Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Manafort sentenced to 47 months in prison

Told judge he felt ‘humiliated and ashamed’

- By Chris Megerian Los Angeles Times

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Paul Manafort, who managed Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign for part of 2016, was sentenced Thursday to 47 months in prison for financial crimes that were prosecuted by special counsel Robert Mueller.

U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis could have sent the 69-year-old veteran Republican operative to prison for the rest of his life, but he rejected the recommende­d sentence of 19 to 24 years, under federal guidelines, calling it excessive.

A lobbyist and consultant before he joined Trump’s campaign, Manafort was brought into court in a wheelchair. He

appeared more frail than in August, when a federal jury convicted him of eight charges of tax evasion and bank fraud.

Near the end of a 31⁄2 -hour court hearing, Manafort appealed to Ellis for compassion and said he felt “humiliated and ashamed.” He thanked the judge for “a fair trial.”

“The last two years have been the most difficult that my family and I have experience­d,” he said.

Ellis described Manafort’s crimes as “very serious” and said his tax evasion represente­d “a theft of money from everyone that pays their taxes.” He also expressed surprise that Manafort did not express more regret when he addressed the court.

“I hope you reflect on that,” he said.

Because Manafort has already been in jail for the last nine months, his sentence means he would serve only an additional 38 months. He was sent to jail last summer when U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who is overseeing a related case in Washington, D.C., decided he revoked his bail by reaching out to potential witnesses.

Jackson is scheduled to sentence Manafort at another hearing Wednesday. He has pleaded guilty to two related charges of conspiracy in that case.

All the criminal charges against Manafort stemmed from his work on behalf of Ukraine’s former pro-Russian government, although some of the crimes continued while he also managed Trump’s campaign for several months in 2016.

During his trial, prosecutor­s detailed how Manafort used a network of offshore bank accounts and other schemes to avoid paying millions of dollars in federal income taxes.

When his client, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, was overthrown in a popular uprising in 2014, Manafort turned to bank fraud to maintain an opulent lifestyle that included custom tailored clothes, seven homes and luxury cars.

Mueller’s team initially focused on Manafort as part of its investigat­ion into whether Trump’s campaign conspired with a Russian intelligen­ce operation that sought to sway the 2016 election to Trump, using stolen emails and disinforma­tion on social media.

In June 2016, Manafort joined Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, in a meeting in Trump Tower in Manhattan with a woman identified to them as a “Russian government attorney.”

Before the meeting, when an intermedia­ry’s email said the lawyer would present dirt on Hillary Clinton “as part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump,” Trump Jr. replied, “If it’s what you say I love it.”

No charges have been filed in connection with the meeting, and Trump’s allies have said no incriminat­ing informatio­n was provided. Trump’s critics have said the campaign should have called the FBI to report the Russian offer.

Two months later, Manafort and Trump’s deputy campaign chairman, Richard Gates, met with Konstantin Kilimnik.

Mueller’s prosecutor­s later disclosed in court papers that Kilimnik “has ties to a Russian intelligen­ce service and had such ties in 2016.”

Manafort shared polling data with Kilimnik, then lied about it even after he agreed to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

Those lies and others led to the implosion of Manafort’s plea deal, which he reached after he was convicted in northern Virginia. The deal had required him to cooperate truthfully with the special counsel’s office.

Prosecutor­s had urged the judge to impose a tough sentence.

Greg Andres, a prosecutor from the special counsel’s office, said Manafort “broke the basic civic covenant of citizens in this democracy” by failing to pay his taxes.

“Nobody made up these crimes,” he added. “He made criminal choices.”

Manafort’s lawyers argued in a sentencing memo before Thursday’s hearing that “the special counsel’s attempt to vilify Mr. Manafort as a lifelong and irredeemab­le felon is beyond the pale and grossly overstates the facts.”

They also suggested that prosecutor­s pressured Manafort to provide evidence against the president in the Russia investigat­ion, and urged the judge to spare him jail time.

Mueller’s “strategy in bringing charges against Mr. Manafort had nothing to do with the special counsel’s core mandate — Russian collusion — but was instead designed to ‘tighten the screws’ to compel Mr. Manafort to cooperate and provide incriminat­ing informatio­n about others,” the lawyers wrote.

Trump has repeatedly said that his former campaign chairman was treated unfairly by prosecutor­s, and he’s left open the possibilit­y of pardoning him before he leaves office.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP 2018 ?? Paul Manafort, shown leaving Federal District Court last May, was brought to court Thursday in a wheelchair.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP 2018 Paul Manafort, shown leaving Federal District Court last May, was brought to court Thursday in a wheelchair.

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