The Day

Manafort sues Mueller, Justice Department over Russia probe

- By ERIC TUCKER and CHAD DAY

Washington — President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman sued special counsel Robert Mueller and the Justice Department on Wednesday, saying prosecutor­s had oversteppe­d their bounds by charging him for conduct that he says is unrelated to Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The lawsuit by Paul Manafort, filed in federal court in Washington, is the most direct challenge to date to Mueller’s legal authority and the scope of his mandate as special counsel. It comes amid Republican allegation­s of partisan bias among members of Mueller’s team, which for months has been investigat­ing whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russia to influence the outcome of the U.S. election.

Manafort was indicted in October on charges, including money-laundering conspiracy, related to his lobbying work on behalf of a Russia-friendly Ukrainian political party. He has pleaded not guilty. He is one of four Trump associates — including former national security adviser Michael Flynn — to be charged so far in Mueller’s investigat­ion.

In his complaint, Manafort alleges that the investigat­ion into “decade-old business dealings” is “completely unmoored” from the mandate Mueller was given when he was named in May to probe possible ties between the Kremlin and the Trump campaign. He argues that a paragraph in Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s order appointing Mueller, which allows him to pursue new matters he comes across during his investigat­ion, is too broad to be permitted under the regulation that governs special counsels.

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