San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Feds want Manafort to pay $3M tied to bank accounts

- By Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has filed a lawsuit against former President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort — who was convicted in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion and later pardoned — seeking to recover nearly $3 million from undeclared foreign bank accounts.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in federal court in West Palm Beach, Fla., asks a judge to force Manafort to pay fines, penalties and interest after prosecutor­s say he failed to disclose more than 20 offshore bank accounts he ordered opened in the United Kingdom, Cyprus, St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

The Justice Department alleges that Manafort failed to file federal tax documents detailing the accounts and failed to disclose the money on his income tax returns. The suit charges the money was related to consulting work in Ukraine with his deputy Rick Gates and an associate, Konstantin Kilimnik, who were both key figures in Mueller’s investigat­ion.

In court documents, the Justice Department alleges that Manafort “knowingly, intentiona­lly and willfully filed and conspired to file false tax returns from 2006-2015 in that he said he did not have reportable foreign bank accounts when he knew that he did.” The suit says the Treasury Department notified Manafort of the fines and assessment in July 2020.

Manafort’s lawyer, Jeffrey Neiman, argued that the suit is being filed “for simply failing to file a tax form.”

Manafort, who led

Trump’s campaign during a pivotal period in 2016 before being ousted over his ties to Ukraine, was among the first people charged as part of Mueller’s investigat­ion into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. Manafort was later sentenced to more than seven years in prison for financial crimes related to his political consulting work in Ukraine. Trump pardoned him in December 2020.

Though the charges against Manafort did not concern the central crux of Mueller’s mandate — whether the Trump campaign and Russia colluded to tip the election — he was nonetheles­s a pivotal figure in the probe that shadowed Trump’s presidency for years.

Despite the pardon, the government believes Manafort still owes the money for the alleged financial misconduct.

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