Las Vegas Sun

May 1, 2024

Judge sets new sentencing date for Michael Flynn

WASHINGTON — A federal judge has set a Dec. 18 sentencing date for Michael Flynn as a lawyer for President Donald Trump's former national security adviser accused federal prosecutors of "egregious government misconduct."

U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan scheduled Flynn's sentencing during a status conference Tuesday in which Flynn's legal team escalated its attacks on special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.

Flynn attorney Sidney Powell said prosecutors have withheld information favorable to Flynn. Prosecutors deny that.

Flynn was supposed to be sentenced last December for lying to the FBI about his December 2016 conversations with the Russian ambassador to the United States. But that sentencing hearing was abruptly cut short after Flynn asked that he be allowed to continue cooperating with prosecutors in hopes of earning credit toward a lighter punishment.

Flynn changed lawyers and hired a new legal team led by Sidney Powell, a conservative commentator and former federal prosecutor who has been an outspoken critic of Mueller's investigation into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.

In a court filing, Powell accused Justice Department prosecutors of withholding evidence that she says would be favorable to the defense.

She said prosecutors had engaged "in even more malevolent conduct in the prosecution" of Flynn than in the case of the late Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, which Sullivan threw out a decade ago after determining that prosecutors had withheld information from the senator's defense team.

Prosecutors have strongly rejected that assertion, saying "the government has exceeded its discovery and disclosure obligations in this matter," including by providing Flynn with more than 22,000 pages of documents.

Powell has also advanced theories of law enforcement bias that President Donald Trump and many of his supporters have seized on to allege that Mueller's investigation was tainted.

In a court filing earlier this month, she invoked former FBI agent Peter Strzok, who interviewed Flynn at the White House and was later fired from the bureau because of pejorative text messages about Trump, and Chris Steele, a former British spy who was funded by Democrats to investigate Trump's connections to Russia.