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FLYNN FREE: Case Against General Michael Flynn BEING DROPPED


The Justice Department on Thursday said it is dropping the criminal case against President Donald Trump’s first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, abandoning a prosecution that became a rallying cry for Trump and his supporters in attacking the FBI’s Russia investigation.

The move is a stunning reversal for one of the signature cases brought by special counsel Robert Mueller. It comes even though prosecutors for the last three years had maintained that Flynn had lied to the FBI about his conversations with the Russian ambassador in a January 2017 interview. Flynn himself admitted as much, and became a key cooperator for Mueller as he investigated ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign.

In court documents being filed Thursday, the Justice Department said it is dropping the case “after a considered review of all the facts and circumstances of this case, including newly discovered and disclosed information.” The documents were obtained by The Associated Press.

The Justice Department said it had concluded that Flynn’s interview by the FBI was “untethered to, and unjustified by, the FBI’s counterintelligence investigation into Mr. Flynn” and that the interview on January 24, 2017 was “conducted without any legitimate investigative basis.”

The U.S. attorney reviewing the Flynn case, Jeff Jensen, recommended the move to Attorney General William Barr last week and formalized the recommendation in a document this week.

“Through the course of my review of General Flynn’s case, I concluded the proper and just course was to dismiss the case,” Jensen said in a statement. “I briefed Attorney General Barr on my findings, advised him on these conclusions, and he agreed.”

The decision is certain to be embraced by Trump, who has relentlessly tweeted about the case and last week pronounced Flynn “exonerated,” and energize supporters who have taken up the retired Army lieutenant general as something of a cause celebre. But it may also add to Democratic concerns that Attorney General William Barr is excessively loyal to the president, and could be a distraction for a Justice Department that for months has sought to focus on crimes arising from the coronavirus.

The Justice Department’s action comes amid an internal review into the handling of the case and an aggressive effort by Flynn’s lawyers to challenge the basis for the prosecution. The lawyers cited newly disclosed FBI emails and notes last week to allege that Flynn was entrapped into lying when agents interviewed him at the White House days after Trump’s inauguration. Though none of the documents appeared to undercut the central allegation that Flynn had lied to the FBI, Trump last week pronounced him “exonerated

The decision is the latest dramatic turn in a years-old case full of twists and turns. In recent months, his attorneys have leveled a series of allegations about the FBI’s actions and asked to withdraw his guilty plea. A judge has rejected most of the claims and not ruled on others, including the bid to revoke the plea.

The decision comes as Barr has increasingly challenged the Russia investigation, saying in a television interview last month that it was started “without any basis.” In February, he overruled a decision by prosecutors in the Roger Stone case in favor of a more lenient recommended sentence for the longtime Trump friend.

Earlier this year, he appointed Jensen, of St. Louis, to investigate the handling of Flynn’s case. As part of that process, the Justice Department produced to Flynn’s attorneys a series of emails and notes, including one handwritten note from a senior FBI official that mapped out internal deliberations about the purpose of the Flynn interview: “What’s our goal? Truth/admission or to get him to lie, so we can prosecute him or get him fired?” the official wrote.

Other documents show that the FBI had been prepared weeks before its interview of Flynn to drop its investigation into whether he was acting at the direction of Russia. Later that month, though, as the White House insisted that Flynn had never discussed sanctions with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, FBI officials grew alarmed by Flynn’s conversations with the diplomat and what he had communicated to the White House. The investigation remained open, and agents went to visit him in the White House on Jan. 24, 2017.

Justice Department officials visited the White House two days later to warn officials that they feared that Flynn was compromised and vulnerable to blackmail by Russia because of his account of what was said on the call. White House officials waited several weeks to oust him from the job, saying they’d concluded that Flynn had lied to them.

Flynn pleaded guilty that December, becoming among the first of the president’s aides to admit guilt in Mueller’s investigation. He acknowledged that he lied about his conversations with Kislyak, in which he encourage Russia not to retaliate against the U.S. for sanctions imposed by the Obama administration over election interference.

He provided such extensive cooperation that prosecutors said he was entitled to a sentence of probation instead of prison.

As it turned out, that sentencing hearing was abruptly cut short after Flynn, facing a stern rebuke from U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan, asked to be able to continue cooperating and earn credit toward a more lenient sentence.

Flynn’s misgivings about the case were already on display when his then-attorneys pointedly noted in their sentencing memo that the FBI had not warned him that it was against the law to lie when they interviewed him at the White House in January 2017.

Since then, though, he has hired new attorneys — including Sidney Powell, a conservative commentator and outspoken critic of Mueller’s investigation — who have taken a far more confrontational stance to the government. The lawyers have accused prosecutors of withholding documents and evidence they said was favorable to the case and repeatedly noted that one of the two agents who interviewed Flynn was fired from the FBI for having sent derogatory text messages about Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign.

(AP)



10 Responses

  1. Good, now Trump can give General Michael Flynn his old job at WH back. In order to restore trust of American people back to justice system DOJ must immediately put Obama, James Comey, Mueller and the rest of Deep State plotters in orange suits and charge them with treason.

  2. If these corrupt dirty “justice” department bureaucrats can do this to 3 star general and US President, why be surprised to what they did to Rubashkin. This episode demonstrates that “Justice” system can not be trusted if it exists in present form.

  3. If one wants to know what NAZI Germany’s press was like, read this AP article.

    Time for YWN. to hire some news writers!

    This case against Flynn was pure EVIL,

    They keep reminding us that Flynn “admitted to lying… They conveniently skip the fact that the Mueller/FBI completely BANKRUPT him and threatened to go after his son. So he did what a father would do and make a deal with the DEVIL including admitting to something he DID NOT DO, in order to save his SON.

    Now read this article and tell me these people are not EVIL

    They pretend to be surprised that his case was dropped. even claiming that AG Barr is too much in the pocket for TRUMP.

    EVIL

  4. After they destroyed his pristine career credentials and his family – left him dead and bereft of all his accomplishments, they conveniently case! He should sue them for defamation and for all his honestly earned credentials and honors!
    That’s Robert Mueller and the Democrats for you!

  5. What a mealy-mouthed piece by AP. The recent revelations completely exonerate him. He never committed any crime, and he has had his career ruined, his finances destroyed, and his health damaged by this criminal persecution, which we now know was done for one sole purpose: because he was an obstacle to the FBI plot against the President.

    Justice will not be done until he is made financially whole, and criminal charges are brought against the FBI agents and commanders who set him up, especially Peter Strzok, who unilaterally reversed the FBI decision to drop the whole investigation back in January 2017.

  6. On same day as this unfounded Bridgegate, both cases get exonerated. Now release Manfort immediately, and then go after each & every single one of the 33,000 bleached emails by Hillary, and prosecute and lock her up, 33,000 times no questions asked.

  7. Hopefully he’ll win a 100-million civil rights lawsuit against the officials who did this.

    Hopefully, the plot will continue to unravel that was coup against the President. It was connected to this.

    Hopefully, those bad actors (senior law enforcement officials under the previous administration) will face something for their crimes.

  8. Will Strzok and his lady friend now get indicted? Absolutely not! It works one way! That’s the swamp the president thought he could drain!

  9. 147, Bridgegate was not unfounded. On the contrary, everyone now admits the truth. Today’s decision explicitly acknowledges that it was corrupt. Bu not every corrupt act is a crime, let alone a federal crime, and this one was not.

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