Texarkana Gazette

Judge who oversaw Flynn case fighting to rehear it

- Michael McGough

U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan, who had the case of former national security adviser Michael Flynn yanked out of his hands by a federal appeals court panel, is not through fighting. On Thursday, Sullivan’s lawyers asked the full U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia to rehear the case and reconsider the ruling of the three-judge panel. (On Friday the court stayed the panel’s order pending considerat­ion of Sullivan’s petition.)

It’s vital that the full appeals court accede to Sullivan’s request, even if the ultimate result is that Sullivan accepts a motion by the Justice Department that he dismiss the charge that Flynn lied to the FBI about his conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador during the presidenti­al transition. Flynn pleaded guilty in 2017, but later moved to withdraw his plea.

As I wrote last month, the overarchin­g issue in this legal melodrama isn’t whether there is a good reason to dismiss the Flynn case — though there are powerful arguments against dismissal. Rather, the key question is whether Flynn got special treatment because he’s a friend of President Donald Trump. (Never mind that in 2017 Trump tweeted that “I had to fire General Flynn because he lied to the Vice President and the FBI.”) Selective exoneratio­n is just as disturbing as selective prosecutio­n.

I don’t mean to minimize the importance of the legal arguments in this tangled affair. In their petition for a rehearing, Sullivan’s lawyers make specific points grounded in precedent about why a three-judge panel was wrong to issue an order known as a writ of mandamus to force Sullivan to dismiss the Flynn case.

Before the panel intervened, Sullivan was mulling whether to grant the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the charge and had appointed a former federal judge, John Gleeson, to make the case against dismissal.

In a filing with Sullivan’s court, Gleeson said that the move to dismiss the case represente­d a “gross abuse of prosecutor­ial power.” He added that the government “has engaged in highly irregular conduct to benefit a political ally of the president.”

In any other administra­tion, that claim might have sounded farfetched. But Trump has made it clear that he thinks the Justice Department ought to go easy on his friends and prosecute his political opponents.

Although Attorney General William Barr pushed back at Trump’s tweeting about the Justice Department, he has intervened not only in the Flynn case but also in the sentencing of Trump associate Roger Stone, supporting a softening in a sentencing recommenda­tion for the self-described “dirty trickster.” (Barr reiterated last week in an ABC News interview that he thought the Stone prosecutio­n was “righteous” and that he approved of the sentence a judge ultimately handed down. But Trump commuted Stone’s sentence on Friday.)

The insanely intricate legal issues in this unusual case more than justify a review by the full appeals court. But so does the perception that Flynn received special treatment.

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