Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mueller considers new charges for Manafort

- BY CHAD DAY AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort may face additional charges after lawyers in the special counsel’s Russia investigat­ion said he lied to them and broke his plea agreement, prosecutor­s said Friday.

The latest developmen­t in Manafort’s case comes at a time of public activity in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion. Prosecutor­s obtained a guilty plea from President Donald Trump’s longtime legal fixer on Thursday and appear to be lining up charges against another Trump supporter.

The prospect of new charges adds to the legal peril of Manafort, the onetime political consultant who already faces years in prison after being convicted of financial fraud crimes in Virginia and pleading guilty to conspiracy counts in Washington.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson set a tentative sentencing date of March 5 as prosecutor­s plan to disclose next week what they believe are the lies Manafort told since pleading guilty in September and agreeing to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

Manafort’s lawyers, who deny Manafort lied, will have an opportunit­y to respond and a judge is expected to hear arguments before deciding whether he breached his plea deal.

Prosecutor Andrew Weissmann told the judge prosecutor­s had not yet decided whether to file new charges against Manafort for the alleged lies, saying, “That determinat­ion has not been made yet.”

The same is true of whether they’ll pursue the 10 felony counts they dismissed in Virginia or others they planned to drop in Washington as part of the plea deal, Weissmann said. Jurors deadlocked on those Virginia counts and convicted Manafort on eight others.

Trump is facing continued questions about whether he might pardon Manafort. At the same time, he is playing down the significan­ce of the guilty plea of his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, for lying to Congress.

None of the recent moves by Mueller has definitive­ly answered the question of whether Trump or his associates coordinate­d with Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. And they don’t directly accuse the president of any criminal wrongdoing or indicate that the president faces legal jeopardy.

But Trump has continuall­y surfaced in Mueller’s investigat­ion, with references to him in Cohen’s plea on Thursday and in a draft plea offer extended to conservati­ve writer and conspiracy theorist Jerome Corsi made public this week.

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