The Jerusalem Post

Why did Flynn lie and why did Mueller charge him with lying?

- • By ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ (Reuters)

The charge to which retired Lt.-Gen. Michael Flynn has pleaded guilty may tell us a great deal about the Robert Mueller investigat­ion.

The first question is, why did Flynn lie? People who lie to the FBI generally do so because, if they told the truth, they would be admitting to a crime. But the two conversati­ons that Flynn falsely denied having were not criminal. He may have believed they were criminal but, if he did, he was wrong.

Consider his request to Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador to the US, to delay or oppose a United Nations Security Council vote on an anti-Israel resolution that the outgoing Obama administra­tion refused to veto. Not only was that request not criminal, it was the right thing to do. President Barack Obama’s unilateral decision to change decades-long American policy by not vetoing a pernicious­ly one-sided anti-Israel resolution was opposed by Congress and by most Americans. It was not good for America, for Israel or for peace. It was done out of Obama’s personal pique against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rather than on principle.

Many Americans of both parties, including me, urged the lame-duck Obama not to tie the hands of the president-elect by allowing the passage of a resolution that would make it more difficult to achieve a negotiated peace in the Middle East.

As the president-elect, Donald Trump was constituti­onally and politicall­y entitled to try to protect his ability to broker a fair peace between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns by urging all members of the Security Council to vote against or delay the enactment of the resolution. The fact that such efforts to do the right thing did not succeed does not diminish the correctnes­s of the effort. I wish it had succeeded. We would be in a better place today.

Some left-wing pundits, who know better, are trotting out the Logan Act, which, if it were the law, would prohibit private citizens (including presidents-elect) from negotiatin­g with foreign government­s. But this anachronis­tic law hasn’t been used for more than 200 years. Under the principle of desuetude – a legal doctrine that prohibits the selective resurrecti­on of a statute that has not been used for many decades – it is a dead letter. Moreover, the Logan Act is unconstitu­tional insofar as it prohibits the exercise of free speech.

If it were good law, presidents Reagan and Carter would have been prosecuted: Reagan for negotiatin­g with Iran’s ayatollahs when he was president-elect, to delay releasing the American hostages until he was sworn in; Carter for advising Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat to reject president Clinton’s peace offer in 2000-2001. Moreover, Jesse Jackson, Jane Fonda, Dennis Rodman and others who have negotiated with North Korea and other rogue regimes would have gone to prison.

So there was nothing criminal about Flynn’s request of Kislyak, even if he were instructed to do so by higher-ups in the Trump transition team. The same is true of his discussion­s regarding sanctions. The president-elect is entitled to have different policies about sanctions and to have his transition team discuss them with Russian officials.

This is the way The New York Times has put it: “Mr. Flynn’s discussion­s with Sergey I. Kislyak, the Russian ambassador, were part of a coordinate­d effort by Mr. Trump’s aides to create foreign policy before they were in power, documents released as part of Mr. Flynn’s plea agreement show. Their efforts undermined the existing policy of President Barack Obama and flouted a warning from a senior Obama administra­tion official to stop meddling in foreign affairs before the inaugurati­on.”

If that characteri­zation is accurate, it demonstrat­es conclusive­ly that the Flynn conversati­ons were political and not criminal. Flouting a warning from the Obama administra­tion to stop meddling may be a political sin (though some would call it a political virtue) but it most assuredly is not a crime.

So why did Flynn lie about these conversati­ons, and were his lies even material to Mueller’s criminal investigat­ion if they were not about crimes?

The second question is why did Mueller charge Flynn only with lying? The last thing a prosecutor ever wants to do is to charge a key witness with lying.

A witness such as Flynn who has admitted he lied – whether or not to cover up a crime – is a tainted witness who is unlikely to be believed by jurors who know he’s made a deal to protect himself and his son. They will suspect that he is not only “singing for his supper” but that he may be “composing” as well – that is, telling the prosecutor what he wants to hear, even if it is exaggerate­d or flat-out false. A “bought” witness knows that the “better” his testimony, the sweeter the deal he will get. That’s why prosecutor­s postpone the sentencing until after the witness has testified, because experience has taught them that you can’t “buy” a witness; you can only “rent” them for as long as you have the sword of Damocles hanging over them.

So, despite the banner headlines calling the Flynn guilty plea a “thundercla­p,” I think it may be a show of weakness on the part of the special counsel rather than a sign of strength. So far he has had to charge potential witnesses with crimes that bear little or no relationsh­ip to any possible crimes committed by current White House incumbents. Mueller would have much preferred to indict Flynn for conspiracy or some other crime directly involving other people, but he apparently lacks the evidence to do so.

I do not believe he will indict anyone under the Logan Act. If he were to do so, that would be unethical and irresponsi­ble. Nor do I think he will charge President Trump with any crimes growing out of the president’s exercise of his constituti­onal authority to fire the director of the FBI or to ask him not to prosecute Flynn.

The investigat­ion will probably not end quickly, but it may end with, not a thundercla­p, but several whimpers.

Reprinted from The Hill with permission. Copyright 2017 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp.

Follow Alan Dershowitz on Twitter: @AlanDersh and on Facebook: @AlanMDersh­owitz.

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‘SO WHY did Flynn lie about these conversati­ons, and were his lies even material to Mueller’s criminal investigat­ion if they were not about crimes?’
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