The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Former Trump campaign aide jailed in Russia probe

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WASHINGTON: A former advisor to US President Donald Trump whose contacts with Russians set off the investigat­ion into possible collusion with Moscow was jailed Friday for lying to the FBI.

US District Judge Randolph Moss sentenced foreign policy aide George Papadopoul­os to 14 days in prison, acknowledg­ing his guilty plea and his remorse, but noting that he “lied in an investigat­ion that was important to national security.”

Papadopoul­os was the second person ordered to prison in the sprawling, 16-month Russia collusion investigat­ion of Special Counsel Robert Mueller. It came just over two weeks after two former top Trump aides were convicted of felony crimes in cases that grew out of the probe.

Trump suggested the conviction was trivial for a probe that has cost millions since it launched in May 2017 — while ignoring the 35 indictment­s, five guilty pleas and one trial conviction Mueller has racked up so far.

“14 days for US$28 million US$2 million a day, No Collusion. A great day for America!” Trump tweeted.

Senator Mark Warner, the senior Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, which has its own Russia collusion investigat­ion, applauded Mueller’s work.

Despite constant attacks by the president, Mueller and his team “are conducting a serious, profession­al investigat­ion” into the 2016 Trump campaign’s contacts with Russians, Warner said in a statement.

Papadopoul­os, 31, was an inexperien­ced London-based oil analyst when he joined the Trump campaign in March 2016 on the Republican candidate’s national security advisory board.

Told the campaign’s priority was to improve relations with Russia, within weeks Papadopoul­os made contact with a mysterious professor, Joseph Mifsud, who touted links to the Kremlin.

Mifsud introduced him to others who ostensibly had connection­s to Russian President Vladimir Putin — including a woman laimed to be Putin’s niece.

At a campaign meeting at the end of March 2016 Papadopoul­os told Trump, then-senator and now Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and other campaign officials that he had connection­s in London that could set up a Trump-Putin meeting ahead of the November election. X“While some in the room rebuffed George’s offer, Mr Trump nodded with approval and deferred to Mr Sessions, who appeared to like the idea and stated that the campaign should look into it,” Papadopoul­os’s lawyers said in a pre-sentencing statement last week.

Sessions has claimed he opposed the idea, but Papadopoul­os continued to discuss it with top campaign officials over the following months.

Papadopoul­os told CNN in a late Friday interview that Trump “gave me a sort of a nod” and “wasn’t committed either way” at that meeting — but that Sessions “was actually enthusiast­ic” about a Trump-Putin gathering.

He also said that Mifsud told him in April that the Russians had “thousands of emails” about Clinton — which Papadopoul­os described as a “momentous statement” but not a direct offer of assistance.

His reaction was that Mifsud “was simply repeating gossip and rumors,” Papadopoul­os said.

“All I can say about this question — because I’ve been asked a million times — is if I told anyone it would have been discovered by now,” he told CNN. “As far as I remember, I absolutely did not share this informatio­n with anyone on the campaign. I might have, but I have no recollecti­on of doing so.”

Weeks later, the stolen Clinton emails were posted online by what US intelligen­ce chiefs now say were Russian intelligen­ce actors.

The mysterious Mifsud has since vanished, CNN said.

FBI agents quietly opened a probe into Trump campaign officials possibly colluding with Russia after they were tipped off by an Australian diplomat that Papadopoul­os had spoken about Russians having dirt on Clinton.

 ??  ?? Papadopoul­os leaves the US District Court after his sentencing hearing in Washington, DC. — AFP photo
Papadopoul­os leaves the US District Court after his sentencing hearing in Washington, DC. — AFP photo

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