged on, for example, Mr.Mueller took part less and less, ac-cording to people familiar withhow the office worked.

That hands-off style was on dis-play on Wednesday when Mr.Mueller testified for about sevenhours before two House commit-tees. Once famous for his laserlikefocus, Mr. Mueller, who will turn75 next month, seemed hesitantabout the facts in his own 448-page report. He struggled at onepoint to come up with the word“conspiracy.”

At one excruciatingly awkwardmoment, he stumbled over apoorly worded question aboutwho was president when heserved as a top federal prosecutorin 1986, apparently assuming thequestioner meant his subsequentJustice Department post.

“He didn’t have the fight in himthat he used to have,” said GlennKirschner, who worked with Mr.Mueller as a homicide prosecutorin the mid-1990s.

Mr. Mueller delivered a strong-er performance in the afternoon,when the questioning focused onRussia’s interference in the 2016election instead of whether thepresident had obstructed justice,noted John S. Pistole, a formerdeputy F.B.I. director. Mr. Muellercalled forcefully for the govern-ment to do more to combat Rus-sia’s continued efforts to meddlein American elections.

Still, Mr. Pistole acknowledged,he was not “as precise as he was inhis dozens of previous appear-ances as director.”

For Mr. Mueller’s many Demo-cratic and Republican fans, who

A Halting Delivery atOdds With a Laser

Focus of the Past

This article is by Sharon LaFra-niere, Michael S. Schmidt, NoahWeiland and Adam Goldman.

Robert S. Mueller III, the former special counsel, testified before two congressional committees in back-to-back hearings Wednesday.ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A16

SAN JUAN, P.R. — Gov. Ricar-do A. Rosselló of Puerto Rico an-nounced his resignation onWednesday, conceding that hecould no longer credibly remain inpower after an extraordinary pop-ular uprising and looming im-peachment proceedings had de-railed his administration.

In a statement posted onlinelate Wednesday, Mr. Rosselló, 40,said he would step down on Aug. 2.

He said his successor for themoment would be the secretary ofjustice, Wanda Vázquez, a formerdistrict attorney who once headedthe island’s office of women’s af-fairs. Ms. Vázquez was next in lineunder the territory’s Constitutionafter the secretary of state, whowould have succeeded as gover-nor, resigned last week when healso was caught up in a chat scan-dal that enveloped Mr. Rosselló’sadministration.

San Juan, the capital, which hadseen protesters arrive on foot, onhorseback and even on motorizedwater scooters over the pastweek, burst into celebration afterMr. Rosselló’s announcement.People cheered outside La Fort-aleza, the governor’s official resi-dence. They banged drums, tam-bourines and kitchen pots, nownot in anger but in revelry. “We’renot a small group. We’re PuertoRico!” they chanted.

The governor began his an-

GOVERNOR IS OUTIN PUERTO RICO

Quits Amid Protests andImpeachment Threat

By PATRICIA MAZZEIand FRANCES ROBLES

Continued on Page A19

China hinted that its troops could beused to quell protests that challenge thecentral government’s authority. PAGE A8

A Warning for Hong Kong

Late EditionToday, mostly sunny skies, low hu-midity, high 83. Tonight, clear skies,low 70. Tomorrow, mostly sunnyskies continuing, light winds, high86. Weather map, Page A26.

$3.00