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Trump Tweet Backs Gen. Flynn's Exculpatory Evidence

michael flynn walks out of a court house with a police officer leading him out
Gen. Michael Flynn (Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images)

By    |   Saturday, 11 July 2020 10:17 AM EDT

President Donald Trump, a morning after commuting the sentence of former campaign adviser Roger Stone, took aim at the prosecution of former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

Trump tweeted Saturday morning:

"New documents just released reveal General Flynn was telling the truth, and the FBI knew it! @OANN"

Trump was referring to Flynn's defense filing Friday, which presented handwritten notes as exculpatory evidence as U.S. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan is seeking to appeal the dropping of his case by the Justice Department, as Politico reported.

Defense lawyer Sidney Powell and colleagues wrote, per the report:

"These documents establish that on January 25, 2017 — the day after the agents ambushed him at the White House — the agents and DOJ officials knew General Flynn's statements were not material to any investigation, that he was 'open and forthcoming' with the agents, that he had no intent to deceive them, and that he believed he was fully truthful with them. In short, there was no crime for many reasons. These documents were known to exist at the highest levels of the Justice Department and by Special Counsel, yet they were hidden from the defense for three years."

Judge Sullivan requested a full appeals court review Thursday after a three-judge panel last month ordered Sullivan to dismiss the case against Flynn, following the Justice Department's extraordinary decision to drop the prosecution.

The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia said in a 2-1 ruling the Justice Department’s decision to abandon the case against Flynn settled the matter, even though Flynn had pleaded guilty as part of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation to lying to the FBI.

The request signals Sullivan's dissatisfaction with the ruling. If granted, it would prolong the court fight over Flynn's fate and represent yet another dramatic development in a case that has taken unexpected twists and turns over the last year and turned Flynn into something of a cause celebre for Trump and his supporters.

Sullivan had declined to immediately dismiss the case, seeking instead to evaluate on his own the department's request. He appointed a retired federal judge to argue against the Justice Department’s position and to consider whether Flynn could be held in criminal contempt for perjury. He had set a July 16 hearing to formally hear the request to dismiss the case.

Sullivan said in the court papers Thursday the appellate decision "in fact marks a dramatic break from precedent that threatens the orderly administration of justice."

He said the ruling prevented the court from doing its job.

"The panel's decision threatens to turn ordinary judicial process upside down," he wrote. "It is the district court's job to consider and rule on pending motions, even ones that seem straightforward."

He requested the full appeals court to re-hear the case. If the court agrees, the 11 fulltime judges in the D.C. circuit would listen to arguments, instead of just three, the norm for most cases.

"Judicial decisions are supposed to be based on the record before the court, not speculation about what the future may hold," the court papers said.

Judge Neomi Rao, a Trump nominee who was joined by Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson, wrote in the opinion dismissing the case that Sullivan had overstepped by second-guessing the Justice Department’s decision. This case, she wrote, "is not the unusual case where a more searching inquiry is justified."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Eric Mack

Eric Mack has been a writer and editor at Newsmax since 2016. He is a 1998 Syracuse University journalism graduate and a New York Press Association award-winning writer.

© 2024 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


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A morning after commuting the sentence of former campaign adviser Roger Stone, President Donald Trump took aim at the prosecution of former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.
prosecution, sidney powell, twitter, tweet, lawyer, fbi, investigation, judge
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2020-17-11
Saturday, 11 July 2020 10:17 AM
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