The Mercury News

Report: Flynn, Manafort pardons discussed

- By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> One of President Donald Trump’s attorneys floated the possibilit­y of pardoning two of the president’s former advisers caught up in the Russia probe in discussion­s with their lawyers last year, The New York Times reported Wednesday.

The newspaper, citing three anonymous people with knowledge of the discussion­s, said then-Trump attorney, John Dowd, raised the idea with attorneys for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Dowd, who recently resigned from Trump’s legal team, denied having the conversati­ons in an interview with the Times, saying, “There were no discussion­s. Period.” He did not respond to request for comment from The Associated Press.

According to the Times, the discussion with Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, took place last summer, months before Flynn took a plea deal and began cooperatin­g with special counsel Robert Mueller. The conversati­on with Reginald Brown, who represente­d Manafort at the time, took place ahead of Manafort’s indictment last October on charges of acting as an unregister­ed foreign agent and conspiring to launder money.

Reached Wednesday, Brown and Kelner declined to comment. The report provoked strong denials from the White House and Trump’s attorneys.

In a statement, attorney Ty Cobb, who represents the White House, said there have been no pardons discussed related to the Russia investigat­ion.

“I have only been asked about pardons by the press and have routinely responded on the record that no pardons are under discussion or under considerat­ion at the White House,” he said.

Trump personal attorney Jay Sekulow also said, “Never during the course of my representa­tion of the president have I had any discussion­s of pardons of any individual involved in this inquiry.”

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said she wasn’t aware of any discussion­s in which Trump directed Dowd to broach the subject of pardoning people involved in the special counsel’s investigat­ion.

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