Global Times

Judge: Ex-Trump aide broke plea deal

▶ Manafort, 69, faces maximum sentence of 10 years for conspiracy charges

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Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort could face a much longer prison sentence than expected after a Washington judge ruled Wednesday that he had broken his plea deal with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion.

Federal district judge Amy Berman Jackson agreed with prosecutor­s that Manafort had “intentiona­lly” lied to investigat­ors about his contacts with a suspected Russian operative, Konstantin Kilimnik in 2016 and 2017, despite having pledged to cooperate as part of his September plea agreement.

Jackson also ruled that Manafort had lied about a secretive payment he made to a law firm, and lied on another occasion when investigat­ors queried him about a separate, still secret investigat­ion related to the Mueller probe.

The ruling meant that Mueller no longer has to abide by the deal, in which Manafort agreed to plead guilty to two reduced conspiracy charges, carrying a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

It could also elevate whatever punishment arises from the 69-year-old’s guilty verdict in a separate jury trial last year in Virginia.

Mueller’s side is “no longer bound by its obligation­s under the plea agreement, including its promise to support a reduction” in Manafort’s sentence, Jackson said.

Theoretica­lly that could mean Manafort is also vulnerable to new charges, though prosecutor­s have indicated they want to move quickly to sentencing and not spend more time on the case.

The breakdown of the deal set back what had been seen as a major success of the 21-month-old Mueller probe in turning Manafort into a possible key witness against President Donald Trump, his family and other top aides.

Manafort is one of seven former Trump campaign associates who have been charged by Mueller’s team.

He was convicted in August in a Virginia court on eight charges of banking and tax fraud related to his work for Russia-backed political parties in Ukraine between 2004 and 2014.

He was separately charged in Washington with money laundering, witness tampering and other offenses, which were consolidat­ed into the two conspiracy charges in the plea bargain.

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