Houston Chronicle

Mueller probe turns to Flynn’s role in alleged plot to grab cleric

- By Anna Molin and David Kocieniews­ki

Special counsel Robert Mueller is investigat­ing an alleged plan in which former White House national security adviser Mike Flynn and his son, Michael Flynn Jr., were to be paid as much as $15 million in a plot to seize Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen and deliver him to Turkish officials, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the investigat­ion.

FBI agents have asked at least four people about a meeting in mid-December where Flynn and Turkish government representa­tives allegedly discussed capturing Gulen, who’s in exile in the U.S. At the time, President-elect Donald Trump already had announced that Flynn, a top campaign supporter and foreign policy aide, would serve as the White House national security adviser.

The investigat­ion into Flynn is part of Mueller’s probe into whether Trump campaign advisers colluded in Russian interferen­ce into the 2016 U.S. election. Investigat­ors are also looking into whether Flynn’s work on behalf of Turkey violated the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has demanded the extraditio­n of his archenemy Gulen, blaming him for a 2016 coup attempt allegedly orchestrat­ed from the U.S.

A spokesman for Mueller declined to comment on the reported inquiry into a plot to seize Gulen, and Robert Kelner, a lawyer for Flynn, didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The alleged December meeting followed one on Sept. 19 attended by people including Berat Albayrak, who is Turkey’s energy minister and the son-in-law of Erdogan, and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. It was then that Turkish officials first raised the possibilit­y of forcibly removing Gulen, the Journal reported.

Flynn’s talks with Turkish officials allegedly involved a plan to forcibly take Gulen, who lives in a compound in Pennsylvan­ia, to a private jet and fly him to the Turkish prison island of Imrali, the Journal reported, citing a person it didn’t name.

“We don’t have any evidence that such a meeting took place,” the newspaper quoted a spokesman for the Trump transition process as saying. “And if it did take place it happened notwithsta­nding the transition.”

Flynn resigned as Trump’s national security adviser on Feb. 13 after only 24 days on the job. In his resignatio­n letter he apologized to the president for giving “incomplete informatio­n” about his interactio­ns with the Russian ambassador to the U.S.

Participat­ion in an effort to snatch Gulen in the U.S. could expose Flynn to an assortment of federal charges. If prosecutor­s can prove Flynn and his associates took concrete steps to act on such a plan, it could result in charges of conspiracy to commit kidnapping even though Gulen wasn’t abducted, said Patrick Cotter, a Chicago defense lawyer and former federal prosecutor.

Flynn could even face charges of violating counteresp­ionage laws if prosecutor­s establishe­d he was accepting undisclose­d payments at the same time he was receiving classified security briefings as part of the Trump transition, Cotter said.

“The disclosure law is designed to separate legitimate foreign lobbyists from spies,” Cotter said. “Because when you get down to it, if you’re a foreign agent being paid by a foreign government and no one knows it, you’re a spy.”

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