Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Mueller turns up heat on Flynn

Probe examining Trump ex-aide’s ties with Turkey

- By Chris Megerian Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — In the lucrative world of Washington consulting, businesses often burnish their reputation­s by adding bold-faced names to their boards.

So after Michael Flynn was fired as head of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency in 2014 for what the Obama administra­tion said was mismanagem­ent, he asked former CIA Director R. James Woolsey Jr. to serve as an adviser for his new company, the Flynn Intel Group.

The position involved little work, according to a source with knowledge of the relationsh­ip, until a fateful encounter at the JW Marriott Essex House, a luxury hotel in midtown Manhattan, on Sept. 19, 2016, about seven weeks before the presidenti­al election.

The meeting, which involved Flynn, Woolsey and Turkey’s minister of foreign affairs, Mevlut Cavusoglu, is among those special counsel Robert Mueller is investigat­ing as he seeks to determine whether President Donald Trump’s current or former aides helped Russian meddling in the presidenti­al election or engaged in other misconduct.

The Essex House group discussed forcibly removing Fethullah Gulen, a dissident Turkish cleric who lives in exile in Pennsylvan­ia, and sending him back to Turkey, according to Woolsey. He later described the idea to the Wall Street Journal as “a covert step in the dead of night to whisk this guy away.”

Flynn was a senior adviser to Trump’s presidenti­al campaign at the time. His company also was being paid $530,000 to dig up and disseminat­e incriminat­ing informatio­n about Gulen, payments Flynn didn’t disclose until four months after the election.

Shortly after Trump won the election, he named Flynn as his national security adviser. The retired Army three-star general had led a distinguis­hed career in military intelligen­ce in Iraq and Afghanista­n, but most Americans knew him only for his angry denunciati­on of Hillary Clinton at the Republican National Convention, where he led the crowd in chants of “Lock her up!”

But in December 2016, during the transition, Flynn reportedly had a second meeting with Turkish government officials at the 21 Club, an upscale New York restaurant. They again discussed a Turkish proposal to forcibly remove Gulen and deliver him to Turkey, but now in exchange for up to $15 million, the Wall Street Journal reported this month.

NBC News separately reported that Mueller also is examining reports that Flynn was offered millions to help free Reza Zarrab, a wealthy gold trader close to Turkey’s ruling family. Zarrab was arrested in Miami in March 2016 on charges of conspiring to evade U.S. sanctions against Iran, money laundering and bank fraud. He was denied bail and remains in custody.

In a statement that day, Robert Kelner, Flynn’s lawyer, said he was breaking his usual silence to denounce “allegation­s about General Flynn, ranging from kidnapping to bribery, that are so outrageous and prejudicia­l that we are making an exception to our usual rule: they are false.”

Flynn was forced to resign as Trump’s national security adviser in February, after 24 days in the job, for misleading Vice President Mike Pence and other White House officials about his meetings with Sergey Kislyak, then-Russian ambassador in Washington.

But Flynn’s ties to Turkey — and the conversati­ons about Gulen — could be more problemati­c.

It is a felony to fail to register as a foreign agent, and potentiall­y a far more serious crime to agree to secretly act on another government’s behalf after being named to a senior post in the White House, or not to report a possible bribe.

Neglecting to register as a foreign agent is rarely prosecuted, but Mueller is willing to do so. Trump’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, and a top deputy, were charged last month with failing to register — as well as conspiracy and money laundering — despite filing retroactiv­e paperwork in June. They have pleaded not guilty.

If Flynn is charged, his ruptured business relationsh­ip with Woolsey, who has spoken to Mueller’s investigat­ors, could be an important part of the case.

Their falling out accelerate­d when Flynn filed a belated federal report in March disclosing his work as a foreign agent on behalf of Inovo BV, a Netherland­sbased company run by Ekim Alptekin, a Turkish businessma­n.

Inovo paid $530,000 to the Flynn Intel Group to dig up and disseminat­e incriminat­ing informatio­n about Gulen, work that “could be construed to have principall­y benefitted [sic] the Republic of Turkey,” the report said.

The disclosure report also said Flynn’s company would create an “investigat­ive laboratory” that would include a “former Director of United States Central Intelligen­ce Agency,” an apparent reference to Woolsey, who headed the spy agency from 1993 to 1995.

Woolsey left the Trump transition team in January and tried to distance himself from Flynn after the report was filed.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused Gulen, a former political ally who fled to the U.S. in 1999, for stirring dissent in the increasing­ly authoritar­ian country. Gulen, who heads a global network of schools and social groups, denies trying to destabiliz­e the country.

Erdogan’s pursuit of Gulen intensifie­d after a failed military coup in July 2016.

 ?? CHRIS KLEPONIS/GETTY-AFP ?? Michael Flynn resigned as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser after 24 days on the job in February.
CHRIS KLEPONIS/GETTY-AFP Michael Flynn resigned as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser after 24 days on the job in February.

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