Austin American-Statesman

Dutch lawyer gets jail time and fine for lying in probe

Van Der Zwaan is first sentenced in Russia investigat­ion.

- By Chad Day

A Dutch attorney who lied to federal agents investigat­ing former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was sentenced Tuesday to 30 days in prison in the first punishment handed down in the special counsel’s Russia investigat­ion. He was also ordered to pay a $20,000 fine.

Alex van der Zwaan’s sentence could set a guidepost for what other defendants charged with lying in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion may receive when their cases are resolved. Among them are a former White House national security adviser and a Trump campaign foreign policy aide.

Van der Zwaan had faced zero to six months in prison under federal sentencing guidelines, and his attorneys had pushed for him to pay a fine and leave the country.

But U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, citing the need to deter others from lying in an investigat­ion of internatio­nal importance, said incarcerat­ion was necessary. “These were not mistakes. These were lies,” Jackson told van der Zwaan as he stood before her. Being able to “write a check and walk away,” she added, would not fit the seriousnes­s of the crime or send the right message.

The criminal case against van der Zwaan is not directly related to Russian election interferen­ce, the main focus of Mueller’s probe. But it has revealed new details about the government’s case against Manafort and opened a window into the intersecti­ng universes of internatio­nal law, foreign consulting work and politics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States