(Updates with Quigley comment, paragraph 6, Prince testimony ending and comments paragraphs 16, 18-19.)
By Patricia Zengerle and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions refused to answer questions on Thursday during a closed congressional hearing about whether President Donald Trump ever instructed him to hinder the Justice Department's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, according to Democratic lawmakers who attended.
Sessions testified behind closed doors for several hours before the U.S. House of Representatives Intelligence Committee.
Representative Adam Schiff, the committee's top Democrat, told reporters he was troubled by Sessions' refusal to answer what he believes are essential questions.
"I asked the attorney general whether he was ever instructed by the president to take any action that he believed would hinder the Russia investigation and he declined to answer the question," Schiff told reporters after the hearing.
"There is no privileged basis to decline to answer a question like that. If the president did not instruct him to take an action that would hinder the investigation, he should say so. If the president did instruct him to hinder the investigation in any way, in my view that would be a potential criminal act," Schiff said.
Representative Mike Quigley, another Democratic committee member, said on MSNBC that Sessions "is one of the most forgetful persons who works out of Washington, D.C., or he's being less than candid with the American public."
Sessions declined to comment to reporters as he left the secure hearing room.
The panel is among several congressional committees, along with the Justice Department's special counsel Robert Mueller, investigating allegations that Russia sought to influence the U.S. election and potential collusion by Trump's campaign.
Moscow has denied any meddling and Trump has said there was no collusion.
Another source familiar with his testimony said that Sessions said he could not remember the answers to many important questions, and the answers he did provide concerning meetings with Russians tracked statements he had previously made in other congressional hearings.
NOTHING IMPROPER
A spokeswoman for Sessions said he has consistently declined to discuss his communications with Trump in the past, and that he has also previously said he was never instructed to do anything illegal or improper.
When he was a Republican U.S. senator, Sessions was an early supporter and close adviser to Trump during his run for the White House.