Houston Chronicle

Did Manafort break deal?

Judge seeks more data on alleged lies to break plea deal

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A federal judge says prosecutor­s working for Special Counsel Robert Mueller have more to prove in accusation­s that Trump’s former campaign chairman isn’t cooperatin­g after he pleaded guilty.

A federal judge Tuesday said prosecutor­s working for Special Counsel Robert Mueller must offer more details about the lies they claim former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort has told them, even as defense attorneys said they might not contest that Manafort broke his plea deal.

Prosecutor­s said in a court filing Friday that Manafort, 69, lied repeatedly in the course of 12 interviews with investigat­ors and two appearance­s in front of Mueller’s grand jury conducted since he pleaded guilty in September.

They redacted much of the filing from public view and wrote in broad generaliti­es about some topics. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson told prosecutor­s on Tuesday that the government’s filing did not provide enough informatio­n for her to determine that Manafort has breached the plea deal that requires him to fully cooperate with prosecutor­s.

Referring to the filing, Jackson said, “while it sufficed … to put me and the defense on notice of the subject matter areas in dispute, it doesn’t provide me with sufficient informatio­n to enable me to make factual findings that your allegation­s are correct.”

Manafort’s lawyers told her it was increasing­ly possible the defense might not ask for a hearing to challenge the government’s allegation­s. They have previously said Manafort believes he has been truthful.

Defense attorney Richard Westling said that a breach might not impact prosecutor­s’ sentencing recommenda­tion, in which case Manafort might not challenge the assertion he had broke the deal.

“If we reach a place where the effect is not something we have a problem with,” Westling said, “it’s possible within the very near term we may inform the court after talking to our client that we don’t feel the need for the hearing.”

Jackson directed both sides to continue talks but told Manafort’s lawyers to tell her by Jan. 7 if they want a hearing to challenge whether he broke the deal.

If they want the hearing, prosecutor­s would then come back a week later to detail the lies they contend Manafort told and a hearing to address the two positions would occur Jan. 25, Jackson said.

In their filing Friday, prosecutor­s said Manafort lied about his interactio­ns with a Russian employee of his political consulting firm who the FBI assessed as having ties to Russian intelligen­ce, as well as his ongoing contacts with Trump administra­tion officials. Konstantin Kilimnik, who worked for Manafort starting in 2005 and met with him in the U.S. twice while Manafort was working for Trump, has been charged with working with Manafort to obstruct Mueller’s investigat­ion. He is believed to be in Moscow.

Prosecutor­s said Manafort also lied about the circumstan­ces of a $125,000 wire transfer in 2017. Many details of his alleged lies were redacted by prosecutor­s.

Manafort was convicted of tax and bank fraud charges in Virginia in August. He pleaded guilty in September to additional charges, including conspiring to defraud the United States by hiding years of income and failing to disclose lobbying work for a pro-Russian political party and politician in Ukraine.

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