Trump attorney discussed pardons with
Flynn, Manafort lawyers: report
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[March 29, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An attorney
for President Donald Trump raised the idea of Trump pardoning two of his
former top advisers last year as Special Counsel Robert Mueller was
building a case against them in his probe into possible Russian
interference in the U.S. presidential election, the New York Times
reported on Wednesday.
John Dowd, who was Trump's lead lawyer in the special counsel
investigation until he resigned last week, broached the issue in
discussions with attorneys for former national security adviser Michael
Flynn and former campaign manager Paul Manafort, the Times reported,
citing three people with knowledge of the talks.
Dowd, who denied to the New York Times that he discussed pardons with
lawyers for the president’s former advisers, did not immediately respond
to a request for comment.
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said at a media briefing that
White House counsel "Ty Cobb is the person that would be most directly
involved in this and he's got a statement on the record saying that
there's no discussion and there's no consideration of those at this time
at the White House."
The discussions between Dowd and lawyers for Manafort and Flynn
indicated Trump's legal team was concerned about what the two former
aides would reveal if they cut a deal with Mueller in exchange for
leniency, according to the newspaper.
Robert Kelner, Flynn's lawyer, as well as Reginald Brown, Manafort's
lawyer at the time of the reported overture, and Kevin Downing, his
current lawyer, did not respond to requests for comment about the New
York Times report.
The discussions also raise questions about whether the possibility of a
pardon was dangled to influence Flynn and Manafort's decisions on
whether to plead guilty and cooperate with Mueller's investigation, the
newspaper said.
Legal experts were split on whether such a discussion would amount to
obstruction of justice, even if Dowd broached the idea with Trump before
talking to lawyers for Manafort and Flynn - a point that the New York
Times said remained unclear .
Such discussions could not constitute the crime of obstruction of
justice because the president has vast power to issue pardons, according
to Alan Dershowitz, an emeritus law professor at Harvard Law School.
"A president cannot commit a crime by engaging in a constitutionally
protected act," Dershowitz said.
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Lawyer John Dowd exits Manhattan Federal Court in New York, U.S. on
May 11, 2011. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Lisa Kern Griffin, a former federal prosecutor and a law professor
at Duke University School of Law, disagreed, saying an offer to
issue pardons could be obstruction of justice if it is made with the
intent to impede an investigation.
"One can do things one has the power to do, that would otherwise be
lawful, and render them unlawful by doing them with corrupt intent,"
Griffin said.
MANAFORT PREPARES FOR TRIAL
Trump fired Flynn as national security adviser in February after it
was revealed Flynn had discussed U.S. sanctions with then-Russian
Ambassador Sergei Kislyak during the transition and later misled
Vice President Mike Pence about the conversations.
Flynn pleaded guilty in December to lying to the FBI about his
discussions with Kislyak, becoming the first member of Trump’s
administration to agree to cooperate with Mueller’s investigation.
Manafort, who stepped down as chairman of Trump's campaign in August
amid media reports about cash payments from Ukraine, is facing
charges in two separate indictments, including allegations of money
laundering, tax evasion and covertly lobbying for a pro-Russian
political party in Ukraine.
In contrast to Flynn, Manafort has denied wrongdoing and is
preparing for trial.
(Reporting by David Alexander, Sarah Lynch, and Karen Freifeld in
Washington, and Jan Wolfe and Nathan Layne in New York; editing by
Jeffrey Benkoe and Cynthia Osterman)
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