Washington (CNN) Multiple times during his testimony Wednesday, Attorney General William Barr downplayed special counsel Robert Mueller's findings and analysis in his obstruction of justice investigation of the President, especially regarding President Donald Trump's direction to then-White House counsel Don McGahn to remove the special counsel.

Mueller found that Trump had indeed told McGahn to remove Mueller in June 2017 -- a request McGahn characterized as the President asking McGahn to "do crazy s**t." Mueller also found that Trump's directive to McGahn related to a legal proceeding, and that Trump had motivation to thwart the investigation.

Yet Barr asserted Wednesday morning to the Senate that Trump was concerned with Mueller's potential conflicts of interest when he tried to remove him.

Mueller acknowledges this, but says Trump was immediately told the supposed conflicts of interest were "ridiculous" and didn't affect Mueller's service. (The possible conflicts Trump had flagged questioned Mueller's former job at a private law firm that represented subjects of the investigation, Mueller's membership at a Trump golf course in Northern Virginia and that Mueller had interviewed for the FBI director job under Trump. The Justice Department had examined the potential conflicts and cleared Mueller to be special counsel.)

"This evidence shows that the President was not just seeking an examination of whether conflicts existed but instead was looking to use asserted conflicts as a way to terminate the Special Counsel," Mueller wrote.

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