Former official Yates will testify about Flynn, Russia
WASHINGTON — An Obama administration Justice Department official will testify to Congress Monday about the most explosive contacts to emerge so far between President Donald Trump’s former top aides and senior Russian officials.
Sally Yates, deputy attorney general under President Barack Obama, is expected to disclose details to a Senate Judiciary Committee panel about her warnings to White House officials in January that Trump’s national security adviser, retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, had misled Vice President Mike Pence and other officials about his conversations with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.
Flynn was fired 18 days after Yates went to the White House, and only after news stories revealed the existence of a transcript of Flynn’s telephone conversation with Kislyak that was recorded as part of routine U.S. intelligence monitoring of foreign officials’ communications.
Yates, a former U.S. attorney in Atlanta who became deputy attorney general in 2015, took over the Justice Department as acting attorney general after Trump was inaugurated Jan. 20 while he prepared his own team.
She was fired 10 days later after she announced that under her leadership, the Justice Department would not defend Trump’s executive order seeking to bar travel to the U.S. from select Muslim-majority nations.
James R. Clapper, the director of national intelligence during the Obama administration, is also scheduled to testify at the same hearing.
Lawmakers from both parties are likely to press Yates for details about her warnings to the White House that Flynn’s misrepresentations to Pence, and to the public, about his conversations with Kislyak left him vulnerable to blackmail by Moscow.
FBI Director James Comey recently told a judiciary subcommittee Yates had spoken to him about her “concerns that General Flynn had been compromised.”
Flynn and Kislyak exchanged phone calls and text messages during the White House transition, and were in touch on Dec. 29, the day the Obama administration levied a range of sanctions against Moscow for meddling in the 2016 election.
After leaks revealed those contacts, Flynn and other Trump administration officials, including Pence, denied that Flynn and Kislyak had discussed easing the sanctions. Doing so might violate the Logan Act, a 1799 law prohibiting private citizens from negotiating with foreign governments.
Those denials unraveled in mid-February after news stories revealed the existence of a transcript of Flynn’s conversations with Kislyak, and Flynn was forced to resign.
Yates was supposed to testify last month to the House Intelligence Committee, but the appearance was canceled by Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., the chairman. Nunes later recused himself from the panel’s Russia inquiry after the House Ethics Committee announced it was investigating whether he had wrongly disclosed classified information as he claimed that U.S. surveillance under Obama had deliberately targeted Trump’s aides.
The Senate Intelligence Committee, which is conducting a parallel investigation, sent a letter to several members of Trump’s former campaign team last month seeking details of their contacts and financial ties with Russian authorities.