Los Angeles Times

Flynn’s payments under scrutiny

Lawmakers from both parties say he may have broken the law.

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com Times staff writer Noah Bierman contribute­d to this report.

Lawmakers say Trump’s former national security advisor did not disclose income from Turkey and Russia and may have violated the law.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, may have violated the law when he failed to disclose large fees from business dealings in Russia and Turkey shortly before he joined the White House, the leaders of the House Oversight Committee said Tuesday.

The disclosure by Reps. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) and Elijah E. Cummings (DMd.) marks the first potential legal fallout from the swirl of investigat­ions by congressio­nal committees and the FBI into whether any of Trump’s current or former aides coordinate­d with Russian authoritie­s before or after November’s election.

There is no indication that Flynn, a retired Army three-star general who once headed the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency under President Obama, is a target in the FBI counter-intelligen­ce inquiry, which began last summer.

But his apparent failure to obtain Pentagon permission to receive foreign payments, or to disclose them on required vetting forms, could violate several statutes, including a constituti­onal ban on foreign payments to retired military officers, known as the emoluments clause, according to Chaffetz and Cummings.

The two lawmakers said that Flynn did not seek permission from the Pentagon, as is required, to accept a $33,750 fee to attend a December 2015 gala in Moscow sponsored by RT, a staterun TV network, and to attend a lunch where Flynn sat beside Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In all, Cummings said, Flynn was paid more than $67,000 by Russian companies before the election.

Flynn’s company, Flynn Intel Group, also received $530,000 for work it did last fall — at the height of the campaign — that benefited the government in Turkey, the committee has found. He retroactiv­ely disclosed that work last month on a federal disclosure form.

Omitting informatio­n from a federal disclosure form required for a security clearance can result in criminal penalties for false statements of up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

“As a former military officer, you simply cannot take money from Russia, Turkey or anybody else,” Chaffetz, the committee chairman, said after receiving a Pentagon briefing about what Flynn had disclosed about his Moscow trip. “And it appears as if he did take that money. It was inappropri­ate, and there are repercussi­ons for a violation of law.”

The lawmakers’ comments raised the possibilit­y that Flynn could face prosecutio­n — at a minimum for failure to disclose the payments — and added to the mounting questions about whether he and several other Trump associates may have violated the law in their dealings with Russia.

When Flynn filed a form to renew his security clearance in early 2016, shortly after he’d returned from Moscow, he did not disclose the money he’d been paid, Cummings said. He said the panel had obtained Flynn’s SF 86, the form required for a security clearance.

“There is no evidence anywhere in these documents that he reported the funds he received for his trip. There is also no evidence that he sought permission to obtain these funds from a foreign source,” Cummings said.

Flynn was a close confidant of Trump during the campaign and famously led the Republican National Convention crowd last summer in chants of “Lock her up!” referring to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

Flynn was forced to resign in February after less than a month as Trump’s top national security aide after news reports revealed he had misled White House officials about his conversati­ons in December with Russia’s ambassador about easing U.S. sanctions on Russia.

The revelation by the House Oversight Committee, which has jurisdicti­on over financial disclosure issues, also deepened the troubles the White House faces on Capitol Hill, where the GOP-led House and Senate intelligen­ce committees are conducting separate investigat­ions into Russia’s interferen­ce in last year’s election.

The Senate Judiciary Committee joined the fray on Tuesday. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said the subcommitt­ee he leads on crime and terrorism would hold a hearing May 8 to “investigat­e Russia’s interferen­ce” in the election, at which it would hear from James R. Clapper, former director of national intelligen­ce, and Sally Yates, former acting attorney general.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer sought to distance the administra­tion from Flynn’s difficulti­es Tuesday, telling reporters that whether Flynn broke the law was “a question for him and a law enforcemen­t agency.”

“I don’t know what he filled out and what he did or didn’t do,” Spicer said. “He filled that form out prior to coming here, so it would be up to the committee and other authoritie­s to look at that.”

The White House recently turned down the House Oversight Committee’s request for any documents mentioning Flynn’s foreign contacts or payments before or while he was national security advisor.

In an April 19 letter released by the committee, Marc T. Short, the White House director of legislativ­e affairs, said the White House did not have documents concerning Flynn’s foreign contacts before he joined the administra­tion, and would not provide any papers on his contacts during his brief White House tenure.

That response irked Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the committee.

“We have received no internal documents relating to what Gen. Flynn reported to the White House when they vetted him to become national security advisor,” he said.

Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, said in a statement that his client told the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency about his 2015 trip to Moscow. Kelner’s statement did not address whether Flynn disclosed the fee he was offered by the Russian government TV network.

As the former director of the Pentagon’s spying arm, Flynn was covered by regulation­s requiring him to inform the Defense Department prior to traveling overseas and about any contacts with officials from government­s that are U.S. adversarie­s, officials said.

“Gen. Flynn briefed the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency … extensivel­y regarding the RT speaking event trip both before and after the trip, and he answered any questions that were posed by DIA concerning the trip during those briefings,” Kelner said.

The lobbying disclosure form Flynn filled out retroactiv­ely last month revealed his company worked for Inovo, a firm with connection­s to Turkey’s government.

In an accompanyi­ng letter, Flynn’s lawyer acknowledg­ed that the arrangemen­t “could be construed to have principall­y benefited the republic of Turkey.”

The business arrangemen­t began in September and was terminated after the election in November.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? AT ISSUE are Michael Flynn’s business dealings with Turkey and Russia.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press AT ISSUE are Michael Flynn’s business dealings with Turkey and Russia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States