Los Angeles Times

Former Trump aide sentenced

Judge gives George Papadopoul­os, whose actions led to the larger Russia inquiry, 14 days in prison.

- By Chris Megerian chris.megerian@latimes.com

George Papadopoul­os, whose suspicious conversati­ons with federal agents triggered the Russia investigat­ion, was given a 14-day prison term.

WASHINGTON — George Papadopoul­os, the former foreign policy advisor to President Trump’s campaign whose suspicious conversati­ons triggered the Russia investigat­ion, was sentenced Friday to 14 days in prison and one year of supervised release.

The sentencing, coming nearly one year after he pleaded guilty to lying to federal agents, ends an important yet mysterious story line in the examinatio­n of whether anyone from Trump’s team conspired with Moscow to influence the presidenti­al election.

U.S. District Judge Randolph D. Moss said the sentence could have been higher, but he sensed “genuine remorse” from Papadopoul­os and there was no evidence he had “any desire to aid Russia in any way.” However, by lying to the FBI in hopes of maintainin­g his shot at a job in the Trump administra­tion, he had placed “self-interest over the national interest,” Moss said.

Papadopoul­os, 31, had never before appeared in a public court hearing; he admitted his guilt during a closed session last October.

Before the sentencing, he made a statement, describing himself as a “patriotic American” who made a mistake by lying to investigat­ors. “I was not honest, and I might have hindered the investigat­ion,” he said.

The junior Trump aide first appeared on investigat­ors’ radar during the campaign after he told an Australian diplomat that Russians had dirt on Hillary Clinton, who was on her way to becoming the Democratic nominee for president.

When hacked emails were released publicly that summer — part of an operation that intelligen­ce officials later concluded was orchestrat­ed by the Kremlin — the diplomat informed U.S. officials and a counterint­elligence investigat­ion began.

About a week after Trump’s January 2017 inaugurati­on, FBI agents knocked on the door of the Chicago home where Papadopoul­os was living with his mother, Kiki.

“I see two tall men in black suits,” Kiki Papadopoul­os told reporters outside court Friday. “I say, oh my God, trouble.”

She said her son, who had just stepped out of the shower, received a text from the men saying they were with the FBI, and he urged his mother to let them in. The agents started talking with Papadopoul­os, and he agreed to an interview at their field office downtown.

“I said, ‘George, please stop; they’re not your friends,’ ” his mother said. “He wouldn’t listen.”

During the interview that day, Papadopoul­os lied to the agents about his April 2016 conversati­on with Joseph Mifsud, a Maltese professor working in London who had ties to Russian officials. Although Papadopoul­os confirmed that Mifsud told him Russians had “thousands of emails” involving Clinton, he claimed it was before he joined the Trump campaign.

Before Papadopoul­os’ FBI interview, Trump had been blasting the Russia investigat­ion as “fake news” and a “witch hunt,” said Thomas Breen, a lawyer for Papadopoul­os. Because of Papadopoul­os’ loyalty to the president, “that’s the mindset going in there” with the FBI, Breen said.

It’s unclear whether the conversati­on between Mifsud and Papadopoul­os was part of Moscow’s larger scheme to boost Trump’s candidacy. Mifsud’s current whereabout­s are unknown, and Papadopoul­os has denied telling anyone else from the president’s campaign about Mifsud’s claims.

Trump and his allies have repeatedly downplayed Papadopoul­os’ role in the campaign, with one of them describing him as a mere “coffee boy.” The president told reporters Friday on Air Force One: “I don’t know Papadopoul­os.”

“I saw him sitting in one picture at a table with me; that’s the only thing I know about him,” Trump said, referring to a widely circulated photo of Papadopoul­os in a meeting with Trump and several other advisors.

Prosecutor­s working for special counsel Robert S. Mueller III had asked the judge to sentence Papadopoul­os to up to six months in prison, saying his false statements “were intended to harm the investigat­ion, and did so.”

The FBI met with Mifsud while he was visiting the United States in early 2017, but Papadopoul­os’ lies “undermined investigat­ors’ ability to challenge the professor or potentiall­y detain or arrest him.”

In a court filing, lawyers for Papadopoul­os had argued for probation, saying he was “ashamed and remorseful” but wasn’t trying to undermine the Russia inquiry when he was “caught off-guard by an impromptu interrogat­ion.”

They said prosecutor­s had not provided any proof that Papadopoul­os “actually harmed the investigat­ion as alleged.”

The lawyers portrayed Papadopoul­os as “out of his depth” as a foreign policy advisor for a candidate for whom he had “unbridled loyalty.”

Papadopoul­os’ goal in speaking with Mifsud was not related to seeking dirt on Clinton, the lawyers said, but an effort to broker a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

When Papadopoul­os pleaded guilty last year, he pledged to help the special counsel’s office with its investigat­ion. But prosecutor­s said his assistance was negligible.

“He didn’t come close to a standard of substantia­l assistance,” Andrew Goldstein, one of the prosecutor­s, told the judge Friday, adding, “It was, at best, begrudging attempts to cooperate.”

Papadopoul­os disagreed in his own court filing, arguing that he had “cooperated fully” and provided “critical informatio­n.”

 ?? Tasos Katopodis EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? A SHIRT is thrown by a protester at former Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoul­os and wife Simona Mangiante as they arrive at court in Washington.
Tasos Katopodis EPA/Shuttersto­ck A SHIRT is thrown by a protester at former Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoul­os and wife Simona Mangiante as they arrive at court in Washington.

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