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Attorney General William Barr has reportedly assigned an outside prosecutor to re-examine the criminal case against Michael Flynn

Michelle Mark   

Attorney General William Barr has reportedly assigned an outside prosecutor to re-examine the criminal case against Michael Flynn
Politics2 min read
william barr
  • Attorney General William Barr installed a prosecutor to review the criminal case against Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump's former national security adviser, The New York Times reported Friday.
  • The news comes just days after senior Department of Justice officials publicy undermined career prosecutors by minimizing the sentence recommendation for the Republican strategist Roger Stone.
  • The events have fueled speculation that President Donald Trump and his allies are interfering in DOJ criminal cases.
  • Prosecutors resigned en masse from the Stone case after the sentencing dispute, and Barr urged Trump in an ABC interview to stop tweeting about DOJ cases because it was "impossible for me to do my job."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Attorney General William Barr assigned a prosecutor to review the criminal case against Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump's former national security adviser who pleaded guilty in 2017 as part of the special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation, The New York Times reported Friday

The unusual move is likely to fuel further speculation of political interference in Department of Justice cases.

Flynn has already sought to withdraw the guilty plea he made more than two years ago. His attorneys have alleged prosecutorial misconduct in the case, accusations which a judge has refuted.

Michael Flynn

Barr has faced intense scrutiny in recent days, after senior DOJ officials publicly undermined the department's own prosecutors by announcing they would seek a lesser sentence for Roger Stone, the Republican strategist convicted last year of lying to Congress, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering.

Federal prosecutors had originally sought a sentence of seven to nine years in prison. But not long after Trump called the sentence recommendation "horrible and unfair," senior DOJ officials overruled the career prosecutors.

Those prosecutors resigned en masse from the case after the sentencing dispute, and Barr urged Trump in an ABC interview to stop tweeting about DOJ cases because it was making it "impossible" for him to do his job.

The Times reported that Flynn's case was not the only one Barr has assigned prosecutors to review. People familiar with the matter told The Times that prosecutors are reviewing a number of other "politically sensitive national-security cases," though it wasn't clear which ones.


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