Michael Flynn during the daily news briefing at the White House before his dismissal in February.
Michael Flynn during the daily news briefing at the White House before his dismissal in February. Credit: ap file photo

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump urged his former national security adviser to strike an immunity deal Friday, even as congressional investigators rebuffed Michael Flynn’s offer of cooperation in exchange for protection from prosecution.

Trump tweeted that Flynn, the adviser he fired last month, should ask for immunity because he’s facing “a witch hunt.”

The White House also tried to quell a firestorm over its role in helping a top Republican lawmaker see secret intelligence reports. Rep. Adam Schiff went to the White House to view materials that he said were “precisely the same” as what House intelligence chairman Devin Nunes viewed there last week.

“The White House has yet to explain why senior White House staff apparently shared these materials with but one member,” said Schiff, who met with Trump for about 10 minutes while he was at the White House.

The president weighed in on Flynn the day after the ousted national security adviser’s attorney confirmed the immunity discussions with intelligence committees in both the Senate and House that are investigating Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

A congressional aide confirmed that preliminary discussions with the Senate intelligence committee involved immunity but that it was too early in the investigation to set terms.

Schiff said committee leaders would be discussing the issue with their Senate counterparts and the Justice Department. “We should first acknowledge what a grave and momentous step it is for a former national security adviser to the president of the United States to ask for immunity from prosecution,” Schiff said in a statement.

Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, said no “reasonable person” who has a lawyer would answer questions without assurances that he would not be prosecuted, given calls from some members of Congress that the retired lieutenant general should face criminal charges.

Flynn seemed to have a different view last September when he weighed in on the implications of immunity on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” criticizing Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and her associates in the FBI’s investigation into her use of a private email server.

“When you are given immunity, that means that you have probably committed a crime,” Flynn said during the interview.