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Home » ‘It’s just theft’: Legal expert exposes how Trump uses your tax dollars to reward allies

‘It’s just theft’: Legal expert exposes how Trump uses your tax dollars to reward allies

Alternet by Alternet
1 minute ago
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The Department of Justice has awarded Michael Flynn, the retired three-star Army general who served as Trump’s National Security Advisor for less than a month, a $1.25 million settlement—a decision that legal experts are comparing to outright theft of taxpayer funds.Flynn’s settlement, announced this week, compensates him for what the Trump administration is characterizing as wrongful prosecution. The irony is stark: Flynn pleaded guilty under oath in 2017 to intentionally making false statements to the FBI. He admitted to the crime in court with a lawyer present, with a judge confirming his understanding of what he was confessing to. Trump later pardoned him in 2020.Now, with a new Trump administration in place, the Department of Justice under Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has agreed to hand over more than a million dollars in public money to a man who has already admitted guilt.”I really do not understand how you justify this as anything but theft,” said Andrew Weissmann, a former DOJ prosecutor who spent 20 years at the Department of Justice and served as general counsel at the FBI, during an appearance on “The Illegal News” podcast this week. “To make this a legitimate settlement, there would have to be a good faith belief that he has a meritorious argument and that there might be some downside in litigating this.”Weissmann’s critique goes to the heart of how government settlements are supposed to work. When the DOJ settles a case, there must be a reasonable belief that the other side might actually win if the case went to trial—a genuine legal dispute, in other words. But in Flynn’s case, Weissmann argues, there is no such ambiguity.”I don’t see the downside of having taken it to court,” Weissmann said. “The issues here seem so completely one-sided that I really do not understand how you justify this as anything but theft.”The case against Flynn was straightforward. As National Security Advisor, Flynn had engaged in back-channel communications with Russian officials during the transition period. When FBI agents questioned him about these contacts, he lied. Vice President Mike Pence later went public saying he had repeated Flynn’s denials on air, only to discover they were false—a betrayal that led directly to Flynn’s firing after just 24 days in the job.Flynn initially tried to withdraw his guilty plea, leading to years of litigation, but ultimately the legal process confirmed the guilty plea stood. There was no meritorious legal argument waiting to be discovered. There was no ambiguity about whether Flynn had committed the crime he admitted to committing.Yet Bondi and Blanche signed off on the settlement anyway.Weissmann raised additional concerns about the precedent this sets. “This is something that Michael Flynn admitted under oath he did, which was lied to the FBI. Now he then moved to withdraw his guilty plea. There was lots and lots of litigation back and forth, and that ultimately ended up with Donald Trump pardoning him,” Weissmann explained.The settlement also raises questions about potential conflicts of interest. Blanche was Trump’s personal criminal defense attorney during his hush money trial and conviction. Now, as Deputy Attorney General, he’s using government resources to benefit his former client.”The next administration can look into this as an ethics issue,” Weissmann said. “Remember, they represented Donald Trump individually. And they have to be looking out for the interests of the public, not for the interests of Donald Trump.”Perhaps most troubling to Weissmann is what this settlement signals about future Trump administration conduct. “This is the harbinger of more to come,” he said, “because we know that Donald Trump wants to do this. And for all we know, this has been happening with other people doing this without bringing a lawsuit—just having a private agreement with the Department of Justice where they give out money and we just don’t know.”

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