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Former Trump adviser pleads guilty to lying to FBI

- By Eric Tucker And Chad Day

Former national security adviser Michael Flynn pleaded guilty Friday to making false statements to the FBI, the first Trump White House official to make a guilty plea so far in a wide-ranging investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert Mueller.

Court documents show Flynn, an early and vocal supporter on the campaign trail of President Donald Trump whose business dealings and foreign interactio­ns made him a central focus of Mueller’s investigat­ion, will admit to lying about his conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador to the United States during the transition period before Trump’s inaugurati­on.

The expected guilty plea makes the retired Army lieutenant general the first person to have actually worked in the Trump White House to face formal charges in the investigat­ion, which is examining possible co-ordination between Russia and the Trump campaign to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.

Flynn has been under investigat­ion for a wide range of allegation­s including lobbying work on behalf of Turkey, but the fact that he was charged only with a single count of false statements suggests he is cooperatin­g with Mueller’s investigat­ion in exchange for leniency. He was present for consequent­ial moments in the campaign, the transition period and the early days of Trump’s presidency, campaign, making him a valuable potential tool for prosecutor­s and agents.

Early on in his administra­tion, Trump had taken a particular interest in the status of the Flynn investigat­ion. Former FBI Director James Comey, whose firing in May precipitat­ed the appointmen­t of Mueller as special counsel, has said Trump had asked him in a private Oval Office meeting to consider ending the investigat­ion into Flynn. Comey has said the encounter unnerved him so much that he prepared an internal memo about it. The White House has denied that assertion.

Flynn, who was interviewe­d by the FBI just days after Trump’s inaugurati­on, was forced to resign in February after White House officials said he had misled them about whether he had discussed sanctions with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak. Administra­tion officials said Flynn had not discussed sanctions that had been imposed on Russia in part over election meddling. In charging Flynn, prosecutor­s made clear they believe that claim to be false.

Days after Flynn’s interview with the FBI, thenacting attorney general Sally Yates alerted White House counsel Don Mcgahn that Flynn was potentiall­y compromise­d and vulnerable to blackmail because of discrepanc­ies between public assertions — including by Vice-- President Mike Pence — that Flynn and Kislyak had not discussed sanctions and the reality of what occurred.

Mueller’s team announced charges in October against three other Trump campaign officials, former chairman Paul Manafort and his business associate Rick Gates, and a former campaign foreign policy adviser, George Papadopoul­os.

Papadopoul­os pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his own foreign contacts.

Signs of Flynn co-operating with Mueller’s team surfaced in the past week as his lawyers told the legal team they could no longer discuss informatio­n about the case with them.

Scheduled grand jury testimony regarding Flynn was also postponed by prosecutor­s.

The two-page charging document makes reference to two separate conversati­ons with Kislyak and to separate false statements prosecutor­s say he made regarding that communicat­ion.

Besides a Dec. 29 conversati­on about sanctions, prosecutor­s also cite an earlier December meeting, in which Flynn asked Kislyak to delay or defeat a UN Security Council resolution. That appears to refer to the body’s vote a day later to condemn Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank.

In a striking rupture with past practice, the Obama administra­tion refrained from vetoing the condemnati­on, opting instead to abstain. The rest of the 15-nation council, including Russia, voted unanimousl­y against Israel.

 ?? AP photo ?? A protestor stands outside federal court in Washington as former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn is inside.
AP photo A protestor stands outside federal court in Washington as former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn is inside.
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