The Mercury News

Ex-judge to evaluate whether to hold Flynn in contempt

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WASHINGTON >> The judge presiding over Michael Flynn’s criminal case appointed a retired jurist on Wednesday to evaluate whether the former Trump administra­tion national security adviser should be held in criminal contempt.

The judge’s order is the second signal in as many days registerin­g his resistance to swiftly accepting the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss all charges against Flynn.

In his order, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan appointed former federal judge John Gleeson as an amicus curiae — or friend-of-the-court — and asked him to explore whether Sullivan should hold Flynn in “criminal contempt for perjury.” Flynn pleaded guilty, as part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion, to lying to the FBI about conversati­ons with the then-Russian ambassador to the United States during the presidenti­al transition period. As part of the plea, he had to admit in court, under oath, that he lied to the FBI and violated federal law. It is a crime to lie under oath in court.

Justice Department spokeswoma­n Kerri Kupec declined to comment on Sullivan’s order.

In January, Flynn filed court papers to withdraw his guilty plea, saying federal prosecutor­s had acted in “bad faith” and broken their end of the bargain when they sought prison time for him.

Initially, prosecutor­s said Flynn was entitled to avoid prison time because he had cooperated extensivel­y with the government, but the relationsh­ip with the retired Army lieutenant general grew increasing­ly contentiou­s in the months before he withdrew his plea, particular­ly after he hired a new set of lawyers who raised misconduct allegation­s against the government.

But the Justice Department filed a motion last week to dismiss the case, saying that the FBI had insufficie­nt basis to question Flynn in the first place and that statements he made during the interview were not material to the broader counterint­elligence investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Officials have said they sought to dismiss the case in the interest of justice, upon the recommenda­tion of a U.S. attorney who had been appointed by Attorney General William Barr to review the handling of the Flynn investigat­ion.

But Sullivan, who has to approve the motion, made clear Tuesday that he wouldn’t immediatel­y rule on the request and would let outside individual­s and groups weigh in with their opinions in court documents.

Gleeson was a federal judge in New York for more than two decades. Before becoming a judge, he had been a federal prosecutor handling numerous high-profile cases, including the case against late Gambino crime family boss John Gotti. He’s been in private practice since 2016.

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