Former US Attorney Preet Bharara revealed yesterday that he received a handful of “unusual” phone calls from US President Donald Trump after the November election that made him feel uncomfortable, and said he was fired after declining to take the third call.
In his first televised interview since Trump fired him in March from the post of top federal prosecutor in Manhattan on ABC News’ This Week, Bharara said he believed Trump’s calls to him violated the usual boundaries between the executive branch and independent criminal investigators.
Bharara said that Trump called him twice after the November election “ostensibly just to shoot the breeze”.
“It was a little bit uncomfortable, but he was not the President. He was only the President-elect,” Bharara said.
The third call, however, came two days after Trump's inauguration. That time, he said, he refused to call back.
“The call came in. I got a message. We deliberated over it, thought it was inappropriate to return the call. And 22 hours later, I was asked to resign along with 45 other people,” he said.
“It’s a very weird and peculiar thing for a one-on-one conversation without the attorney-general, without warning between the President and me or any United States attorney who has been asked to investigate various things and is in a position hypothetically to investigate business interests and associates of the president,” Bharara said.
He added that during President Barack Obama’s tenure, Obama never called him directly.
Bharara’s comments came just a few days after former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey testified at a congressional panel that Trump had asked him to drop an investigation into former Trump aide Michael Flynn and his alleged ties to Russia.
Comey also said he believed he was subsequently fired in an effort to undermine the investigation into possible collusion between Trump's campaign and Russia to influence the 2016 Presidential election.