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Circuit Court Rejects Michael Flynn’s Appeal

Police: Man Who Pulled Gun on Protesters Was ‘Lawfully Defending Himself’

Police in Tallahassee, Florida, said a man who was seen pulling a gun at Black Lives Matter protesters and agitators who were seen beating him will not be charged. Video footage captured Saturday at the Florida Historic Capitol building showed the demonstrators attacking the man while he was on the ground before the man got up and pulled out a pistol and waved it before the protesters retreated. “The evidence confirmed the physical altercation between numerous protesters and that the individual was knocked to the ground and under attack before lawfully defending himself,” a press release from the police department read. “TPD confirmed that the individual with the gun was lawfully carrying a concealed weapon as a license holder.” The city said that the man, who is white, started “documenting the protest”…

Circuit Court Rejects Michael Flynn’s Appeal

The federal appeals court in Washington on Aug. 31 rejected a request for intervention filed by former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, sending the case back to the district judge who had set up an unprecedented procedure to determine whether he should approve the government’s motion to dismiss the case.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit denied the mandamus petition, arguing that Flynn has not exhausted other means of relief. Two of the eleven judges on the panel wrote a dissenting opinion. A mandamus petition is a form of extraordinary relief which asks a higher court to issue an order to a lower court.

“We conclude that mandamus is unavailable because an ‘adequate alternative remedy exists,’” the court opinion (pdf) states.

“Here, petitioner and the government have an adequate alternate means of relief,” the opinion states. “the District Court could grant the motion, reject amicus鈥檚 arguments, and dismiss the case.”

Flynn’s legal team filed a petition with the DC circuit court in May, shortly after the district judge in his case appointed an “amicus curiae” (friend of the court) to provide arguments against the prosecution’s motion to dismiss the case. The unprecedented step pitted the judge against the defendant and the prosecutor before an appeals court. A three-judge panel sided with Flynn, but Judge Emmet Sullivan hired attorney Beth Wilkinson and asked the court’s full eleven-judge panel, or en banc, to rehear the case.

Circuit Court Judge聽Neomi Rao dissented and argued that Sullivan’s “conduct patently draws his impartiality into question.” Sullivan, Rao continued, voided his impartiality by acting as a party in the case before the appeals court.

“But his petition for en banc review with no legal support whatsoever therefor manifests, first, that he plainly appears to view himself as a ‘party’; second, and more important, that his attempted action removes any doubt that the appearance of impartiality required of all federal judges has been compromised beyond repair,” Rao wrote.

Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI in December 2017, but withdrew his plea prior to the sentencing. The prosecutors later asked the judge to dismiss the case after discovering evidence that the bureau had no reason to conduct the interview during which Flynn allegedly lied. Sullivan responded to the motion by appointing a third-party judge to weigh in on the motion to dismiss to determine whether Flynn should be charged with perjury for walking back his plea.

The Flynn prosecution played a central part in shaping the false narrative that the Trump 2016 presidential campaign colluded with Russia to sway the 2016 election. After a 22-month investigation, special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence of collusion, a finding recently affirmed by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

In recent months, the Flynn case became a political bombshell after records disclosed as part of the case showed that President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden were directly involved in discussions about the investigation during the transition period in early January 2017.

With the mandamus appeal rejected, Flynn and his prosecutors will have to present their arguments before Sullivan against the amicus curiae, who has already opined that the court should reject the prosecution’s motion to dismiss the case.

Follow Ivan on Twitter: @ivanpentchoukov

Focus News: Circuit Court Rejects Michael Flynn’s Appeal

Schiff: House Could Subpoena Officials to Testify on Election Interference

House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said Sunday it is possible the House could issue subpoenas to federal intelligence officials to testify on alleged election interference, coming after Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe told members of Congress that he won’t deliver in-person briefings on election interference because of rampant leaks to the press. Schiff said on Sunday that “I can’t speak for what decision ultimately we’ll make. That’s a decision that will have to go to the speaker,” referring to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). Schiff served as the lead House impeachment manager and has frequently accused President Donald Trump of colluding with Russia to secure the 2016 election. “This intelligence paid for by taxpayers doesn’t belong to Donald Trump, it doesn’t belong to the intelligence agencies, it belongs to the…