Los Angeles Times

Will a lone judge do what Congress could not?

Emmet G. Sullivan could hold Trump and allies accountabl­e for flagrant disregard for the rule of law.

- HARRY LITMAN HARRY LITMAN is a former U.S. attorney.

THE TRUMP administra­tion — which has made a signature achievemen­t of eluding accountabi­lity for all manner of lawless and corrupt conduct — is headed for a highstakes showdown with a federal judge who has some very powerful cards to play.

U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan presides over the case of President Trump’s fired national security advisor Michael Flynn. Sullivan has signaled that he is, at a minimum, skeptical about the motion from the Department of Justice to dismiss the charges against Flynn, who has twice pleaded guilty to lying to federal officers about his contacts with Russian officials.

And no wonder Sullivan has doubts. The motion to dismiss was a naked political move and a betrayal of the Justice Department’s solemn obligation to pursue impartial justice. It has drawn outrage from almost all legal quarters, including from more than 2,000 former DOJ prosecutor­s who signed a letter saying the motion “assaulted the rule of law.”

Sullivan has already responded to the motion with a strong countermov­e that shows he is not going to permit the dismissal without at least a hard look at the law and the facts. He has appointed a highly respected former federal judge, John Gleeson, to step in and argue against it in a “friend of the court” brief due June 10.

The DOJ might not have bargained for Sullivan’s resistance. More likely, it calculated that even if he wasn’t happy about it, he would grant the dismissal. The law requires the department to secure “the leave of the court” for such a motion. That sounds like a grant of open-ended judicial discretion, but courts have interprete­d it to provide judges very little leeway to reject the government’s decisions to dismiss charges in a criminal case.

Still, Sullivan doesn’t have to deny the motion to make trouble for the department. He could order an evidentiar­y hearing to evaluate the motion’s chief contention­s, and that would not be a pretty day for the DOJ. It could result in making public the transcript­s of the calls Flynn made to the Russians and then lied about. The department claims the conversati­ons were innocuous and pro forma; the smart money suggests otherwise.

Sullivan has far more potent options, though if he decides to deploy them he can expect the Justice Department to fight him tooth and nail.

He could simply deny the government’s motion and proceed to sentence Flynn, which would have been the next step in the case if the government hadn’t dropped its dismissal bomb. However, that would go against the grain of federal court rulings , in particular from Sullivan’s own D.C. Court of Appeals, which has specified that dismissng criminal charges “lie[s] squarely within the ken of prosecutor­ial discretion.”

But Sullivan needn’t deny or attack the principle of prosecutor­ial discretion; he can simply deny the motion on the grounds that the government’s arguments don’t hold water. The DOJ claims there is new evidence that supports dismissal, but none has been cited. It says there was no basis for questionin­g Flynn in the first place, but the predicate for suspecting Flynn is clear — the intercepte­d phone calls.

Most importantl­y, the department claims Flynn’s lies aren’t “material,” or important. But materialit­y is something the judge determines, and it’s manifest here because the lies were about patently serious matters of state.

It is alleged that Flynn told the Russians to ignore Obama administra­tion sanctions retaliatin­g for interferen­ce in the 2016 election, indicating Trump would later undo them. He also urged Russia to vote against a U.N. resolution condemning Israeli settlement­s, according to the criminal complaint. Then Flynn denied those conversati­ons to the FBI. His rogue diplomacy with the U.S’s chief geopolitic­al adversary was flagrantly improper, and his lies exposed him to blackmail by Russians who could prove his dishonesty.

Sullivan’s final hole card is potentiall­y the strongest. He has asked Gleeson to address whether Flynn should be held in criminal contempt for perjury. That is an action a federal judge can initiate without the involvemen­t of prosecutor­s from the Department of Justice, and there is plenty to support it in this case.

Flynn filed a 50-page motion in January, attaching a personal declaratio­n stating that he was innocent, had not lied to the agents and “didn’t remember” if he and Russian envoy Sergey Kislyak had discussed sanctions of the UN vote. The exact opposite, in other words, of what he had previously sworn to in elaborate detail twice before Sullivan.

The DOJ will no doubt respond ferociousl­y if Sullivan moves to sentence Flynn or to prosecute him for perjury. We can expect a motion to force the judge to recuse himself, or motions to “mandamus” him, that is, to put his rulings immediatel­y before the court of appeals. And the president always has the ultimate trump card of a Flynn pardon, but presumably a chief reason for the department’s motion was to keep Trump from having to deploy that politicall­y costly gesture in an election year. As time drags on with hearings or appeals, the pressure increases on the president.

If Sullivan uses the power at his disposal, he could accomplish what Congress, multiple inspectors general, and a majority of the electorate have not been able to do — hold the president and his allies accountabl­e for their contemptuo­us disregard for the rule of law.

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