How Appealing



Monday, August 31, 2020

“Michael Flynn case does not have to be immediately dismissed, appeals court rules”: Ann E. Marimow of The Washington Post has this report.

Sadie Gurman of The Wall Street Journal reports that “Michael Flynn’s Emergency Bid to Force Dismissal of Criminal Case Denied; Federal judge can examine Justice Department’s move to drop criminal case, appeals court rules.”

Kristine Phillips of USA Today reports that “Appeals court denies ex-Trump adviser Michael Flynn’s request to force dismissal of case.”

Jeff Mordock of The Washington Times reports that “Federal appeals court denies Flynn’s bid to dismiss criminal case.”

Eric Tucker of The Associated Press reports that “Appeals court keeps Flynn case alive, won’t order dismissal.”

Jan Wolfe of Reuters reports that “U.S. court denies ex-Trump adviser Flynn’s bid to halt criminal case.”

Erik Larson of Bloomberg News reports that “Flynn Loses Bid to Force Judge to Dismiss Criminal Case.”

Pete Williams of NBC News has a report headlined “Setback for Mike Flynn, Court of Appeals denies request to have his case tossed immediately; The saga of Trump’s former national security adviser, who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI, is likely to drag on for months.”

Katelyn Polantz of CNN reports that “Appeals court denies Michael Flynn and Justice Department’s effort to end his case.”

Josh Gerstein of Politico reports that “Judge can move forward with Flynn hearing, appeals court says; The full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that lower-court Judge Emmet Sullivan may hear arguments over the Justice Department’s request to dismiss the case against former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, upending a smaller panel’s ruling.”

And Harper Neidig of The Hill reports that “Appeals court rejects Flynn’s effort to dismiss charges.”

You can access today’s per curiam en banc ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit at this link.

Posted at 12:40 PM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court’s split decision for abortion rights gives opponents an unlikely boost”: Richard Wolf of USA Today has this report.

Posted at 9:52 AM by Howard Bashman