on one word in your report. it's the second to the last word in the report. it's "exonerate." the report states, accordingly, while this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it does not exonerate him. now, in the judiciary hearing, in your prior testimony, you've already agreed with mr. ratcliffe that exonerate is not a legal term, that there is not a legal test for this i have a question for you, mr. mueller. does the attorney general have the power or authority to exonerate? what i'm putting up here is the united states code. this is where the attorney general gets his power, and the constitution, and the annotated cases of these. we even went to your law school i went to case western but i thought maybe your law school teaches it differently. we got the criminal law textbook from your law school. mr. mueller, nowhere in these -- because we had them scanned, is there a process or description on exonerate. there's no office of exoneration at the attorney general's office, no certificate at the bottom of his desk. mr. mueller, would you agree with me that the attorney general does not have the power