Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGE: MANAFORT LIED TO INVESTIGAT­ORS

- BY CHAD DAY Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort intentiona­lly lied to investigat­ors and a federal grand jury in the special counsel’s Russia probe, a judge ruled Wednesday.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson’s decision was another loss for Manafort, a once-wealthy political consultant who rose to lead Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and now faces years in prison in two criminal cases brought in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion.

The four-page ruling hurts Manafort’s chance of receiving a reduced sentence, though Jackson said she would decide the exact impact during his sentencing next month. It also resolves a dispute that had provided new insight into how Mueller views Manafort’s actions as part of the broader probe of Russian election interferen­ce and any possible coordinati­on with Trump associates.

Prosecutor­s have made clear that they remain deeply interested in Manafort’s interactio­ns with a man the FBI says has ties to Russian intelligen­ce. But it’s unclear exactly what has drawn their attention and whether it relates to election interferen­ce because much of the dispute has played out in secret court hearings and blacked out court filings.

In her ruling Wednesday, Jackson provided few new details as she found there was sufficient evidence to say Manafort broke the terms of his plea agreement by lying about three of five matters that prosecutor­s had singled out. The ruling was largely a rejection of Manafort’s attorneys’ argument that he hadn’t intentiona­lly misled investigat­ors but rather forgot some details until his memory was refreshed.

The judge found that Manafort did mislead the FBI, prosecutor­s and a federal grand jury about his interactio­ns with Konstantin Kilimnik, the co-defendant who the FBI says has ties to Russian intelligen­ce. Prosecutor­s had accused Manafort of lying about several discussion­s the two men had including about a possible peace plan to resolve the Russia Ukraine conflict in Crimea.

During a sealed hearing last week, Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said one of the discussion­s — an Aug. 2, 2016, meeting at the Grand Havana Club cigar bar in New York — went to the “larger view of what we think is going on” and what “we think the motive here is.”

“This goes, I think, very much to the heart of what the special counsel’s office is investigat­ing,” Weissmann said, according to a redacted transcript of the hearing.

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Paul Manafort

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