The House Oversight Chairman Jason Chaffetz (R) and ranking Democrat Elijah Cummings said today that there is no sign that Trump’s former national security advisor complied with the law when he failed to disclose payments he received from Russia.
From CNN:
Chaffetz and Cummings announced their findings to reporters on the Hill following a classified gathering of the committee in which they reviewed documents that Cummings described as “extremely troubling.”
“I see no data to support the notion that Gen. Flynn complied with the law,” Chaffetz said, referring to whether Flynn received permission from the Pentagon or the State Department or that he disclosed the more than $45,000 he was paid for a speech he gave to RT-TV in Russia.
Also today: White House Director of Legislative Affairs Marc Short refused the House Oversight Committee’s request for documents relating to Flynn.
From The Week:
In a letter, Short said some of the requested documents were in the custody of the Department of Defense, not the White House. In the case of other documents, Short wrote that the White House was “unable to accommodate” the requests. Short’s response arrived as the committee convened Tuesday to review its first set of documents on Flynn, provided by the Pentagon.
Previous documents released by the White House at the beginning of April revealed Flynn had not disclosed income he’d received from three Russia-linked firms. Flynn’s lobbying company has also been found to have worked for a firm linked to the Turkish government while Flynn was serving as a top adviser to Trump’s presidential campaign.