Great Article from The Federalist
Legal ‘Scholars’ Embarrass Themselves In Pompous Letter Attacking Michael Flynn
Part 1
Twenty legal luminaries calling themselves “Separation of Powers Scholars” and led by Harvard Professor Laurence Tribe have written a brief urging Judge Emmet Sullivan to reject the government’s motion to dismiss the Michael Flynn case and to proceed to sentencing.
The brief is a shoddy piece of work. It tells little about the Flynn case, even misleading on that score, but it triggers disturbing ruminations about the sad state of current legal academia.
How We Got Here
Here’s a quick review of the case. For more detail, visit the roster of documents compiled by Flynn’s lawyer, Sidney Powell.
https://sidneypowell.com/the-michael-t-flynn-case/
Flynn, Trump’s first national security advisor, was charged with lying to the FBI. After great pressure was put on him in threats of extensive jail time, possible indictments of his son, and financial ruin from lawyers’ fees, he, advised by the D.C. establishment firm of Covington and Burling (headed by former Obama Attorney General Eric Holder), agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a government recommendation of no jail time.
At a sentencing hearing in December 2018, Sullivan berated Flynn as a traitor. Thereafter, the government pushed Flynn still further for confessions, and in June 2019 Flynn fired C&B and hired Powell. Powell filed motions demanding production of exculpatory material the government hid, to which Flynn has a right.
In an intemperate opinion in December 2019, Sullivan denied the requests for more documents. Then, in February, U.S. Attorney General Barr appointed U.S. Attorney Jeff Jenson to review the Flynn case. In April, Jenson began releasing documents that tended to exculpate Flynn, much of it material the prosecutors had said did not exist.
Instead of Agreeing to Dismiss, Sullivan Attacked
On May 7, the Department of Justice filed a Motion to Dismiss. It elided the most unsavory aspects of the prosecution and rested on three legal points: (1) a false statement must be “material,” and because the investigation of Flynn lacked a legitimate basis it could not be “material”; (2) given the missing information, proving the case would be quite difficult; (3) under existing case law the judge has no discretion and must dismiss if DOJ so requests.
Sullivan instead appointed an outside lawyer to argue against dismissal and expressed an intent to solicit briefs from other outside parties. The named amicus immediately noted that he might require additional factual discovery, so this circus could go on a while.
Powell answered by requesting the DC Circuit Court of Appeals tell Sullivan to dismiss and remove him from the case. That court immediately ordered the judge to respond by June 1. Sullivan re-escalated by hiring a pit-bull litigator to represent him. And there the matter rests, although events keep unfolding hourly.
We’re Right Because We Gave Each Other Degrees
The scholars’ brief was drafted in response to Sullivan’s announced intent to accept such filings and was released on May 22, but has not been formally filed. Of the brief’s 24 pages of argument, the first 11 consist of the signatories preening about their accomplishments. Then it says: “The government’s motion to dismiss the case against Michael Flynn, after he twice pled guilty to violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001, asks this Court to place its imprimatur on the Executive Branch’s virtually unprecedented decision to dismiss a prosecution after the case has been won.”
Both prongs of this statement—“pled guilty” and “case has been won”—are problematic. Take the “won” first, because it is the simplest. It is close to a flat-out lie. Sullivan has not ruled on several of Powell’s motions concerning government misconduct and failure to produce material, nor on her motions about C&B’s representation. He cannot proceed to sentencing without ruling on them, and they could then be appealed. The case is over only if one assumes these motions lack merit, an assumption that is absurd, considering the recent DOJ revelations during the Russiagate probe.