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Judge Delays DOJ Request to Dismiss Flynn Case, Considers Allowing Outside Parties to Weigh in

streetwisepol May 13, 2020 Crossfire Hurricane, Department of Justice, DOJ, Emmet Sullivan, Michael Flynn, Politics, US, US News Comments Off on Judge Delays DOJ Request to Dismiss Flynn Case, Considers Allowing Outside Parties to Weigh in

A federal judge on Tuesday said he would not immediately allow the Department of Justice’s motion to drop charges against former Trump administration national security adviser Lt. Gen Michael Flynn, and would instead consider letting outside parties to weigh in on the case with their opinions.

D.C. District Judge Emmet Sullivan said in a written order late Tuesday that instead of dismissing the Flynn prosecution right away, “given the current posture of this case,” he anticipated that interested outside parties will “seek leave of the Court” to file briefs expressing their opinions, referred to as amicus curiae—or friend-of-the-court—briefs.

Sullivan, a Clinton appointee, said he expects a scheduling order governing the submission of the briefs.

Flynn’s legal team criticized Sullivan’s move to considering the “amicus” filings. In a motion late Tuesday, Sidney Powell, a former federal prosecutor who took over representation for Flynn in June 2019, pointed out that “[t]his Court has consistently—on 24 previous occasions—summarily refused to permit any third party to inject themselves or their views into this case.”

“The proposed amicus brief has no place in this Court,” Powell and other attorneys for Flynn wrote, objecting to an amicus brief that a group identifying itself as “Watergate Prosecutors” had said on May 11 that it intended to submit.

“No rule allows the filing, and the self-proclaimed collection of ‘Watergate Prosecutors’ has no cognizable special interest,” Flynn’s attorneys said in the six-page motion. “Separation of powers forecloses their appearance here. Only the Department of Justice and the defense can be heard.”

“A criminal case is a dispute between the United States and a criminal defendant. There is no place for third parties to meddle in the dispute, and certainly not to usurp the role of the government’s counsel,” the attorneys also wrote. “For the Court to allow another to stand in the place of the government would be a violation of the separation of powers.”

In an interview Tuesday evening with Fox News, Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said the department’s position was clear in the motion to dismiss the case.

“We do not believe this case should have been brought, we are correcting that and we certainly hope that in the interest of true justice, that the judge ultimately agrees and drops the case against General Flynn,” she said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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