Texarkana Gazette

Probe of former Trump aide extends to Cyprus

- By Jack Gillum, Menelaos Hadjicosti­s and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON—The U.S. government investigat­ion of President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, crossed the Atlantic earlier this year to the Mediterran­ean island nation of Cyprus, once known as a haven for money laundering by Russian billionair­es.

Treasury agents in recent months obtained informatio­n connected to Manafort’s transactio­ns from Cypriot authoritie­s, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to speak publicly. The request was part of a federal anti-corruption probe into Manafort’s work in Eastern Europe. The Cyprus attorney general, one of the country’s top law enforcemen­t officers, was also aware of the American request.

Manafort was Trump’s unpaid campaign chairman from March until August last year, during the critical run-up to the Republican National Convention. He’s been a leading focus of the U.S. investigat­ion into whether Trump associates coordinate­d with Moscow to meddle in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Manafort, in a statement to the AP Thursday when asked about the Cyprus transactio­ns, characteri­zed them as a normal practice. “Like many companies doing business internatio­nally, my company was paid via wire transfer, typically using clients’ preferred financial institutio­ns and instructio­ns,” he said.

Federal prosecutor­s became interested in Manafort’s activities years ago as part of a broad investigat­ion to recover stolen Ukrainian assets after the ouster of pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych there in early 2014. No U.S. criminal charges have been filed in the case.

It was not immediatel­y clear what time period of Manafort’s transactio­ns was covered under the request from the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network. Manafort was known to route financial transactio­ns through Cyprus, according to records of internatio­nal wire transfers obtained by the AP and public court documents filed in a 2014 legal dispute in the Cayman Islands with Russian billionair­e Oleg Deripaska.

As part of their investigat­ion, U.S. officials were expected to look into millions of dollars’ worth of wire transfers to Manafort. In one case, the AP found that a Manafort-linked company received a $1 million payment in October 2009 from a mysterious firm through the Bank of Cyprus. The $1 million left the account the same day—split in two, roughly $500,000 disburseme­nts to accounts with no obvious owner.

There is nothing inherently illicit about using multiple companies as Manafort was doing. But it was unclear why he would have been involved with companies in Cyprus, known for its history of money laundering before joining the European Union, with unclear sources of the money flowing in to them and with such secrecy surroundin­g the firms’ connection­s to him.

With Cyprus’ entry into the European Union in 2004, the island was forced to put in place a host of stringent anti-money laundering regulation­s to avoid running afoul with the bloc’s own rules and incurring the wrath of other EU members. Cypriot banks, sticking to EU rules, took on heightened importance when Cyprus started using the Euro currency in 2008.

But the island’s allure as a friendly E.U. member brought a steady stream of Russian cash to fill Cypriot bank coffers, and rumors began to swirl again that it was fast becoming a major cash laundromat for Russian oligarchs, a charge that Cypriot authoritie­s strenuousl­y deny.

A Treasury Department spokesman, Stephen Hudak, declined to answer the AP’s questions about Manafort’s records, citing a policy never to confirm or deny an investigat­ion’s existence.

 ?? AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File ?? n Then-Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort talks to reporters July 17, 2016, on the floor of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. U.S. Treasury Department agents have recently obtained informatio­n about offshore financial transactio­ns...
AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File n Then-Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort talks to reporters July 17, 2016, on the floor of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. U.S. Treasury Department agents have recently obtained informatio­n about offshore financial transactio­ns...

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