Chattanooga Times Free Press

SOMEONE IN FLYNN CASE SHOULD PAY

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WASHINGTON — Let’s be clear: A crime was committed in the Michael Flynn case. But that crime was committed not by the retired general, but by someone who leaked the classified details of his conversati­ons with then-Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

The Justice Department was correct to drop charges against Flynn for lying to the FBI about his communicat­ions with Kislyak. The case was reviewed by Jeff Jensen, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri with two decades of experience as a prosecutor and FBI special agent, and the resulting 108-page motion to dismiss is a searing indictment of FBI misconduct.

The department found there was no legal justificat­ion for the FBI to question Flynn in the first place, because the interview was “untethered to, and unjustifie­d by, the FBI’s counterint­elligence investigat­ion” of Flynn. The FBI had decided to close that inquiry because of an “absence of any derogatory informatio­n.” That meant Flynn pleaded guilty to making false statements that were not “material” to any investigat­ion. For Flynn to have committed a crime, his statement had to have been “not simply false, but ‘materially’ false with respect to a matter under investigat­ion.” In his plea, Flynn “stipulated to the essential element of materialit­y” without being informed the FBI had already cleared him in the underlying investigat­ion.

That fact alone is disgracefu­l. Even more outrageous is that the bureau interrogat­ed Flynn about communicat­ions the Justice Department says were “entirely appropriat­e.” He was the incoming national security adviser, and his “request that Russia avoid ‘escalating’ tensions in response to U.S. sanctions … was consistent with him advocating for, not against, the interests of the United States.” There was nothing in the calls to suggest he was being “directed and controlled by … the Russian federation.” And the FBI did not need his recollecti­ons of the calls because it had word-for-word transcript­s.

The Justice Department withdrew the charges against Flynn. The fact the judge in the case is refusing to accept the department’s decision — and has appointed a former judge to contest it — only perpetuate­s the FBI’s miscarriag­e of justice.

Instead of pursuing Flynn for a crime he did not commit, we should be focused on finding the individual who did commit a serious felony by leaking the classified details of Flynn’s conversati­ons with Kislyak. And thanks to acting national intelligen­ce director Richard Grenell, we finally have a list of suspects.

Most government officials with access to the transcript­s would not have known Flynn was on the call, because when a U.S. citizen is the subject of “incidental collection” during surveillan­ce of a foreign national, their name is “masked.” Only certain officials had the authority to request a name be unmasked. Until now, we did not know which officials had done so. But on Wednesday, the Office of the Director

of National Intelligen­ce released a list of more than three dozen former Obama administra­tion officials who submitted unmasking requests that revealed Flynn’s identity.

Only eight of those received informatio­n after the intelligen­ce community discovered his communicat­ions with Kislyak on Jan. 4, 2017: former U.N. ambassador Samantha Power; former national intelligen­ce director James R. Clapper Jr.; former treasury secretary Jack Lew; former White House chief of staff Denis McDonough; deputy national intelligen­ce director Michael Dempsey; former deputy national intelligen­ce director Stephanie L. O’Sullivan; a CIA official whose name is redacted; and former vice president Joe Biden.

The crime of leaking the details about Flynn and Kislyak’s call could only have been committed by a small universe of people who had access to unmasked intelligen­ce on Flynn. We don’t know whether it was someone on the list. That is for U.S. Attorney John Durham, who is investigat­ing the origins of the Russia probe, to determine. But this much is certain: Obama administra­tion officials leaked unmasked intelligen­ce about Flynn to the media. The fact those individual­s have gone unpunished for three years, while Flynn has endured a legal hell, is appalling.

 ??  ?? Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen

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