President Donald Trump‘s former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, met with two FBI investigators in the West Wing early last year — without a lawyer or the White House’s knowledge, NBC News reported Wednesday.
Months before special counsel Robert Mueller was appointed to investigate potential contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian sources, Flynn spoke with FBI investigators in his West Wing office about his communications with Russians, NBC reported.
Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe reportedly facilitated the Jan. 24 meeting after a phone call with Flynn’s scheduler on the same day. Sources told NBC that Trump was unaware of the meeting until two days later, on Jan. 26.
Flynn took the meeting alone, NBC said, opting to exclude his lawyer or a lawyer from the National Security Council who would normally attend such a meeting.
Former acting attorney general Sally Yates informed White House lawyer Don McGahn about the meeting — the first member of Trump’s inner circle to learn about the event — two days later. McGahn then told senior administration officials about the interview.
Flynn is a retired Army lieutenant general who joined the Trump administration as national security advisor in January 2017. He resigned from the role less than a month later, after his allegedly misleading statements to Vice President Mike Pence about contacts with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak raised concerns from the Justice Department that Flynn could be vulnerable to blackmail.
Trump later told reporters that Flynn was fired from the position “because of what he said to Mike Pence,” while later adding “with all that being said, I think he’s a fine man.”
In late 2017, Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI as part of the bureau’s investigation into potential collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia. He is now cooperating with the special counsel’s probe.