Lodi News-Sentinel

Manafort denies meeting Assange in 2016

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — The Londonbase­d Guardian newspaper reported Tuesday that Paul Manafort met privately with Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, in the same month Manafort joined Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign in 2016, a meeting that could carry vast implicatio­ns for the investigat­ion of Russia’s election meddling.

The alleged meeting took place in March 2016 inside Ecuador’s Embassy in London, where Assange has sought refuge for several years to avoid potential prosecutio­n, the newspaper reported. Four months later, in July 2016, WikiLeaks began releasing a flood of Democratic Party emails that U.S. officials say had been hacked by Russian operatives.

Manafort, who was named Trump’s campaign chairman in June 2016, was convicted of bank fraud and tax evasion in August this year. On Tuesday, he denied any meeting with Assange, calling the Guardian report “totally false and deliberate­ly libelous.”

“I have never met Julian Assange or anyone connected to him,” Manafort, who is in jail awaiting sentencing, said in a statement issued through a spokesman. “I have never been contacted by anyone connected to WikiLeaks, either directly or indirectly. I have never reached out to Assange or WikiLeaks on any matter.”

A clear connection between Manafort and Assange, if it exists, could be key evidence for special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who is leading the investigat­ion into whether anyone from Trump’s team illegally conspired with Russians to influence the presidenti­al election.

A dozen Russian military intelligen­ce officers were indicted in July for stealing tens of thousands of internal emails from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton’s campaign and then leaking them to WikiLeaks as part of a covert Moscow effort to boost Trump’s campaign and undermine his Democratic rival.

The alleged Manafort-Assange meetings could not be independen­tly confirmed. WikiLeaks denied the story on Twitter, saying the Guardian report was destined to become “one of the most infamous news disasters.”

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON/ZUMA PRESS FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Paul Manafort speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 18, 2016.
PATRICK T. FALLON/ZUMA PRESS FILE PHOTOGRAPH Paul Manafort speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 18, 2016.

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