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Michael Flynn's heavily redacted sentencing memo shows Mueller has more bombshells in store
Michael Flynn's heavily redacted sentencing memo shows Mueller has more bombshells in store · CNBC
  • Former national security advisor Michael Flynn's glowing performance review from special counsel Robert Mueller suggests there are more shoes to drop in the ongoing probe of Russian election interference.

  • In a heavily redacted court document filed Tuesday night ahead of Flynn's Dec. 18 sentencing in Washington, D.C. federal court, Mueller recommended a light sentence — possibly so light as to include no jail time at all — for President Donald Trump's ex-senior official and campaign surrogate.

  • "The cooperation does not appear to be against Manafort or Cohen or it wouldn't have been blacked out," said David Weinstein, a defense attorney and former federal prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Miami. "There is more to come."

Special counsel Robert Mueller's glowing performance review of star witness and former national security advisor Michael Flynn suggests there are more shoes to drop in the ongoing probe of Russian election interference.

In a heavily redacted court document filed Tuesday night ahead of Flynn's Dec. 18 sentencing in Washington, D.C. federal court, Mueller recommended a light sentence — possibly so light as to include no jail time at all — for President Donald Trump 's ex-senior official and campaign surrogate.

Mueller said in that sentencing memo that Flynn, 60, had provided "firsthand insight" over the course of 19 interviews with special counsel investigators and Justice Department attorneys, and that his benefits to their work "may not be fully realized" until the investigations are finished.

The court filing reveals that Flynn's cooperation extended beyond the probe of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and possible coordination between Trump campaign-related figures and the Kremlin.

One lengthy section, almost entirely blacked out, points to a separate and unspecified "criminal investigation" in which Flynn had "provided substantial assistance" to investigators.

"Mueller still has many more revelations to drop, and they're going to land hard," former federal prosecutor Elie Honig wrote in a CNN op-ed about the memo .

White-collar attorney Sol Wisenberg, who was deputy independent counsel in the Whitewater investigation into then-President and first lady Bill and Hillary Clinton, said on Fox News that "the memo itself is kind of a dud," but only because "all the good stuff is redacted."

Flynn pleaded guilty in December 2017 to a single count of lying to the FBI about his contacts with Sergey Kislyak, Russia's ambassador to the U.S. Flynn spoke to Kislyak during the presidential transition period about sanctions slapped on Russia by President Barack Obama in December 2016, in retaliation for that country's attempts to interfere in the U.S. presidential election.