The Columbus Dispatch

Judge sets closed hearing for Manafort

- By Colleen Long and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — A federal judge said Friday she will hold a hearing behind closed doors to determine whether former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort intentiona­lly lied to investigat­ors, including about sharing polling data with a business associate that the U.S. says has ties to Russian intelligen­ce.

Attorneys with special counsel Robert Mueller’s office say Manafort breached his plea deal by repeatedly making false statements after he began cooperatin­g with them in September. Manafort’s lawyers say he simply had an inconsiste­nt recollecti­on of facts and events from several years ago, and that he suffers from depression and anxiety and had little time to prepare for questionin­g on the days he met with investigat­ors.

The allegation­s threaten Manafort’s chances of getting leniency at sentencing. Attorneys with the special counsel told Judge Amy Berman Jackson the deal was no longer a factor, but they hadn’t decided how to adjust their sentencing request.

Manafort’s attorneys conceded the special counsel had the authority under the terms of the deal to revoke it if they determined that Manafort was lying.

But the judge said that she isn’t yet convinced, and her decision will impact how much time Manafort gets behind bars.

She said some of Manafort’s arguments, particular­ly the idea that some defendants misstate facts and then correct them later on, “have some force.”

“Investigat­ors shouldn’t have to pull teeth” to get the truth,” Manafort the judge said, but “not all the issues rise to the level of actual false statements.”

But Jackson said there were other times where Manafort “affirmativ­ely advanced” a version that prosecutor­s believe was false. “He may have lied, pure and simple” in those instances, she said.

Jackson said Friday she had been given more than 800 pages of evidence on the matter, and she set the sealed proceeding for Feb. 4 so that attorneys could talk freely about the accusation­s. She told a courtroom full of reporters she knew the measure wouldn’t be exactly popular, and she promised a redacted transcript as soon as possible.

The court documents already filed in the matter have been heavily blacked out. One allegation that did emerge from a poorly redacted defense filing was especially striking — that Manafort shared polling data from the 2016 campaign with Konstantin Kilimnik, a business associate and co-defendant charged by Mueller, and then lied about it. Kilimnik is not in U.S. custody and has denied links to Russian intelligen­ce.

Jackson questioned whether the special counsel would charge Manafort with additional crimes as a result of the alleged violation and wondered whether her determinat­ion on whether he lied would somehow prejudice any additional charges.

Attorney Andrew Weissmann said there were no plans to do so, but he didn’t rule it out entirely. Either way, he said, he believed her determinat­ion would not affect it.

Once a high-flying political consultant with a taste for luxury clothing, Manafort, 69, asked for permission to attend court in a suit rather than his jail uniform, and the request was granted. He walked slowly into court using a cane, wearing a dark suit with a magenta tie.

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