Los Angeles Times

Sentences for Cohen, Manafort likely to diverge

- By Chris Megerian chris.megerian @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III is expected to disclose new details from the wide-ranging Russia investigat­ion when he recommends sentences Friday for convicted felons Michael Cohen and Paul Manafort, two of President Trump’s former top aides.

Cohen was Trump’s personal lawyer and self-described fixer in New York, as well as a top officer at the Trump Organizati­on, the private holding company for Trump’s businesses. Manafort, a longtime lobbyist and Republican operative, served as Trump’s campaign chairman in mid-2016, including at the Republican National Convention.

Mueller’s recommenda­tions, which factor in the severity of the crime and the extent of any cooperatio­n with prosecutor­s, will probably diverge for the two men.

Cohen has avidly cooperated with federal and state prosecutor­s in New York and the special counsel’s office in Washington in hopes of reducing a possible sentence. He first pleaded guilty in August to multiple crimes, including campaign finance violations, implicatin­g Trump in a felony by saying he directed election-year hush money payments to women who claimed to have slept with him years ago.

Cohen subsequent­ly admitted to lying to Congress about pursuing a Moscow real estate project for Trump during the campaign, abandoning the project only after Trump had clinched the Republican nomination.

His lawyers have described Cohen’s cooperatio­n as part of an effort to “repoint his internal compass true north toward a productive, ethical and thoroughly law-abiding life,” and they asked a judge to spare him prison time.

Manafort was convicted in August of financial fraud and tax evasion stemming from his work for Ukraine’s former pro-Russia government, crimes that were unconnecte­d to his work on Trump’s campaign, although they continued into 2016.

He later pleaded guilty to separate conspiracy charges to avoid a second trial, but his plea deal fell apart when Mueller’s office accused him of lying again to prosecutor­s.

Manafort’s attorneys have denied that he tried to mislead the special counsel’s office.

It’s unclear how many specifics will be revealed to the public in Friday’s court filing.

On Tuesday, Mueller’s office blacked out large parts of a sentencing memo for Michael T. Flynn, a retired three-star Army general who briefly served as Trump’s national security advisor in early 2017.

Flynn pleaded guilty last year to lying to federal agents about his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador during the presidenti­al transition, falsely denying that they discussed sanctions imposed by President Obama as punishment for Moscow’s interferen­ce in the election.

Prosecutor­s urged the judge to consider letting Flynn off without a prison sentence, saying he had submitted to 19 interviews and provided “substantia­l assistance” with multiple investigat­ions.

“The investigat­ions in which he has provided assistance are ongoing,” they wrote.

Mueller has obtained charges or guilty pleas from 33 individual­s, and five of Trump’s former aides have pleaded guilty to various charges.

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