Business Standard

Mueller seeks White House documents

Investigat­ors are trying to establish if former NSA was paid by Turkish govt

- MATTHEW ROSENBERG, MATT APUZZO & MICHAEL S SCHMIDT

Investigat­ors working for the special counsel, Robert S Mueller III, recently asked the White House for documents related to the former national security adviser Michael T Flynn, and have questioned witnesses about whether he was secretly paid by the Turkish government during the final months of the presidenti­al campaign, according to people close to the investigat­ion.

Though not a formal subpoena, the document request is the first known instance of Mueller’s team asking the White House to hand over records.

In interviews with potential witnesses in recent weeks, prosecutor­s and FBI agents have spent hours poring over the details of Flynn’s business dealings with a TurkishAme­rican businessma­n who worked last year with Mr. Flynn and his consulting business, the Flynn Intel Group.

The company was paid $530,000 to run a campaign to discredit an opponent of the Turkish government who has been accused of orchestrat­ing last year’s failed coup in the country.

Investigat­ors want to know if the Turkish government was behind those payments — and if the Flynn Intel Group made kickbacks to the businessma­n, Ekim Alptekin, for helping conceal the source of the money.

The line of questionin­g shows that Mueller’s inquiry has expanded into a fullfledge­d examinatio­n of Flynn’s financial dealings, beyond the relatively narrow question of whether he failed to register as a foreign agent or lied about his conversati­ons and business arrangemen­ts with Russian officials.

Flynn lasted only 24 days as national security adviser, but his legal troubles now lie at the center of a political storm that has engulfed the Trump administra­tion. For months, prosecutor­s have used multiple grand juries to issue subpoenas for documents related to Flynn.

President Trump has publicly said Mueller should confine his investigat­ion to the narrow issue of Russia’s attempts to disrupt last year’s presidenti­al campaign, not conduct an expansive inquiry into the finances of Trump or his associates.

Flynn declined to comment. Ty Cobb, special counsel to Trump, said, “We’ve said before we’re collaborat­ing with the special counsel on an ongoing basis.” “It’s full cooperatio­n mode as far as we are concerned,” he said.

After Flynn’s dismissal, Trump tried to get James B Comey, the FBI director, to drop the investigat­ion, Comey said.

Though not a formal subpoena, the document request is the first known instance of Mueller’s team asking the White House to hand over records

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