The Philippine Star

Trump campaign manager faces conspiracy, money launder raps

-

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Paul Manafort, a former campaign manager for US President Donald Trump, and an associate were indicted by a federal grand jury on 12 counts including conspiracy against the United States and money laundering, the federal special counsel’s office said yesterday.

The charges were the first arising from the investigat­ion by Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller, who was appointed to look into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election campaign aimed at swaying the vote in favor of Trump.

Manafort and Rick Gates, a business partner who served as his deputy in the Trump campaign, were charged on Friday in the District of Columbia in an indictment unsealed Monday after the two men surrendere­d to the FBI, the special counsel said in a statement.

“The indictment contains 12 counts: conspiracy against the United States, conspiracy to launder money, unregister­ed agent of a foreign principal, false and misleading FARA statements, false statements, and seven counts of failure to file reports of foreign bank and financial accounts,” the statement said.

FARA is an acronym for Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act.

The indictment said Manafort and Gates generated tens of millions of dollars of income from work for Ukrainian political parties and leaders and laundered money through US and foreign entities to hide payments between 2006 and at least 2016.

The two concealed their work and revenue as agents of Ukrainian political parties, it said.

Manafort and Gates will be taken to the federal district courthouse, a FBI spokesman told Reuters.

Lawyers for Gates and Manafort did not immediatel­y return calls for comment.

Manafort, 68, served the Trump campaign from June to August of 2016 before resigning amid reports that he might have received millions in illegal payments from a pro-Russian political party in Ukraine.

Investigat­ions into Russian links with the Trump campaign, including Mueller’s and probes by several congressio­nal panels, have dogged Trump’s presidency since the Republican took office in January. Trump has denied any allegation­s of collusion with the Russians and called the probes “a witch hunt.” The Kremlin also has denied the allegation­s.

US intelligen­ce agencies concluded earlier this year that Moscow interfered in the campaign, including by hacking into and releasing Democratic emails in order to try to embarrass Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

Among other things, Mueller has been investigat­ing Manafort’s financial and real estate dealings and his prior work for that political group, the Party of Regions, which backed former Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovich, sources have told Reuters.

 ?? EPA ?? US President Donald Trump kisses his wife Melania during a news conference in Washington on Friday.
EPA US President Donald Trump kisses his wife Melania during a news conference in Washington on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines