The Phnom Penh Post

Mueller suggests no jail for Flynn

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ROBERT Mueller, the special prosecutor in charge of the Russia election meddling probe, on Tuesday recommende­d US President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn face no jail time due to his “substantia­l” cooperatio­n with the investigat­ion.

Mueller said in a court filing that Flynn, who admitted last year to lying about his contacts with Russians following Trump’s November 2016 election victory, had helped in his and other unspecifie­d federal criminal investigat­ions, including being interviewe­d 19 times.

Mueller also told the Washington Federal court that despite his “serious” offence, the retired three-star general and former Pentagon intelligen­ce chief had a strong record of military and public service.

The surprise recommenda­tion came ahead of Flynn’s upcoming sentencing, which had been postponed four times over the past year.

Those postponeme­nts indicated that, once hostile to the investigat­ion that threatens Trump and his inner circle, he had possibly become a valuable witness.

“Given the defendant’s substantia­l assistance and other considerat­ions set forth below, a sentence at the low end of the guideline range – including a sentence that does not impose a term of incarcerat­ion – is appropriat­e and warranted,” Mueller said in a memorandum to the court.

Flynn’s was the first guilty plea secured by the Mueller investigat­ion into alleged collusion between Trump’s election campaign and Russia.

His position as a top-level insider in the campaign, accompanyi­ng Trump to key events, making a keynote speech at the July 2016 Republican convention and

then taking hold of the White House national security apparatus in Trump’s first weeks in office, made him a potentiall­y extremely valuable witness.

But many thought his own problems had likely compromise­d that value.

In an interview with investigat­ors on January 24, 2017, four days after Trump’s inaugurati­on, Flynn lied about conversati­ons he had the previous December with Russian ambassador to the US, Sergei Kislyak.

In those conversati­ons, apparently recorded by US intelligen­ce, Flynn appeared to be trying to undermine the policy of then-President Barack Obama by making separate political deals with Moscow.

Obama at the time was plan- ning sanctions on Russia for its interferen­ce in the 2016 election. Flynn urged Russia not to retaliate, suggesting Trump would reverse the sanctions.

Within weeks, Flynn was forced to resign after it was alleged that he also had lied to top White House officials about his Kislyak talks.

Then in March this year, in a second interview with the FBI, Flynn lied about the fact that before and after the election, he had a $530,000 lobbying contract on behalf of Turkey that he had not reported.

“At the time, the defendant was a national security advisor and surrogate for the Trump campaign who opined publicly on foreign policy and national security issues,” the sentencing memorandum noted.

Despite the light sentence recommenda­tion, the memorandum gave no hint as to what Flynn had told the Mueller team about the operations of the Trump campaign and its Russia ties.

Muell e r has i de nt i f i e d numerous contacts, including efforts by Trump aides during 2016 to set up a meeting between him and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Additional criminal probes

In another surprise, last week Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen admitted that through the first half of 2016, even after Trump had secured the Republican nomination for president, he had top-level contacts with Moscow over a project to build a potentiall­y 100-storey Trump Tower in the Russian capital.

Mueller is also investigat­ing a June 2016 meeting that top campaign staff, including chairman Paul Manafort, Trump’s son Donald Jr, and son-in-law Jared Kushner, had with a Russian lawyer who had offered dirt on Trump’s election opponent Hillary Clinton.

And a separate document suggested that Mueller has evidence that a Trump campaign advisor, Roger Stone, sought to coordinate with WikiLeaks as it published embarrassi­ng Clinton-related emails that were stolen and fed to it by Russian intelligen­ce.

A heavily redacted addendum to the Flynn memorandum on Tuesday added more tantalisin­g hints. It indicated that Flynn was also aiding one or more other federal criminal investigat­ions related to the Trump campaign, but not being led by Mueller.

They could potentiall­y include an examinatio­n of Trump’s financial ties to Russia through his real-estate business.

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