The Borneo Post

Mueller to give details on Russia probe with filings on former Trump aides

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WASHINGTON: US Special Counsel Robert Mueller will provide new details on Friday on how two of President Donald Trump’s closest former aides have helped or hindered his investigat­ion into possible collusion between Russia and Trump’s 2016 election campaign.

Mueller last month accused Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort of breaching a plea bargain deal by lying to prosecutor­s, and he will submit informatio­n on those alleged lies in a fi ling to a federal court in Washington.

That could include shedding new light on Manafort’s business dealings or his consulting for proKremlin interests in Ukraine.

Manafort, who maintains he has been truthful with Mueller, managed Trump’s campaign for three months in 2016.

Also on Friday, Mueller’s office and the Southern District of New York are to fi le sentencing memos on Michael Cohen, Trump’s former private lawyer.

Cohen pleaded guilty to financial crimes in a New York court in August, and last week to lying to Congress in a Mueller case. Sentencing for both of those cases will be handled by one judge.

Attention will focus on whether Mueller discloses new informatio­n to supplement Cohen’s admission last week that he sought help from the Kremlin for a Trump skyscraper in Moscow late into the 2016 campaign.

Mueller’s probe has infuriated Trump. He denies any collusion between his team and Russia, and accuses Mueller’s prosecutor­s of pressuring his former aides to lie about him, his election campaign and his business dealings.

The president has called Cohen a liar and “weak person.”

Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor, said he was eager to see if Mueller’s prosecutor­s directly or tacitly support Cohen’s assertions that Trump directed him to make hush payments to women in violation of campaign fi nance law and that he let the White House know what he planned to tell Congress about the Moscow skyscraper project. Cohen now says he lied in that testimony.

“If the government does not contest that, it indicates that it is consistent with the evidence that they do have,” Mariotti said, referring to Cohen’s assertions. “It could be a big day.”

The filings on Cohen and Manafort follow a sentencing memo earlier this week on Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

In that memo, Mueller praised Flynn for providing “substantia­l” cooperatio­n and argued that Flynn should receive no prison time, a move widely seen by legal experts as a message to other would- be cooperator­s that assistance would be rewarded.

Cohen is hoping he will get similar credit, emphasisin­g in a court filing last week that his decision to cooperate came in the face of fierce criticism by Trump of Mueller’s probe. — Reuters

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