https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...NEE?li=BBnb7Kz
Attorney General Bill Barr is preparing to announce as early as next  week the completion of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia  investigation, with plans for Barr to submit to Congress soon after a  summary of Mueller's confidential report, according to people familiar  with the plans. The preparations are the clearest indication yet that Mueller is nearly done with his almost two-year investigation.
   
 The precise timing of the announcement is subject to change.
The  scope and contours of what Barr will send to Congress remain unclear.  Also unclear is how long it will take Justice officials to prepare what  will be submitted to lawmakers.
But with 
President Donald Trump  soon to travel overseas for a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong  Un, Justice officials are mindful of not interfering with the White  House's diplomatic efforts, which could impact the timing.
The Justice Department and the special counsel's office declined to comment.
Barr  has said that he wants to be as "transparent" as possible with Congress  and the public, "consistent with the rules and the law."
Under  the special counsel regulations, Mueller must submit a "confidential"  report to the attorney general at the conclusion of his work, but the  rules don't require it to be shared with Congress, or by extension, the  public. And, as Barr has made clear, the Justice Department generally  guards against publicizing "derogatory" information about uncharged  individuals.
As a result, one of the most pressing questions Barr  will face in the coming weeks is the extent to which Mueller's findings  should be disclosed to Congress.
The regulations require Mueller  to explain in his report all decisions to prosecute or not prosecute  matters under scrutiny. Barr would also need to inform Congress if the  Justice Department prevented the special counsel team from pursuing any  investigative steps.
Trump said Wednesday that it's "totally up to  Bill Barr" as to whether Mueller's report comes out while he is  overseas in Vietnam next week. 
"That'll be totally up to the new  attorney general. He's a tremendous man, a tremendous person, who really  respects this country and respects the Justice Department, so that'll  be totally up to him," Trump told reporters in the White House.
Speculation  about the end of the probe has been running rampant in Washington. NBC  News reported recently the probe would be done by mid-February.
Life after Mueller
While  the Mueller investigation may soon come to a close, there continue to  be court cases that will be handled by other federal prosecutors. 
In  addition, Mueller has referred certain matters that fell outside the  scope of the Russia probe to other US Attorneys to pursue. Some of those  investigations have already been revealed, including the investigation  in New York into former Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen. That probe  has spawned subsequent federal investigations in New York into the  Trump Organization and the Trump Inaugural Committee. It is possible the  special counsel's team has referred other matters that have not yet  come to light.
For close watchers of the federal courthouse and the Mueller team, small changes have added up in recent weeks.
On  Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday last week, special counsel's office  employees carried boxes and pushed a cart full of files out of their  office - an unusual move that could foreshadow a hand-off of legal work.
At  the same time, the Mueller prosecutors' workload appears to be  dwindling. Four of Mueller's 17 prosecutors have ended their tenures  with the office, with most returning to other roles in the Justice  Department.
And the grand jury that Mueller's prosecutors used to  return indictments of longtime Trump confidant Roger Stone, former Trump  campaign chairman Paul Manafort, and several Russians hasn't apparently  convened since January 24 the day it approved the criminal charges  against Stone.
Even with these signs of a wrap up, the DC US  Attorney's office has stepped in to work on cases that may continue  longer than Mueller is the special counsel. 
That office has  joined onto some of the Mueller's team's casework, including the cases  against Stone, a Russian social media propaganda conspiracy, and in an  ongoing foreign government-owned company's fight against a grand jury  subpoena. 
Mueller and his prosecutors are still reporting to work  as frequently as ever - with some even coming in on recent snow days  and Presidents' Day. But also visiting them more often than ever before  are the prosecutors from the DC US Attorney's Office and others in the  Justice Department who've worked on the Mueller cases.
In one  court case, against Concord Management for its alleged support for the  social media conspiracy prosecutors told a judge in January there's  still a related "matter occurring before the grand jury." 
In  other cases, including Manafort's, the Mueller team has made heavy  redactions to its recent public court filings, including to protect  pending investigations and people who haven't been charged with crimes. 
It begins to appear that the Mueller Report will be submitted to Barr soon. 
After all the Hoopla over Russian Collusion to influence the 2016 election - let's see what is  the result of two years and millions of dollars .
It will be interesting, if negative, to see  what the DPST MSM will have to bleat about from their bully pulpits.