The Arizona Republic

Jail sentence sought for Trump campaign adviser Papadopoul­os

- Doug Stanglin

George Papadopoul­os, a former foreign policy adviser for the Donald Trump campaign, lied to the FBI during the Russian probe and should spend at least some time in jail, according to a court filing by prosecutor­s working for special counsel Robert Mueller.

Those lies, they said, resulted in the FBI missing an opportunit­y to properly question a professor Papadopoul­os had met during the campaign who had tipped him that the Russians had “dirt” on Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails.”

Papadopoul­os was the first Trump campaign adviser to plead guilty in Mueller’s investigat­ion.

He had also triggered the initial counterint­elligence probe into Russia interferen­ce in the 2016 election by revealing to an Australian diplomat, during a night of heavy drinking at a London bar in May 2016, that Russia had political dirt on Clinton.

The diplomat passed along the informatio­n to U.S. officials, setting the investigat­ion into motion. The probe was later taken over by Mueller.

The document, filed in U.S. District Court in Washingto on Friday, revealed several new details about the early days of the probe and charged that Papadopoul­os caused irreparabl­e damage to the investigat­ion by repeatedly giving false informatio­n during a January 2017 interview.

The document says Papadopoul­os had a series of communicat­ions over a period of months with the professor, a female Russian national and a Russia foreign ministry connection “in which they discussed arranging a meeting between Russian officials and the Trump campaign.”

The filing by the special counsel’s office strongly suggests the FBI had contact with Professor Joseph Mifsud while he was in the U.S. during the early part of the investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce and possible coordinati­on with Trump associates.

The prosecutor­s charged that Papadopoul­os, in early 2016, believed that the unidentifi­ed female Russian national had connection­s to high-level Russian government officials and could help him arrange a potential foreign policy trip to Russia.

“(H)e informed the campaign of his beliefs regarding her connection­s; and during the campaign he emailed and spoke over Skype on numerous occasions with her about the potential trip to Russia,” the document says. “The defendant also did not reveal his extensive interactio­ns with the Russia MFA Connection, including over Skype, even though he was asked if he had met during the campaign with any Russian nationals or ‘(a)nyone with a Russian accent.’”

According to prosecutor­s, the FBI “located” the professor in Washington about two weeks after the Papadopoul­os’ interview and that his lies “substantia­lly hindered investigat­ors’ ability to effectivel­y question” him.

“The defendant’s lies undermined investigat­ors’ ability to challenge the Professor or potentiall­y detain or arrest him while he was still in the United States,” Mueller’s team wrote, noting that the professor left the U.S. in February 2017 and has not returned since.

The filing recommends that Papadopoul­os spend at least some time in jail and pay a nearly $10,000 fine. Under federal guidelines, his recommende­d sentence is zero to six months, but prosecutor­s note another defendant in the case spent 30 days in jail for lying to the FBI.

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ERIC BARADAT/GETTY IMAGES Several platforms have removed shows by Alex Jones.
 ??  ?? George Papadopoul­os
George Papadopoul­os

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