Lawyer appointed by Judge Sullivan to offer arguments in Flynn case already has slammed Trump WH's 'improper political influence'
D.C. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan issued an unusual order
Wednesday appointing a law firm partner "to present arguments in
opposition to the government's motion to dismiss" the matter -- and to
consider whether the court should hold Flynn in contempt for perjury. The partner, retired federal judge John Gleeson, has openly criticized
the Trump administration's handling of Michael Flynn's case, raising
concerns that he was selected to improperly bolster Sullivan's efforts
to keep the Flynn case alive even though both the government and
defendant want it dismissed. Sullivan has previously suggested
Flynn may have committed treason, in a bizarre 2018 courtroom outburst,
and seemingly confused key details about Flynn's overseas lobbying
work. The precise reasons for the perjury review were not clear in
Sullivan's order. Last year, Flynn abruptly abandoned his plan to
provide testimony against a former associate, after admitting that he
had lied on federal forms required under the Foreign Agents Registration
Act (FARA). Flynn has said he received constitutionally inadequate
legal advice. Although Flynn was never charged with the FARA
violations or perjury, he admitted to making “materially false
statements and omissions” concerning his work in Turkey as part of his
plea agreement. Flynn ultimately pleaded guilty only to one count of
lying to FBI agents in the White House in January 2017 as his legal
bills mounted, leading him to sell his home. Flynn did not plead guilty to perjury, which applies to false statements under oath in a legal proceeding. (In leaked remarks this week, though, former President Obama conspicuously suggested Flynn had been charged with perjury.)
Justice Department official Andrew Weissman in 2002. Weissman has
previously worked with Gleeson. The Twitter user Techno Fog first
spotted that connection.
(REUTERS, File)
Gleeson, a retired New
York federal district court judge, was specifically appointed as an
"amicus curiae," or friend of the court. Gleeson is now a partner at the international law firm Debevoise & Plimpton. Gleeson penned an op-ed this week apparently pre-judging the Flynn case, writing that "the [Flynn] record reeks of improper political influence." "So
if the court finds dismissal would result in a miscarriage of justice,
it can deny the motion, refuse to permit withdrawal of the guilty plea
and proceed to sentencing," Gleeson wrote. The Twitter sleuth Techno_Fog pointed out
that Gleeson has recently worked with Andrew Weissmann, a former
prosecutor on Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team. And, attorney Ron
Coleman noted that Debevoise has also represented Sally Yates -- the
former deputy attorney general who was fired after she took the
extraordinary step of refusing to defend a Trump administration
executive order in court. The unexpected move to appoint Gleeson came just a day after Sullivan issued an order indicating
he'll soon accept "amicus" submissions in the case -- drawing immediate
scrutiny and a planned ethics complaint against Sullivan, who had
previously refused to hear amicus briefs in the case. Sullivan notably has not appointed an amicus to counter Gleeson's argument. Sullivan
has said, however, that he anticipated that "individuals and
organizations" will file briefs "for the benefit of the court," as he
prepares to rule on the government's motion to dismiss the case, citing a mountain of previously undisclosed exculpatory evidence. Among those unearthed materials was a handwritten note from a top FBI official debating whether the bureau's goal in pursuing Flynn was to "get him fired." OBAMA KNEW DETAILS OF FLYNN CASE, SHOCKING TOP DOJ OFFICIAL, DOCS SHOW "Judge
Sullivan, who denied leave to file amicus briefs when he knew third
parties would have spoken favorably of Flynn, now solicits briefs
critical of Flynn," independent journalist and attorney Michael
Cernovich wrote on Twitter Tuesday evening. "This is a violation of the
judicial oath and applicable ethical rules. We will be filing a
complaint against Sullivan." Cernovich cited D.C. appellate precedent as
precluding Sullivan from keeping the case alive, in defiance of the
wishes of both the prosecution and defense, given that there has been no
final judgment or sentencing.
