The Mercury News

Judge voids Manafort plea deal.

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON >> A federal judge ruled Wednesday that Paul Manafort, President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman, lied to special counsel Robert Mueller’s prosecutor­s despite agreeing to cooperate in the sprawling Russia investigat­ion.

The decision by U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson effectivel­y voids Manafort’s plea agreement and means the 69-year-old former Republican operative and lobbyist will likely be sentenced to prison for the rest of his life.

“The Office of Special Counsel is no longer bound by its obligation­s under the plea agreement, including its promise to support a reduction of the offense level,” Jackson wrote in her order.

Manafort already has been convicted of eight charges of bank fraud and tax evasion following a trial last year in Alexandria, Virginia, and he has pleaded guilty to two additional charges of conspiracy.

All the charges involve Manafort’s work for the Russian-backed president in Ukraine — before he joined Trump’s campaign

— and subsequent allegation­s of attempted witness tampering.

The legal battle over whether Manafort lied to prosecutor­s — his defense team denied it — revealed new clues about Mueller’s closely guarded investigat­ion into meetings and other contacts between Trump’s campaign aides and Russians during the 2016 presidenti­al race.

A partially redacted document filed by Manafort’s lawyers disclosed that he shared polling data with Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian-born associate who worked with Manafort in Ukraine. Prosecutor­s say Kilimnik has ties to Russian intelligen­ce, an allegation he has denied.

In addition, the relationsh­ip between Manafort and Kilimnik was extensivel­y discussed in a closed court hearing on Feb. 4.

“This goes, I think, very much to the heart of what the special counsel’s office is investigat­ing,” Andrew Weissman, a top Mueller deputy, told the judge. Weissman did not elaborate, but he cited a meeting between Manafort and Kilimnik at a cigar club in New York City on Aug. 2, 2016.

“That meeting and what happened at that meeting is of significan­ce to the special counsel,” he said.

The meeting took place less than two weeks after Trump had accepted his party’s presidenti­al nomination at the Republican National Convention and about two weeks before Manafort resigned from the Trump campaign over questions about his work in Ukraine. Richard Gates, Manafort’s deputy at the time, also attended the meeting. Gates initially was named in the same indictment as Manafort, but he later pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and lying to investigat­ors.

Manafort’s conversati­ons with Kilimnik were one of five topics that prosecutor­s said Manafort lied about.

The judge agreed with prosecutor­s on three of the five that Manafort “intentiona­lly false statements.

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