The Sentinel-Record

Flynn invokes Fifth before Jan. 6 panel

- MARIANA ALFARO AND TOM HAMBURGER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d byJacqueli­ne Alemany and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post.

Michael Flynn, former President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, invoked his Fifth Amendment right Thursday during a deposition before the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by a proTrump mob.

Flynn — who was subpoenaed last November by the committee in connection with a meeting he had with Trump on Dec. 18, 2020, after the election — pleaded the Fifth “on advice of counsel,” his attorney David Warrington said in a statement.

Warrington argued that, during Thursday’s deposition, “committee staff insinuated that General Flynn’s decision to decline to answer their questions constitute­d an admission of guilt.”

“According to the Supreme Court, ‘no implicatio­n of guilt could be drawn from [one’s] invocation of his Fifth Amendment privilege,’ ” Warrington noted, accusing the committee of holding views on the amendment that are “in conflict with nearly 250 years of American jurisprude­nce.”

Flynn has perpetuate­d Trump’s claims that widespread voting fraud cost him the election, complaints embraced by the mob that stormed the Capitol to stop the confirmati­on of Joe Biden’s electoral college win.

Warrington said that the committee’s “insistence on proceeding with this deposition while this matter is still being litigated left General Flynn with no other choice” and called it “political theater.”

“Most of the questions lacked any relation to the legislativ­e purpose contained in House Resolution 503, and many were clearly sourced from fringe news and conspiracy websites and rumors. No American should have to endure such harassment by the legislativ­e branch of our government,” Warrington said.

Flynn, a retired lieutenant general who served as an adviser to the former president for the first 22 days of his administra­tion, was subpoenaed by the committee last year along with five other top Trump advisers. According to the committee, all reportedly participat­ed in discussion­s about challengin­g the election results.

In its letter to Flynn, the committee asked specifical­ly about his attendance at the Dec. 18 meeting in the Oval Office “during which participan­ts discussed seizing voting machines, declaring a national emergency, invoking certain national security emergency powers and continuing to spread the message” that the 2020 election was tainted by fraud.

The letter noted that the previous day, Flynn had spoken with a Newsmax TV interviewe­r about seizing voting machines, foreign influence in the election and the purported precedent for deploying military troops and declaring martial law to “rerun” the election.

On March 1, the White House Counsel’s Office informed Flynn and former Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro that President Biden would not back claims of executive privilege to shield them from testifying.

In response to the White House counsel, Warrington said his client had not asserted executive privilege in connection with the select committee’s subpoena. In addition, Warrington said his client had never refused to appear before the panel.

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