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Flynn guilty plea raises questions for Trump and Kushner

The court filings from former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn's plea hearing Friday show special counsel Robert Mueller's investigators are focused on the actions of President Donald Trump and his senior team.

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By
Shimon Prokupecz
and
Jim Sciutto (CNN)
(CNN) — The court filings from former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn's plea hearing Friday show special counsel Robert Mueller's investigators are focused on the actions of President Donald Trump and his senior team.

They also provide the clearest picture yet of coordination between Flynn and other Trump advisers in contacting Russian officials to influence international policy.

The investigation of the contacts ahead of a United Nations Security Council vote on Israeli settlements could have implications for others involved, including Trump and his son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner.

An attorney for Kushner did not respond to a request for comment.

The court filings Friday describe a "very senior member" of Trump's transition team who directed Flynn to contact officials from UN Security Council countries, including Russia, to learn where each country stood on the vote on a resolution condemning Israeli settlement activity. The court documents did not name any transition officials.

Before the vote, the Israeli government lobbied the Obama administration to kill the resolution, but the efforts fell flat. The Israeli government then reached out to the Trump transition and asked for help in pressing for a veto of the resolution, a senior Israeli official told CNN at the time.

The resolution was originally proposed by Egypt. On December 22, Trump spoke with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi before the scheduled vote. After the call, Egypt withdrew the proposal, but other countries later stepped in to put it back on the docket.

Intelligence intercepts picked up Kushner's conversations with foreign intelligence targets about efforts to stop the Israeli settlements resolution, according an official briefed on the matter. In addition, communications intercepts captured Israeli officials saying that Kushner told them he would help with the resolution, a former senior US intelligence official tells CNN.

At President Barack Obama's direction, the US abstained from voting on the resolution, a rare move that allowed the UN Security Council to unanimously condemn Israeli's settlement activity. Israel was vehemently opposed to such a move by its closest ally and appeared to be lobbying the incoming president to change US policy. The Trump transition's offer to the Israelis to provide help would appear to violate the long-held principle that presidents-elect refrain from interfering in US foreign policy during the transition based on the idea that there is "only one president at a time."

The court filings on Friday also show that Flynn was working with other members of the Trump transition team when he spoke to Kislyak about US sanctions against Russia.

On December 28, Obama announced new US sanctions on Moscow in response to Russia's meddling during the 2016 election. The following day, Flynn spoke to a "senior official" on the transition team at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort to discuss "what, if anything, to communicate to the Russian Ambassador about the US sanctions," according to the documents.

Flynn and the official discussed that the transition team did not want Russia to escalate the situation, according to the filings, and Flynn called Kislyak immediately after his conversation with the transition official to request that "Russia not escalate the situation and only respond to the US sanctions in a reciprocal manner."

After his call with Kislyak, Flynn briefed the transition team member on their conversation, the filings state, and he also spoke with other senior members of the transition team about his Kislyak conversations and Russia's decision not to escalate the situation.

The White House said late Friday morning that "nothing about the guilty plea or the charge implicates anyone other than Mr. Flynn.

"The conclusion of this phase of the special counsel's work demonstrates again that the special counsel is moving with all deliberate speed and clears the way for a prompt and reasonable conclusion," Ty Cobb, a White House lawyer, said in a statement.

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