Los Angeles Times

Pentagon investigat­es Flynn income

- By David S. Cloud

The probe aims to determine whether the retired Army general violated military rules by accepting payments from Russia.

WASHINGTON — Former national security advisor Michael Flynn’s legal troubles worsened Thursday when a House committee disclosed that the Pentagon inspector general is investigat­ing whether the retired Army three-star general violated military rules by accepting foreign payments.

Flynn was warned in 2014, when he was retiring from the military, not to accept payments from foreign government­s without advance approval from the Pentagon, according to documents released Thursday by a House committee.

Flynn subsequent­ly accepted more than $500,000 from a Russian government­owned broadcasti­ng company and from a lobbying company representi­ng Turkey, according to the committee.

The Pentagon inspector general is investigat­ing whether Flynn “failed to obtain required approval” to accept those funds, acting Inspector General Glenn A. Fine wrote in an April 11 letter to the House Oversight Committee, which is investigat­ing Flynn’s foreign business ties.

Retired military officers found to have violated the prohibitio­n on foreign payments can be ordered to return pension payments during the time of the violations, according to the Pentagon.

The committee inquiry is one of several in Congress looking at whether any of President Trump’s current or former aides improperly coordinate­d with Russian operatives during last year’s presidenti­al campaign. The FBI is conducting a separate investigat­ion.

Earlier this week, the House committee said that Flynn also failed to disclose the foreign payments when he signed a government disclosure form required to renew his government security clearance in early 2016, shortly after he had returned from Moscow.

“These documents raise grave questions about why Gen. Flynn concealed the payments he received from foreign sources after he was warned explicitly by the Pentagon,” Rep. Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, the top Democrat on the committee, said Thursday.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (RUtah), the committee chairman, separately released a letter that asked the acting Army secretary for a “final determinat­ion” as to whether Flynn had violated the law regarding the foreign payments.

Military officers, including retirees, are barred under the Constituti­on from accepting payments, gifts or items of value from foreign government­s without congressio­nal permission.

After leaving the military, Flynn opened a government relations company and became a top advisor to the Trump campaign last year. Trump subsequent­ly named him White House national security advisor.

But Flynn was forced to resign after less than a month when news reports revealed he had misled Vice President Mike Pence and other top officials about his conversati­ons in December with Russia’s ambassador about easing U.S. sanctions on Russia.

The Defense Intelligen­ce Agency, the Pentagon spy agency that Flynn headed before he retired, said that it had found no evidence that Flynn had sought permission to accept foreign government payments.

The agency did not locate any records of Flynn “seeking permission or approval for the receipt of money from a foreign source,” Christine Kapnisi, the agency’s acting head of congressio­nal relations, said in an April 11 letter to the House committee.

Flynn accepted a $33,750 fee to attend a December 2015 gala in Moscow sponsored by RT, a Russian state-run TV network, and to attend a lunch where he sat beside Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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

Flynn was reminded when he retired that accepting unauthoriz­ed payments from foreign government­s was prohibited, according to the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency letter.

He “was advised of the legal restrictio­ns concerning foreign compensati­ons and instructed to report any potential receipt of compensati­ons in advance,” the agency said.

Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, said that his client briefed the agency before and after the Moscow event and that his appearance was arranged by a firm Flynn had retained to set up speaking events.

“Gen. Flynn provided two briefings to the Department — one before and one after” his trip to Russia, Kelner said in a statement. “The Department was fully aware of the trip.”

david.cloud@latimes.com

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? OUSTED national security advisor Michael Flynn may have violated U.S. military rules.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press OUSTED national security advisor Michael Flynn may have violated U.S. military rules.

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