President Donald Trump's legal team is reportedly planning to characterize former national security adviser Michael Flynn as a liar. That could be a problem.
- President Donald Trump's legal team is reportedly planning to characterize former national security adviser Michael Flynn as a liar if he accuses Trump of wrongdoing to federal prosecutors.
- Any attacks on Flynn would mark a departure from Trump's consistent praise of the retired general. And it would raise questions about when and why he lost faith in Flynn.
- "It is a standard or typical defense strategy, but that’s because clients usually listen to their lawyers and keep quiet so as to preserve their options down the line," said one legal expert. "Trump didn’t do that."
President Donald Trump's lawyers are reportedly preparing to cast former national security Michael Flynn as a liar if Flynn accuses Trump of any wrongdoing as part of his ongoing cooperation with special counsel Robert Mueller.
But that strategy could raise an "obvious question," said criminal law professor David Sklanksy: Why did Trump "stick with Flynn, trust him with national secrets, and defend him as a 'very good person' even after learning about the precise behavior that they now say shows that Flynn is utterly untrustworthy?"
The defense strategy Trump's team reportedly plans to adopt is fairly standard, legal experts say. By impugning the character of the prosecution's star witness — especially one who has already admitted to lying to federal agents — defense lawyers can argue his testimony isn't credible.
Any attacks on Flynn by the defense, however, "would be an uncomfortable 180" given Trump's consistent and public praise of Flynn over the past 10 months, said Jens David Ohlin, a criminal law expert and vice dean at Cornell Law School.
"It is a standard or typical defense strategy, but that’s because clients usually listen to their lawyers and keep quiet so as to preserve their options down the line," Ohlin said Thursday.
"Trump didn’t do that. He’s repeatedly said over and over again, in private and public, that Flynn is a good guy who has been treated unfairly by the media and by this process. If Trump turns around and impugns Flynn’s character, it would be an uncomfortable 180. It doesn’t withstand rational — or logical — scrutiny."
Flynn pleaded guilty earlier this month to making false statements to federal agents about the nature of his conversations with former Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak during the presidential transition period. Flynn evaded more serious charges related to his undisclosed foreign lobbying work — and alleged involvement in a kidnapping scheme — by agreeing to cooperate with Mueller's ongoing investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia.
Asked about Flynn's guilty plea earlier this month, Trump lamented what he saw as "unfair" treatment by the FBI and Department of Justice.
“I feel very badly for Gen. Flynn,” Trump told reporters.
"Hillary Clinton lied many times to the FBI, and nothing happened to her," he continued. "Flynn lied, and it destroyed his life, and I think it’s a shame."
'General Flynn is a wonderful man'
Trump tweeted on December 3 that he had to fire Flynn in February because he had lied to Vice President Mike Pence "and the FBI."
That remark jumped out at legal experts who said it could prove that Trump had corrupt intent when he asked former FBI Director James Comey, one day after Flynn resigned, to consider "letting Flynn go."
"It is a shame because his actions during the transition were lawful," Trump wrote. "There was nothing to hide!"
Sklansky, a professor at Stanford Law School, said that Trump's past praise of Flynn "does make it trickier for his team to attack Flynn now."
"It’s not so much that you can’t attack someone you’re previously praised," Sklansky said. "Lots of criminal defendants claim they were taken in by someone who they later learned they shouldn’t have trusted. But Trump praised Flynn, and kept him on as National Security Advisor, even after Trump knew that Flynn had lied to Pence—and possibly after he knew that he had lied to the FBI."
Trump has also refused to rule out a pardon for the man his legal team reportedly plans to demean, and he continued to praise Flynn's character even after he was forced out of the administration.
"Michael Flynn, General Flynn, is a wonderful man," Trump said at a press conference following Flynn's resignation. "I think he’s been treated very, very unfairly by the media."
Trump has occasionally attempted to distance himself and his administration from Flynn. He reminded his followers in one March tweet that "General Flynn was given the highest security clearance by the Obama Administration," and told Fox in April that "Obama, I guess, didn't vet" Flynn.
Privately, however, Trump was bitter over Flynn's ouster and continued to offer him words of encouragement through April, according to Yahoo News.
"Mike Flynn should ask for immunity in that this is a witch hunt (excuse for big election loss), by media & Dems, of historic proportion!" Trump tweeted on March 31.
A 'super awkward' defense strategy
Former White House associate counsel Andy Wright said it would be "super awkward" for Trump's lawyers "to trash Flynn after the President’s repeated public expressions of support."
Wright said prosecutors will likely pepper the defense with questions about when the president lost confidence in Flynn; why he waited three weeks to remove Flynn once he knew he lied to Pence (and perhaps to the FBI); why the president raised the Flynn issue with Comey; and why he has continued to make statements supportive of Flynn.
"A prosecutor could use Trump’s own words against his lawyers’ argument," Wright said. "It would be consistent with Trump’s with-me-or-against-me style to go from total support to total war once he perceives Flynn as a threat."
While Trump's reported defense strategy may be standard, then, it won't necessarily be effective.
"Don't confuse a defense with a good defense," Bob Deitz, a former top lawyer at the CIA and National Security Agency, said in an email.
''The issue for a defense counsel is always, WHAT ARE MY OPTIONS?" he added. "From my perspective...I think defense lawyers are facing a depleted pantry."