Shortly after William Barr released his four-page “summary” of the 300-page Mueller report, in which he took it upon himself not to charge Donald Trump with obstructing justice despite the fact that the special counsel’s findings revealed he might have, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Democrats that there was no reason to trust anything the attorney general said. Barr‘s words, she told her colleagues, “cannot be taken at face value,” in light of the fact that he literally got his current job by sending an unsolicited 19-page memo to the Justice Department last June in which he called Robert Mueller’s obstruction inquiry “fatally misconceived,” described the investigation as a whole as “grossly irresponsible,” and insisted Mueller “should not be permitted to demand that the president submit to interrogation about alleged obstruction.” In other words, as Pelosi implied, he was obviously going to let Trump off the hook. “We have to see the [full, unredacted] report,” the House speaker told lawmakers. “We cannot make a judgment on the basis of an interpretation by a man who was hired for his job because he believes the president is above the law and he wrote a 19-page memo to demonstrate that.”

And, as it turns out, Pelosi’s assessment was pretty prescient! Barr spent his Congressional testimony on Wednesday indulging in one of president’s favorite conspiracy theories—that intelligence agencies might have “spied” on his 2016 campaign—and has reportedly formed a team to review actions taken by the F.B.I. Following Barr’s testimony, Pelosi doubled down on her appraisal, telling reporters that Barr is doing Trump’s bidding, and that she’s “very concerned” about the A.G.’s handling of the Mueller report. “He is not the attorney general of Donald Trump. He is the attorney general of the United States,” Pelosi told the A.P. “I don’t trust Barr, I trust Mueller.” She added that Barr’s comments undermined the Constitution, as well as his role as the nation’s top law-enforcement official. Later on Wednesday, during a Democratic retreat in Leesburg, Virginia, Pelosi said that Barr is “going off the rails” and described the A.G.’s actions as an “obstruction of giving the truth to the American people.”

While Pelosi has previously said she is “not for impeach[ing]” Trump, she has suggested that her opinion could change based on what she sees in the full Mueller report. Barr has insisted he will not turn the report over to Congress, but the House leader has said she’ll get her hands on it—one way or another.

Asked if she still thought Trump was not worth impeachment, Pelosi said to wait and see the full report.