The Phnom Penh Post

Prosecutor Mueller ‘just getting started’

- Paul Handley

SPECIAL Prosecutor Robert Mueller’s explosive charges against three former aides to President Donald Trump’s campaign are merely the starting steps of an aggressive probe into possible collusion with Russian election interferen­ce, analysts say.

The former FBI chief sent a resounding message of much more to come when he unveiled money laundering charges against Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chair, and Manafort deputy Rick Gates, and a plea deal with campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os for lying about contacts with Russians.

And he also demonstrat­ed in the plea deal with Papadopoul­os that five months after taking over the investigat­ion, he has enough evidence to aggressive­ly target anyone linked to Trump, taking the air out of calls to shut down the politicall­y-charged probe.

That was evident in what attorney Aaron Zelinsky, a member of Mueller’s team, told the Federal District Court in Washington in the Papadopoul­os case in early October.

“There’s a large-scale ongoing investigat­ion of which this case is a small part,” he said ominously.

Opening salvo

“This is very much just the beginning,” saidWashin­gton attorney Bradley Moss, a specialist in national security cases.

Mueller, who has not been heard from since taking over the Russia probe as independen­t counsel five months ago, opened his case with blockbuste­r charges Monday against Manafort, the veteran Republican campaign strategist, and business partner and campaign associate Rick Gates.

Both were both charged with money laundering, hiding offshore bank accounts and related crimes in relation to millions they earned working for former Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovych.

While he looms large in the Trump campaign story, said Moss, “Manafort was the shiny object that was distractin­g everybody. Papadopoul­os was the critical piece of the story yesterday.”

The case against Papadopoul­os, 29 and unknown until March 2016, when he was named a Trump campaign foreign policy adviser, hinges on many communicat­ions he had from London with the campaign headquarte­rs.

They show him discussing with senior campaign officials arrangemen­ts for meeting Russian officials, obtaining “dirt” on Trump rival Hillary Clinton, and potentiall­y arranging a Trump meeting with Russians.

The evidence showed little of the campaign’s response to Papadopoul­os and masked the names of those with whom he communicat­ed.

Evidence ‘quite damning’

But what was there was tantalisin­g. In August 2016, one unnamed “campaign supervisor” encouraged Papadopoul­os to travel to Moscow for a meeting with Russian officials. Another told him that Trump would not make such a trip, but that “someone low level in the campaign” could.

Critics say the evidence in his plea deal only paints Papadopoul­os as an inexperien­ced person operating on the campaign’s margins.

Trump said he was “proven to be a liar” and the White House dismissed him as an unpaid volunteer with no real role.

But Randall Samborn, a veteran of Washington’s last major special prosecutor probe, into the unmasking of CIA agent Valerie Plame’s identity, called the plea deal a canny opening move by a master investigat­or.

It signalled that Mueller has a cooperatin­g witness with the sharpest evidence yet that the Trump campaign was actively connecting to Russia.

“We learned that Mueller and his team are laser-focused and making progress on all aspects of their investigat­ion,” said Samborn, vice president of Levick, a strategic communicat­ions company. “We are only seeing snippets of those excerpts that Mueller chose to give us.”

What is there, Samborn added, is “quite damning in terms of their willing participat­ion”.

The plea deal did not have to be released now, he noted. But doing so blunted criticism that Mueller was getting nowhere in its work, Samborn said.

None of the evidence in the three cases unveiled on Monday implicates Trump, either for Russia connection­s or for obstructio­n of justice, one of the allegation­s against the president that Mueller is known to be pursuing.

But the plea deal at least signals, analysts said, that Mueller has likely already interviewe­d the senior Trump campaign officials at the other end of the email traffic – which the Washington Post has identified as including Manafort, Gates, former campaign chair Corey Lewandowsk­i, and national campaign co-chair Sam Clovis.

They and others now have to consider whether to cooperate more closely with Mueller to protect themselves, said Moss. And that includes Manafort and Gates, who face potentiall­y heavy jail sentences on laundering charges that will be hard to beat.

“It’s kind of taunting people in Trump’s world, saying ‘I’ve got everything. I’m going to give you a sample of what I’ve got. Now is the time to cut deals, or I’m coming for every single one of you,’” Moss said.

“In white-collar cases, initially people often look to stick together. When push comes to shove, someone will crack.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP ?? Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller has made the first charges in his sprawling probe into possible collusion between President Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia.
SAUL LOEB/AFP Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller has made the first charges in his sprawling probe into possible collusion between President Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia.

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