FILE - In this Dec. 1, 2017, file photo, Michael Flynn, center,
arrives at federal court in Washington. A judge set a sentencing hearing
for Michael Flynn after rejecting arguments from the former Trump
administration national security adviser that prosecutors had withheld
evidence favorable to his case. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
Without a live "case or controversy," federal judges
cannot exercise jurisdiction, according to the Case or Controversy
Clause of Article III of the United States Constitution. The provision
prevents judges from issuing advisory opinions, or acting on a matter
that is not the subject of an ongoing dispute. Will Chamberlain, a lawyer and the editor-in-chief of Human Events, separately noted that
case law in the circuit generally prohibits trial court judges from
second-guessing the government's decision not to prosecute a defendant. Indeed,
Sullivan himself had previously held in the Flynn case that "[o]ptions
exist for a private citizen to express his views about matters of public
interest, but the Court's docket is not an available option." Flynn's legal team indicated in a filing Tuesday that a sealed amicus brief has already been submitted by a left-wing group known as the "Watergate Prosecutors," urging
Sullivan not to toss out Flynn's guilty plea despite the Justice
Department's request. That group was featured in an October 2019
Washington Post opinion piece, and listed Jill Wine-Banks -- who
previously advanced unsubstantiated collusion theories involving the
Trump campaign and Russia -- as one of its members. WASHINGTON POST NEWSROOM DIVIDED OVER WHETHER FLYNN'S CALLS WERE EVEN NEWSWORTHY -- THEN OP-ED COLUMNIST WENT AHEAD Wine-Banks was also explictly named as a member of the group seeking to file an amicus brief in the Flynn case. "Mueller can prove conspiracy with Russia beyond any doubt," Wine-Banks previously wrote. She also claimed in 2017 that Flynn would receive "immunity for kidnapping as well as his federal crimes." Late Tuesday, President Trump retweeted a post by
the Twitter user Techno_Fog calling Wine-Banks a "Trump/Russia
collusion nutter." The post concluded, sarcastically: "Good job Judge
Sullivan!" Wine-Banks did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.
FILE - This Dec. 13, 2019 file photo shows former President Barack
Obama speaking at the Gathering of Rising Leaders in the Asia Pacific,
organized by the Obama Foundation in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (AP
Photo/Vincent Thian, File)
In his brief order Tuesday, Sullivan quoted his
fellow judge on the D.C. District Court, Amy Berman Jackson, who
previously admonished the parties in the Stone case that allowing amicus
submissions does not mean that the criminal case will become a "free
for all." Flynn's case, however, has sometimes seemed like just that. In a fireworks-filled sentencing hearing in December 2018, for example, Sullivan himself appeared open to the idea that Flynn could be charged with a death penalty-eligible offense. "I'm
not hiding my disgust, my disdain for this criminal offense," Sullivan
said during that hearing. He added that Flynn's allegedly unregistered
work with Turkey "arguably" had undermined "everything this flag over
here stands for.” (Flynn was never charged with violating the Foreign
Agents Registration Act, which had gone largely unenforced until recently.) WHO IS JOE PIENTKA, MYSTERY FBI AGENT AT CENTER OF FLYNN AND CARTER PAGE CASES? ... FBI SCRUBS HIM FROM WEBSITE In
a bizarre moment, Sullivan then asked the government's attorneys
whether they had considered charging Flynn with treason. The prosecutors
said they had not, and Sullivan later walked back his comments after a
brief recess. Then, last December, Sullivan accused Flynn's
legal team of plagiarism in a filing, saying they had "lifted verbatim
portions from a source without attribution." Powell shot back that
the claim "made no sense," and that she relied on one of her own cases
as well as a brief primarily written by a friend whom she cited.
Peter Strzok exchanged anti-Trump text messages with Lisa Page.
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
On the recommendation of U.S. Attorney Jeff Jensen, who served as an FBI agent for more than a decade, the Justice Department last
Thursday moved to drop its case against Flynn. The stunning development
came after internal memos were released raising serious questions about
the nature of the investigation that led to Flynn’s late 2017 guilty plea of lying to the FBI as his legal fees mounted. One of the documents was a top official's handwritten memo debating
whether the FBI's "goal" was "to get him to lie, so we can prosecute
him or get him fired." Other materials showed efforts by anti-Trump FBI
agent Peter Strzok to pursue Flynn on increasingly flimsy legal grounds. It
would not be unprecedented for the government to successfully move to
dismiss a case after securing a conviction. In fact, Sullivan himself
tossed the conviction of former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens in 2009, when it
emerged the government had not produced a slew of exculpatory "Brady"
material. Powell has raised similar issues in the Flynn case. Fox News has chronicled numerous representations by
the lead prosecutor in the Flynn case, Brandon Van Grack, concerning
the government's supposed compliance with "Brady' requirements --
representations that now appear to have been inaccurate, as a mountain of striking exculpatory evidence has emerged.
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