General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMueller's Michael Flynn Sentencing Memo Should Sound the Alarm for Trump
Last December, Michael Flynn, the retired general and national security adviser to President Trump, pleaded guilty to lying to federal agents about his communications with Russias ambassador to the United States while he was working for Trumps transition team. Hes since been cooperating with the special counsels office. A lot. On Tuesday night, Robert Muellers team filed a memo recommending that Flynn serve no prison time because of how helpful he was to the probe into the Trump campaigns ties to Russia, in addition to two other investigations. In total, Flynn met with investigators a whopping 19 times. The defendants assistance to the government was substantial and merits consideration at sentencing, the memo says. His early cooperation was particularly valuable because he was one of the few people with long-term and firsthand insight regarding events and issues under investigation.
The rest of the memo is heavily redacted, but it does note that Flynn helped flesh out a range of issues, including interactions between individuals in the Presidential Transition Team and Russia. This probably isnt good news for the individuals on the transition team that were in touch with Russia. As Tim OBrien points out for Bloomberg, Jared Kushner met with the Russian ambassador, Sergeu Kislyak, and other Russian figures on multiple occasions in December 2016, and reportedly discussed setting up a backchannel to the Kremlin. Kushner and the White House have claimed there was nothing untoward about any of these interactions, but its possible, if not likely, that Flynn has provided evidence to the contrary. If Flynn offered federal authorities a different version of events than Kushner and Flynns version is buttressed by documentation or federal electronic surveillance of the former general then the presidents son-in-law may have to start scrambling, writes OBrien.
Notably absent from the memo are any details about the extent to which Trump may have known about Flynns communications with the Russian ambassador. Trump has denied he instructed Flynn to tell Russia he planned to ease up economic sanctions once he took office, but its highly unlikely Flynn did so on his own volition. When acting attorney general Sally Yates informed the White House that Flynn lied to investigators about these discussions, thus exposing himself to blackmail, Trump did nothing. It was only a few weeks later, after the Washington Post revealed that Flynn had lied, that Flynn resigned. Something doesnt add up, and the answer could very well lie beneath the black bars that cover most of the memo, including the entirety of the sections detailing the two other investigations to which Flynn offered assistance.
Link to tweet
The amount of redacted material could be serious cause for concern. It signals that Mueller may know far more than the public, or Trump, can imagine. This makes it risky for other subjects of the probe, or Trump, to attempt to deceive investigators about the campaign or the transition teams relationship to Russia. At this point, it may not even matter. Mueller seems to have amassed a substantial amount of evidence, and he doesnt appear to be very worried about Matthew Whitaker, the Trump-friendly interim attorney general, hamstringing the investigation to the point that he cant wrap it up as he sees fit.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/mueller-michael-flynn-trump-763382/