Bangkok Post

Trump celebrates Flynn’s acquittal

PRESIDENT GETS AMMUNITION AGAINST BIDEN

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>>WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump claimed sweeping vindicatio­n on Friday over the Russian election meddling investigat­ion that he has long branded a hoax and a witch hunt, after the Justice Department dropped its prosecutio­n of his former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Attorney General Bill Barr’s deeply controvers­ial declaratio­n that there were never grounds to pursue Mr Flynn, a central target in the Russia investigat­ion, and that the FBI abused its powers, drew outrage across much of the legal community.

But it delivered to Mr Trump a powerful victory in his three-year campaign to convince Americans that the probe was a political inquisitio­n designed to delegitimi­se his presidency.

“Most people knew from the beginning, and they knew it was just a total hoax. It was a made-up story, a disgrace to our nation,” Mr Trump told Fox News.

“They tried to take down the President of the United States, a sitting, duly elected President of the United States before I even won,” he said.

Coming six months before he stands for reelection, Mr Barr’s move offered powerful ammunition that Trump indicated he would use against his Democratic opponent Joe Biden, who was vice president under president Barack Obama when the original FBI investigat­ion began in July 2016.

“These are dirty politician­s and dirty cops and some horrible people. And hopefully they’re going to pay a big price some day in the not too distant future,” Mr Trump said of all those involved in the Russia probe.

“If anyone thinks that (Obama) and Sleepy Joe Biden didn’t know what was going on, they have another thing coming” he said.

“I believe he and Biden... (were) involved in this all, very much.”

By closing the case on Mr Flynn, Mr Barr was plunging a knife into the heart of the justificat­ion for Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into alleged Trump campaign collusion with Russia.

When completed, Mr Mueller detailed numerous contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia which suggested collusion but did not add up to a crime.

Mr Mueller’s probe, which led to conviction­s or guilty pleas by five other Trump associates, had cast a cloud over

Mr Trump’s 2016 upset election victory and riveted the nation for two years.

Mr Mueller detailed nearly a dozen acts of alleged obstructio­n by Mr Trump, but his report neither exonerated the president nor concluded he had committed a crime.

But Mr Barr, who was appointed attorney general in 2018 after supplying legal arguments to the White House against the Mueller investigat­ion, declared that Mr Mueller had found no proof of actionable wrongdoing in the case.

By then, though, Mr Flynn had already pleaded guilty to one count of lying to the FBI over his Russia contacts and was facing sentencing.

The court had heard substantia­l evidence about his secret talks in Dec 2016 with Russia’s envoy to Washington to discuss deals that would undermine then-president Obama’s policy toward Moscow.

Yet in a nearly unheard-of reversal, on Thursday the Justice Department told the federal district court in Washington that Flynn’s guilty plea was moot because the investigat­ion was not justified to begin with.

“Our duty we think is to dismiss the case,” Mr Barr told CBS News.

“A crime cannot be establishe­d here. They did not have a basis for the counterint­elligence investigat­ion against Flynn.”

 ??  ?? FEELING VINDICATED: US President Donald Trump looks at an assembly line machine manufactur­ing protective masks in Phoenix, Arizona, last week.
FEELING VINDICATED: US President Donald Trump looks at an assembly line machine manufactur­ing protective masks in Phoenix, Arizona, last week.

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