Michael Flynn wins as appeals court orders judge to drop case
Michael Flynn won a major victory Wednesday as an appeals court panel ordered the federal judge to dismiss the charges against disgraced former U.S. national security adviser.
A three-judge panel on the Washington, D.C., Circuit
Court of Appeals ordered Judge Emmet Sullivan to end the case against Flynn after prosecutors filed a motion to dismiss the charges that he lied about conversations with a Russian envoy during the Trump transition.
President Donald Trump immediately hailed the ruling as “Great!”
The president fired Flynn in 2017 after hearing about his lies but has since hailed him as a persecuted hero.
“What happened to General
Flynn should never happen again ... he was persecuted,” Trump told reporters later.
Sullivan made an “unprecedented intrusions on individual liberty and the Executive’s charging authority,” by questioning whether to accept the prosecutions move, appeals court Judge Neomi Rao, a Trump appointee, wrote in the 2-1 majority opinion.
Flynn, who pleaded guilty lying to the FBI, will now be cleared of all charges unless Sullivan seeks to appeal the ruling.
Flynn was the only White House official charged in Mueller’s investigation into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. He pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI days after the president’s January
2017 inauguration about conversations he had had during the presidential transition period with the Russian ambassador.
The Justice Department moved to dismiss the case in May as part of a broader effort by Attorney General William Barr to scrutinize, and even undo, some of the decisions reached during the Russia investigation, which he has increasingly disparaged.