Los Angeles Times

Manafort ‘brazenly’ violated law, prosecutor­s say

Trump’s ex-campaign chairman showed a ‘hardened adherence’ to crime, Mueller’s team tells judge.

- By Rachel Weiner Rachel Weiner writes for the Washington Post.

Paul Manafort “repeatedly and brazenly violated the law” and shows a “hardened adherence to committing crimes,” prosecutor­s told a federal judge in Washington in their sentencing memo for President Trump’s former campaign chairman.

But they recommende­d no specific punishment for the crimes detailed in his Washington case, saying that is the practice of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, whose office brought the case.

Prosecutor­s noted that federal guidelines call for a sentence of 17 to 22 years, although under Manafort’s guilty plea in his Washington case, the maximum he faces behind bars is 10 years. The special counsel team said it may ask Judge Amy Berman Jackson to impose a sentence that runs after any prison time Manafort is given for related crimes in Virginia federal court.

“Manafort chose repeatedly and knowingly to violate the law,” prosecutor­s said, from “garden-variety crimes such as tax fraud, money laundering, obstructio­n of justice, and bank fraud” to “more esoteric laws” involving foreign lobbying.

He lied, they said, “to tax preparers, bookkeeper­s, banks, the Treasury Department, the Department of Justice National Security Division, the FBI, the Special Counsel’s Office, the grand jury, his own legal counsel, members of Congress, and members of the executive branch of the United States government.”

He committed crimes while leading a presidenti­al campaign and while out on bail before trial, and then lied to investigat­ors after pleading guilty, prosecutor­s said, revealing “a hardened adherence to committing crimes and lack of remorse.”

The charges in both cases flow from Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election. The filing helps pave the way for Manafort’s sentencing­s in Washington and Virginia scheduled for next month, as Mueller is thought to be beginning to wrap up his inquiry.

But the redacted public document gives no details about Manafort’s campaign interactio­ns with Russians. Prosecutor­s had previously asked the judge for permission to seal material either because it related to “ongoing law enforcemen­t investigat­ions” or “uncharged individual­s.”

As part of a plea deal in September, Manafort, 69, acknowledg­ed he was guilty of everything he was accused of in Washington and Virginia: making millions as an unregister­ed lobbyist for Ukrainian politician­s, hiding that money to avoid paying taxes, defrauding banks to pay his debts when his oligarch patrons fell out of power, and lying to cover up his crimes while trying to persuade witnesses to do the same.

When he appears in front of Jackson on March 13, he will already have been sentenced March 8 for related crimes in federal court in Alexandria, Va., barring any change in the scheduling for those hearings. Jackson could make the sentence she imposes run during or after his Virginia prison term. In Virginia, where Manafort was found guilty of bank and tax fraud at trial, there is no upper limit to his sentence.

In Alexandria, prosecutor­s have asked only for a “serious” sentence. Federal guidelines in that case call for him to spend 19 to 24 years in prison.

Mueller’s prosecutor­s have been handing off other pending matters to the U.S. attorney’s office for D.C., and the Department of Justice is readying for Mueller to formally conclude his work.

In New York, the Manhattan district attorney is preparing to charge Manafort with violating state tax laws and committing other financial crimes, a move designed to ensure Trump’s former campaign chief spends time in prison if the president pardons him for the conviction­s stemming from Mueller’s investigat­ion, Bloomberg News and the New York Times reported Friday.

Trump has not indicated whether he intends to pardon Manafort, though he repeatedly expressed support for him as his trial played out last year. New York’s doublejeop­ardy law, which protects defendants from being prosecuted twice for the same crimes, could pose a challenge for the district attorney’s office, however.

Attorneys for Manafort are not due to file their sentencing recommenda­tion in Washington until Monday. Jackson granted them a delay after they said a snowstorm last week made it harder to meet with their client in the Alexandria jail where he has been held.

Under Manafort’s plea agreement in Washington, federal prosecutor­s had agreed to ask Jackson to give him credit at sentencing for cooperatio­n. But because she found he lied to investigat­ors and breached that agreement, they are no longer bound by it.

Jackson found Manafort lied about his interactio­ns with Konstantin Kilimnik, a longtime aide who the FBI assessed to have ties to Russian intelligen­ce. Those contacts, prosecutor­s said in court, go “very much to the heart of what the special counsel’s office is investigat­ing.”

Manafort gave inconsiste­nt accounts of an August 2016 meeting in New York City at which he and Kilimnik discussed a “peace plan” for Ukraine, a top foreign policy priority for Russia. At the time, Manafort was still leading Trump’s campaign. He also lied about sharing polling data with Kilimnik in 2016, prosecutor­s said in describing how he broke his deal to cooperate truthfully.

The judge also concluded that Manafort lied about a payment that he claimed was a loan, and as part of another Justice Department investigat­ion whose focus has not been described publicly.

Defense attorneys have maintained that Manafort did not intentiona­lly give false informatio­n and that any inconsiste­ncies were honest mistakes.

In 2017, Kilimnik denied to the Washington Post having connection­s to Russian intelligen­ce. He was indicted with Manafort on charges of conspiring to obstruct justice through witness tampering.

Kilimnik is believed to be in Moscow and therefore probably safe from arrest because Russia does not extradite its citizens.

Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort ‘chose repeatedly and knowingly to violate the law.’ — prosecutor­s’ sentencing memo to a federal judge

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? PAUL MANAFORT, President Trump’s former campaign chairman, will be sentenced next month in cases stemming from special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
Susan Walsh Associated Press PAUL MANAFORT, President Trump’s former campaign chairman, will be sentenced next month in cases stemming from special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

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