rab79 said:
So if Flynn committed perjury by pleading guilty to something he didn't do, do criminal defendants that plead innocent commit perjury as well when they are guilty? ridiculous I know but so is the Flynn perjury scenario.
Sounds confusing, doesn't it? But I think the the perjury issue would come during the allocution.
Quote:
After pleading guilty, a defendant is typically offered a formal opportunity to address the court to express remorse, and explain personal circumstances that might be considered in sentencing. This is known as an allocution statement. ... From the court's perspective, judges cannot simply accept a defendant's guilty plea.
LINKI haven't gone back read the transcript but I'm not altogether convinced Judge Sullivan actually got to that part substantively, insofar as he blew up his own hearing with the treason accusation and had to go into recess.
(Further, Sullivan twice expressed doubts over the materiality of the statement as the basis of the false statement case and materiality is an element of the offense. Under Rule 11, the judge must find every element of the offense is supported before he can accept the plea. He failed to do so, so his acceptance of the guilty plea may have been reversible error.)
But the implication is that it is something else Flynn could have said other than the actual words, "I plead guilty" to support a possible perjury charge. Now whether Judge Gleeson legally can make that charge, or even Judge Sullivan can make that charge, is highly suspect as Article III judges do not have prosecutorial authority.
Perjury is not the same as criminal contempt of court. Not can it be made into a criminal contempt of court under the rules. When lawyers get sanctioned for lying to a federal court it is because they are officers of the court that warrants the punishment, not a separate charge of perjury because they are not under oath but are under the duties to not mislead the court as officers, thereto.