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		Trump knew for weeks that aide was being 
		misleading over Russia: White House 
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		 [February 15, 2017] 
		By Steve Holland and Richard Cowan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President 
		Donald Trump knew for weeks that national security adviser Michael Flynn 
		had misled the White House about his contacts with Russia but did not 
		immediately force him out, an administration spokesman said on Tuesday.
 
 Trump was informed in late January that Flynn had not told Vice 
		President Mike Pence the whole truth about conversations he had before 
		Trump took office with Russia's ambassador to the United States, White 
		House spokesman Sean Spicer said.
 
 Pence learned of the "incomplete information" that he received from 
		Flynn when news reports surfaced late last week, spokesman Mark Lotter 
		said on Tuesday.
 
 Flynn quit on Monday after Trump asked for his resignation, and the 
		president hopes to pick a new national security adviser by the end of 
		the week, Spicer said.
 
 The departure was another disruption for an administration already 
		repeatedly distracted by miscues and internal dramas since the 
		Republican businessman assumed the presidency on Jan. 20.
 
 The New York Times reported late on Tuesday that members of Trump's 
		campaign and other associates had contact with senior Russian 
		intelligence officials in the year before the Nov. 8 presidential 
		election, although U.S. officials told the newspaper they had not 
		uncovered any evidence that Trump's associates colluded to disrupt the 
		election.
 
		
		 
		U.S. lawmakers, including some leading Republicans, called for a deeper 
		inquiry into not just Flynn's actions but broader White House ties to 
		Russia. Trump has long said that he would like improved relations with 
		Russian President Vladimir Putin.
 Representative Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House of 
		Representatives Intelligence Committee, said Trump only moved against 
		Flynn because of news media attention, not concern about any wrongdoing.
 
 "The reason they lost faith or trust in General Flynn only last night 
		when they knew for weeks that he had been lying was that it became 
		public," Schiff told MSNBC.
 
 A timeline of events outlined by Spicer and a U.S. official showed that 
		Trump had known for weeks about Flynn misleading the vice president.
 
 Trump, a former reality TV star whose catchphrase was "You're fired!" 
		has often boasted of his eagerness to get rid of subordinates. He was 
		not quick to fire Flynn, a strong advocate of a better relations with 
		Russia and a hard line against Islamist militants.
 
 The Justice Department warned the White House in late January that Flynn 
		had misled Pence by denying to him that he had discussed U.S. sanctions 
		on Russia with Ambassador Sergei Kislyak, a potentially illegal act, a 
		U.S. official said.
 
 Flynn did talk about sanctions with the diplomat, whose calls were 
		recorded by U.S. intelligence officials, the official said. But Pence 
		went on television in mid-January and denied that Flynn had discussed 
		sanctions.
 
 The Federal Bureau of Investigation interviewed Flynn in his early days 
		as Trump's national security adviser regarding his conversations with 
		the Russian ambassador, a White House official confirmed.
 
		 
		Spicer stressed that the administration believed there was no legal 
		problem with Flynn's conversations with Kislyak, but rather an issue 
		over the president's trust in his adviser.
 The turning point, Spicer said, was a Washington Post story published on 
		Thursday in which Flynn, through a spokesman, said for the first time he 
		could not say with 100 percent certainty that he had not discussed 
		sanctions with Kislyak.
 
 Spicer said the Justice Department sought to notify the White House 
		counsel on Jan. 26 about the discrepancies in Flynn's accounts.
 
 "The White House counsel informed the president immediately. The 
		president asked them to commit a review of whether there was a legal 
		situation there," Spicer told reporters, saying it was a "trust issue."
 
 Flynn's conversations with the ambassador took place around the time 
		that then-President Barack Obama imposed sanctions on Russia, charging 
		that Moscow had used cyber attacks to try to influence the 2016 
		presidential election in Trump's favor.
 
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			Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) sits next to retired U.S. Army 
			Lieutenant General Michael Flynn (L) as they attend an exhibition 
			marking the 10th anniversary of RT (Russia Today) television news 
			channel in Moscow, Russia, December 10, 2015. Sputnik/Mikhail 
			Klimentyev/Kremlin via REUTERS 
            
			 
		A U.S. official familiar with the transcripts of the calls with the 
		ambassador said Flynn indicated that if Russia did not retaliate in kind 
		for Obama's Dec. 29 order expelling 35 Russian suspected spies and 
		sanctioning Russian spy agencies, that could smooth the way toward a 
		broader discussion of improving U.S.-Russian relations once Trump took 
		power.
 LEGAL FALLOUT?
 
 Flynn's discussions with the Russian diplomat could potentially have 
		been in violation of a law known as the Logan Act, which bans private 
		citizens from negotiating with foreign governments about disputes or 
		controversies with the United States. There have been no modern 
		prosecutions using the 1799 law.
 
 "The Logan Act is a red herring. The better question is whether he made 
		any false statements to the FBI at any point, which would be a much 
		bigger deal," said University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck, 
		adding the fallout would likely be "political" in nature.
 
 Flynn could also face legal trouble if it emerges that he violated other 
		federal laws in his communications with the Russians, said Andrew Kent, 
		a professor at Fordham University School of Law in New York. The 
		Espionage Act criminalizes sharing information with foreign governments.
 
 Democrats, who do not have control of Congress, clamored for probes into 
		Flynn, and asked how much Trump knew about his connections to Russia.
 
 U.S. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called for an investigation 
		of potential criminal violations surrounding the resignation of Flynn.
 
 "What I am calling for is an independent investigation with executive 
		authority to pursue potential criminal actions," Schumer told reporters, 
		saying such a probe could not be led by newly installed U.S. Attorney 
		General Jeff Sessions or White House lawyers.
 
		
		 
		Two leading Senate Republicans, Bob Corker and John Cornyn, said the 
		Intelligence Committee should investigate Flynn's contacts with Russia.
 But the highest-ranking Republican in Congress, House of Representatives 
		Speaker Paul Ryan, sidestepped questions about whether lawmakers should 
		look into Flynn's Russia ties, saying he would leave it to the Trump 
		administration to explain the circumstances behind Flynn's departure.
 
 A broader investigation of the White House and its ties to Russia is not 
		possible without the cooperation either of the Justice Department or the 
		Republican-led Congress.
 
 Russia's aggression in Ukraine and Syria and Republican congressional 
		opposition to removing sanctions on Russia make any White House attempt 
		to embrace Putin problematic.
 
 Senator John McCain, a leading Republican voice on foreign relations, 
		said Flynn's resignation raised questions about the administration’s 
		intentions toward Putin’s Russia.
 
 (Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, David Morgan, John Walcott, 
		Doina Chiacu, Lawrence Hurley Susan Heavey and Patricia Zengerle; 
		Writing by Alistair Bell and Amanda Becker; Editing by Jonathan Oatis 
		and Peter Cooney)
 
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