The Mercury News Weekend

Trump praises ‘tormented’ Flynn, raises speculatio­n about pardon

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WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump voiced strong support Thursday for his former national security adviser Michael Flynn, raising speculatio­n that a pardon may be coming after Flynn’s lawyers disclosed internal FBI documents they claim show the FBI tried to “intentiona­lly frame” him.

Trump said he believes Flynn should now be cleared in court, but if that doesn’t happen, he as president has “a different type of power.”

“It looks to me like Michael Flynn would be exonerated based on everything I see,” Trump told reporters Thursday. “I’m not the judge, but I have a different type of power. But I don’t know that anybody would have to use that power. I think he’s exonerated.”

Trump has long said he is considerin­g pardoning Flynn, who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador to the United States. The president spent Wednesday night and Thursday morning retweeting supportive statements of Flynn and condemned the FBI’s investigat­ion into the retired general.

“They came at him with 15 buses and he’s standing in the middle of the highway. What they did to this man,” Trump said at an earlier event at the White House, without specifying what he meant. “They tormented him. They destroyed him. But he’s going to come back.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called into Fox News Channel to react to the release of the FBI documents, saying, “If true, it is extremely troubling.”

“If all this proves to be true, you will have, certainly, a major, major error on the part of top leadership at the FBI, which could well warrant additional charges against them,” he said.

Lawyers for Flynn over the last two days released a series of internal correspond­ence obtained through a Justice Department review of the handling of the case. They contend the documents bolster their allegation­s that Flynn was set up to lie when he was questioned at the White House three years ago, and show that agents were prepared to drop an investigat­ion into him just weeks before they set out to question him.

Still, the documents don’t directly address the central allegation in the case — that Flynn lied to the FBI. It’s also unclear how much significan­ce they will carry with the judge, who has already publicly scolded Flynn and rejected many defense allegation­s of prosecutor­ial misconduct. The judge, Emmet Sullivan, has not ruled on Flynn’s request to withdraw his guilty plea.

Among the documents is a redacted internal memo from Jan. 4, 2017, saying the FBI was closing out its investigat­ion into whether a subject with the code name of Crossfire Razor was an agent of a foreign power or acting under the direction of Russia. The subject is described as a Trump campaign foreign policy adviser who traveled to Russia in 2015. Flynn’s attorney Sidney Powell confirmed Thursday that Crossfire Razor was Flynn.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lawyers for Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, claim recently released documents show the FBI tried to “intentiona­lly frame” him.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lawyers for Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, claim recently released documents show the FBI tried to “intentiona­lly frame” him.

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