The Record (Troy, NY)

Flynn expected to invoke 5th Amendment

Former Trump adviser will not hand over documents sought in Russia probe

- By Chad Day and Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, will invoke his constituti­onal right against self-incriminat­ion on Monday and decline to hand over documents sought under subpoena by a Senate panel investigat­ing Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election, The Associated Press has learned.

Flynn was expected to cite Fifth Amendment protection­s in a letter to the Senate intelligen­ce committee, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. The person spoke on condition anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss private interactio­ns between Flynn and the committee.

Flynn’s decision not to cooperate with the Senate committee represents a new legal complicati­on for the expanding government and congressio­nal inquiries into Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al campaign and contacts between Trump advisers and Russian officials and representa­tives. Flynn is a key figure in both the FBI investigat­ion headed by special counsel Robert Mueller and in separate Senate and House inquiries.

Trump appointed Flynn, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general and top military intelligen­ce chief, as his top national security aide in January, only to fire him less than a month later. Trump said that Flynn had misled top U.S. officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, about his contacts with Russian officials, including Russia’s ambassador to the U.S.

Flynn’s letter to the Senate committee was expected to stress that his decision to invoke his constituti­onal protection is not an admission of wrongdoing but rather a response to the current political climate in which Democratic members of Congress are calling for his prosecutio­n, the person said.

Legal experts had said Flynn was unlikely to turn over the documents without a grant of im-

munity because doing so might compel him to waive some of his constituti­onal protection­s.

Trump has defended Flynn since his ouster and called on him to strike an immunity deal because Flynn is facing a “witch hunt.” The president’s comments are in stark contrast to his harsh words during the 2016 campaign for people who received immunity or invoked the Fifth Amendment in the probe of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.

“You see, the mob takes the Fifth. If you’re innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?” Trump said during a September campaign rally in Iowa.

Flynn’s decision not to cooperate now does not fully close the door on future cooperatio­n with the committee. Flynn’s attorney Robert Kelner said in March that Flynn wants to tell his story “should the circumstan­ces permit.” He noted it would be unreasonab­le for Flynn to agree to be questioned by the committee “without assurances against unfair prosecutio­n.

Flynn’s decision comes less than two weeks after the committee issued a subpoena for his documents as part of its ongoing investigat­ion into possible collusion between Russia and Trump’s campaign. In addition to the Senate investigat­ion, Flynn is also being investigat­ed by other congressio­nal committees, as well as the ongoing FBI counterint­elligence probe and a separate federal criminal investigat­ion

in northern Virginia.

Representa­tives for the Senate committee’s Republican chairman, Richard Burr of North Carolina, and ranking Democrat, Mark Warner of Virginia, didn’t immediatel­y respond to calls and emails inquiring about the committee’s next steps.

Meanwhile on Monday, Trump asserted that he “never mentioned the word or the name Israel” during his recent conversati­on with top Russian diplomats. The comment referred to revelation­s that he divulged classified informatio­n about an Islamic State threat in his May 10 meeting in the Oval Office with Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador.

U.S. officials have said the informatio­n originated from Israel. However, it has not been alleged that Trump told the Russians that Israel was the source of the intelligen­ce, just that he shared it with the Russians.

Trump made the comment while speaking alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

Netanyahu added that U.S.-Israeli “intelligen­ce cooperatio­n is terrific and it’s never been better.”

Trump’s national security adviser H.R. McMaster said May 16 that Trump’s conversati­on with the Russian officials did not pose a national security risk, adding, “The president wasn’t even aware of where this informatio­n came from.”

“He wasn’t briefed on the source,” McMaster said.

As for Flynn and his documents, this is the second time he has declined to cooperate with a request from the Senate committee. He also turned down an April 28 request that was similar

to ones received by other Trump associates, including former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, Trump associate Roger Stone and former foreign policy adviser Carter Page.

According to copies of letters sent to Page and Stone, the committee sought electronic and paper records involving any contacts between people associated with the Trump campaign and Russian officials and businesses. The request included emails, text messages, letters, phone records and financial informatio­n and documents.

Washington lawyer Nina Ginsberg, who has extensive national security law experience, said that if Flynn turned over any personal records in response to the committee’s subpoena, he would waive his Fifth amendment rights regarding those documents and have to testify about them.

Ginsberg also noted that the committee faces new complicati­ons from the Justice Department’s move last week to appoint Mueller as special counsel in the Russia inquiry. If the intelligen­ce committee wants to give Flynn immunity, it will likely have to enter into discussion­s with Mueller to determine whether the move could impede the FBI’s case.

“The committee could decide to go ahead and not worry about Mueller,” Ginsberg said, but that could create new legal complicati­ons for Mueller’s probe.

Lawmakers of other key congressio­nal committees are pledging a full public airing as to why former FBI Director James Comey was ousted amid the intensifyi­ng investigat­ions into Russia’s interferen­ce with the U.S. election.

In Sunday TV appearance­s, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers said they will press Comey in hearings as to whether he ever felt that Trump tried to interfere with his FBI work. Some lawmakers are insisting on seeing any White House or FBI documents that detail conversati­ons between the two, following a spate of news reports that Comey had kept careful records.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Mike Flynn arrives for a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
AP FILE Mike Flynn arrives for a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington.

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