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Senate intel panel subpoenas Michael Flynn documents

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WASHINGTON: The Senate intelligen­ce committee subpoenaed former Trump National Security Adviser Michael Flynn for documents related to the panel’s investigat­ion into Russia’s election meddling.

Sen. Richard Burr, the Republican chairman, and Sen. Mark Warner, the committee’s Democratic vice chairman, issued a joint statement saying the panel decided to issue the subpoena after Flynn, through his lawyer, declined to cooperate with an April 28 request to turn over the documents.

Flynn and other associates of President Donald Trump have received similar requests from the committee for informatio­n and documents over the past few weeks.

Copies of request letters sent to longtime Trump associate Roger Stone and former Trump foreign policy adviser Carter Page were shared with The Associated Press. Those letters, which were nearly identical, sought e-mails, text messages, letters, phone records or any other relevant informatio­n they have about meetings or contacts that they or any other individual affiliated with the Trump campaign had with Russian officials or representa­tives of Russian business interests. They also asked for informatio­n about any financial or real estate holdings related to Russia, including any since divested or sold.

Stone, Page, Flynn and former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort all received similar requests for informatio­n, a person familiar with the Senate investigat­ion said. That person spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the details of the committee’s investigat­ion.

The requests sent to Stone and Page covered documents and informatio­n from June 2015 through last Jan. 20.

During that period, Flynn accepted tens of thousands of dollars from a Russian state-sponsored television network. He later worked as a foreign agent on behalf of a Turkish businessma­n, while serving as a top Trump campaign adviser. It also covers the post-election time period in which Trump and his transition team decided to appoint Flynn as national security adviser.

Flynn was fired by Trump after less than one month on the job. The White House said Flynn misled Vice President Mike Pence and other top officials about his communicat­ions during the presidenti­al transition with Russia’s ambassador to the US.

The subpoena comes as both the Senate committee and its counterpar­t in the House are investigat­ing Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election and whether Trump associates colluded with those attempts to sway the election. Flynn’s Russia ties are also being scrutinize­d by the FBI as it conducts a similar investigat­ion.

Flynn attorney Robert Kelner declined to comment on the newly issued subpoena or say why Flynn declined to provide the informatio­n earlier. Flynn had previously been in talks with the committee about agreeing to be interviewe­d as long as he was granted immunity.

In March, Kelner said in a statement that Flynn had a “story to tell,” but said no reasonable person would agree to be questioned by the committee without “assurances against unfair prosecutio­n.”

Other congressio­nal committees and the Pentagon’s inspector general are also separately examining whether Flynn was fully forthcomin­g about his foreign contacts and earnings from organizati­ons linked to the government­s of Russia and Turkey.

The top Democrat and Republican on a House oversight committee have said that Flynn likely broke federal law by failing to get approval from the US government to accept foreign payments and not disclosing them after accepting them.

Among the payments they cited were more than $33,000 from RT, a Russian state-sponsored television network that US intelligen­ce officials have branded as a propaganda front for Russia’s government. The network paid Flynn for attending a December 2015 gala in Moscow during which Flynn was seated next to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 ??  ?? Ex-Defense Intelligen­ce Agency Director US Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn testifies before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on "Worldwide Threats" in Washington in this file photo. (Reuters)
Ex-Defense Intelligen­ce Agency Director US Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn testifies before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on "Worldwide Threats" in Washington in this file photo. (Reuters)

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