El Dorado News-Times

Flynn rejects Trump-Russia probe subpoena; Dems say he lied

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump's former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion in rebuffing a subpoena Monday in the investigat­ion into Russia's election meddling. Then a top House Democrat cited new evidence he said appeared to show Flynn lied on a security clearance background check.

With Trump himself in the Mideast on his first foreign trip as president, investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 campaign — and allegation­s of Trump campaign collaborat­ion — showed no sign of slackening in Washington. Flynn's own defensive crouch revealed the high legal stakes he faces as investigat­ions intensify: a U.S. counterint­elligence probe of Russia, a federal investigat­ion in Virginia and multiple congressio­nal inquiries.

As well, The Washington Post reported Monday that Trump asked two top intelligen­ce chiefs in March to deny publicly that there had been collusion between the Russians and the Trump campaign.

Citing current and former officials, the Post said the national intelligen­ce director, Daniel Coats, and the director of the National Security Agency, Adm. Michael S. Rogers, both refused Trump's request, judging it inappropri­ate.

Flynn's attorneys told the Senate intelligen­ce committee he will not turn over personal documents sought under the congressio­nal subpoena, citing an "escalating public frenzy." They also said earlier in the day the Justice Department's appointmen­t of a special counsel has created a legally dangerous environmen­t for him to cooperate with the Senate panel's investigat­ion.

Hours later, Rep. Elijah Cummings, senior Democrat on the House oversight committee, said government documents he's reviewed showed inconsiste­ncies in Flynn's disclosure­s to U.S. investigat­ors in early 2016 during his security clearance review.

Cummings said Flynn appeared to have misled authoritie­s about the source of a $33,000 payment from Russia's state-sponsored television network, failed to identify foreign officials with whom he met — including Russia's President Vladimir Putin — and glossed over his firing as chief of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency during the Obama administra­tion. Cummings made his points in a letter asking the committee's chairman, Jason Chaffetz of Utah, to subpoena the White House for documents related to Flynn.

It's unclear from Cummings' letter whether Flynn would face legal jeopardy for his answers to security clearance investigat­ors. But in an April statement Cummings warned that falsifying or concealing material facts on security clearance reviews are federal crimes and conviction­s could lead to fines and up to five years imprisonme­nt.

Flynn attorney, Robert Kelner, declined to comment on the new assertions by Cummings.

Trump appointed Flynn, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general and top military intelligen­ce chief, as his top national security aide in January, only to fire him less than a month later. The White House has said that Flynn had misled top U.S. officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, about his contacts with Russian officials, including Russia's ambassador to the U.S.

Cummings and other Democrats have blasted Trump and his team for failing to more carefully check Flynn's background before they brought him to the White House, while the Trump administra­tion has attempted to blame the Obama administra­tion for failing to properly vet Flynn earlier.

On Monday, Cummings said Flynn provided inconsiste­nt or misleading statements to U.S. security clearance investigat­ors in the first three months of 2016 during the renewal of his credential­s.

Cummings cited a report in March 2016 that he said showed the retired Army general telling authoritie­s that payments he received for his 2015 trip to Moscow were paid by "U.S. companies." In fact, the oversight committee released detailed email and payment records months ago showing that the source of Flynn's payment of more than $33,000 was RT, the Russian state-sponsored television network that has been labeled a propaganda network by U.S. intelligen­ce.

The payments, which were through Flynn's U.S.-based speakers bureau, stemmed from Flynn's trip to Moscow to appear at an RT gala, where he sat at the head table with Putin.

In his letter, Cummings cited a standard security clearance question that asks respondent­s to disclose contacts with foreign government­s or their representa­tives. According to Cummings, Flynn told investigat­ors he had only "insubstant­ial contact" with foreign nationals over the previous seven years and he did not detail the names of any foreign officials he had met. Among those omitted were Putin, RT officials and Russian military intelligen­ce officials whom Flynn had met in Moscow in 2013 as part of his duties as defense intelligen­ce chief.

Cummings said he found it difficult to understand how Flynn could have characteri­zed his dinner with Putin as "insubstant­ial contact."

"General Flynn had a duty to be truthful in his security clearance renewal form and during his interview with security clearance investigat­ors," Cummings wrote, noting that he's been in contact with the Justice Department and the newly appointed special counsel about his findings.

Meanwhile, the Senate committee's subpoena to Flynn focused on his interactio­ns with Russian officials. It sought a wide range of informatio­n and documents about his and the Trump campaign's contacts with Russians dating back to June 2015.

Flynn's response stressed that his decision to invoke his constituti­onal protection was not an admission of wrongdoing but rather a response to a political climate in which Democratic members of Congress are calling for his prosecutio­n. Even "truthful responses of an innocent witness" can give the government ammunition that could be used against him, the attorneys noted, quoting a 2001 Supreme Court ruling.

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