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Pentagon probes former Trump aide Flynn's foreign payments

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AP Washington
The investigations into President Donald Trump's ousted National Security Adviser Michael Flynn intensified today as the Pentagon's watchdog joined lawmakers in scrutinising the legality of payments he accepted from foreign sources including a Russian state-sponsored television network.

Also, new documents released by the ranking Democrat on a House oversight committee showed Flynn was warned by authorities when he retired from the military in 2014 not to take foreign government-sourced money without "advance approval" from the Pentagon.

Flynn, a former Army lieutenant general and Defence Intelligence Agency chief, later accepted tens of thousands of dollars for his work on behalf of foreign interests, including RT, the state-supported Russian television network, and a Turkish-owned company linked to Turkey's government.
 

The Pentagon's acting inspector general's office confirmed today he has launched an enquiry into whether those payments qualify as coming from foreign governments and whether Flynn properly informed military authorities about them.

Rep Elijah Cummings, D-Md, who released the documents on Flynn, said during a news conference that Flynn was clearly informed that he needed to get permission to receive foreign payments and there's no evidence he did so.

"The Pentagon's warning to General Flynn was bold, italicised and could not have been clearer," Cummings said.

Both Cummings and Utah Republican Jason Chaffetz, the chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, have previously said they planned to ask the Army to rule on whether Flynn properly informed and asked permission for the payments from Russian and Turkish entities.

A key document released today by Cummings showed that Flynn was warned by a Defence Intelligence Agency official in October 2014 that he would need clearance from the Army before he could accept any earnings linked to foreign governments.

Flynn was told in the document that the US Constitution's emoluments provision prohibits any monetary payments or gifts "from a foreign government unless congressional consent is first obtained."

The letter explained that such "advance approval" would need to come "from the relevant service secretary."

Flynn received at least USD 33,750 for his appearance in Moscow in 2015 for RT's anniversary celebration, a gala where Flynn sat next to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Flynn has previously disclosed that he received between USD 50,000 and USD 100,000 as part of his personal stake in USD 530,000 that his company, Flynn Intel Group, received for consulting work performed last year for a Turkish businessman.

Flynn's firm filed as a foreign agent last month with the Justice Department for its consulting work and acknowledged that it may have benefited the government of Turkey. Flynn's client, Inovo BV, is owned by a Turkish businessman who is also a member of a committee overseen by Turkey's finance ministry.

The US House committee's leaders reported earlier this week that they found no evidence that Flynn asked for permission for foreign payments he received or informed the military that he had accepted them. Army spokeswoman Cynthia O. Smith today also said "we have found no records of LTG(R) Flynn requesting permission from the Army for foreign employment."

In comments to the AP, Chaffetz said that Flynn "had an obligation to seek approval to take money from a foreign government. We found no evidence that he did that." Chaffetz, however, did not join Cummings at today's news conference, unlike their bipartisan appearance earlier in the week announcing the results of the committee's enquiry into Flynn's dealings with authorities before and after his foreign earnings.

Chaffetz's office released a letter he sent today to the Army, asking the service's acting secretary to make a final determination as to whether Flynn violated federal law by accepting the payments, and if so, to start the process of recovering that money.

Chaffetz also asked the Army to say why it hasn't already made a determination as to the legality of Flynn's payments from RT given that they have been widely reported for at least two years. He also wants the Army to disclose any other investigations it's launched since 2010 into similar legal violations.

The committee's enquiry is one of several congressional investigations into Flynn's contacts with foreign officials before and during his brief stint as Trump's top national security aide.

Trump fired Flynn for failing to inform senior administration officials about his contacts with Russian officials contacts that are being examined as part of the wider enquiries into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential campaign.

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First Published: Apr 28 2017 | 12:22 AM IST

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