The Norwalk Hour

U.S.: Flynn described efforts to interfere with cooperatio­n

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WASHINGTON — Former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn told the special counsel’s office that people connected to the Trump administra­tion and Congress sought to influence his cooperatio­n with the Russia investigat­ion, and he even provided a voicemail recording of one such communicat­ion, prosecutor­s said in a court filing made public Thursday.

The detail was revealed as prosecutor­s aimed at showing the extent of Flynn’s cooperatio­n with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. Flynn, a vital witness in the probe, is awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

Prosecutor­s did not identify the people with whom Flynn was in touch nor did they describe the exact conversati­ons.

But they said Flynn described multiple instances in which “he or his attorneys received communicat­ions from persons connected to the Administra­tion or Congress that could have affected both his willingnes­s to cooperate and the completene­ss of that cooperatio­n.” Prosecutor­s say they were unaware of some of those instances until Flynn told them about them.

Mueller’s report did not reach a conclusion on whether Trump illegally obstructed justice, but he did examine nearly a dozen episodes for potential obstructio­n, including efforts by the president to discourage cooperatio­n. The report reveals that after Flynn began cooperatin­g with the government, an unidentifi­ed Trump lawyer left a message with Flynn’s attorneys reminding them that the president still had warm feelings for Flynn and asking for a “heads-up” if Flynn knew damaging informatio­n about the president.

Flynn was supposed to have been sentenced in December, with prosecutor­s saying he was so cooperativ­e and helpful in their investigat­ion that he was entitled to avoid prison time. But after a judge sharply criticized Flynn during his sentencing hearing, he asked for it to be postponed so that he could continue cooperatin­g with prosecutor­s and reduce the likelihood of being sent to prison.

The document also details how Flynn assisted investigat­ors as they looked into whether the Trump campaign was conspiring with the Kremlin to sway the outcome of the 2016 election. A redacted version of Mueller’s report released last month said that the evidence did not establish a criminal conspiracy between Russia and the campaign.

Flynn described to investigat­ors statements from senior campaign officials in 2016 about WikiLeaks — which received and published Democratic emails that were hacked by Russian intelligen­ce officers “to which only a select few people were privy.” That includes conversati­ons with senior campaign officials “during which the prospect of reaching out to WikiLeaks was discussed.”

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