The Malta Independent on Sunday

Trump ally Stone charged with lying about hacked emails

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President Donald Trump’s confidant Roger Stone has been charged with lying about his pursuit of Russian-hacked emails damaging to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 election bid. Prosecutor­s allege that senior Trump campaign officials sought to leverage the stolen material into a White House victory.

The self-proclaimed dirty trickster, arrested by the FBI in a raid before dawn Friday at his Florida home, swiftly blasted the prosecutio­n as politicall­y motivated. In a circus-like atmosphere outside the courthouse, as supporters cheered him on and jeering spectators shouted “Lock Him Up,” Stone proclaimed his innocence and predicted his vindicatio­n.

“As I have said previously, there is no circumstan­ce whatsoever under which I will bear false witness against the president, nor will I make up lies to ease the pressure on myself,” Stone said.

The seven-count indictment , the first criminal case in months in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, provides the most detail to date about how Trump campaign associates in the summer of 2016 actively sought the disclosure of emails the US says were hacked by Russia and then provided to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks. It alleges that an unidentifi­ed senior Trump campaign official was “directed” to keep in contact with Stone about when stolen emails relating to Clinton might be disclosed.

Stone is the sixth Trump aide or adviser charged by Mueller and the 34th person overall. The nearly two-year-old probe has exposed multiple contacts between Trump associates and Russia during the campaign and transition period and revealed efforts by several to conceal those communicat­ions.

The indictment brings the investigat­ion even further into Trump’s circle of advisers and suggests campaign officials were eager to exploit the stolen messages for political gain. But prosecutor­s did not accuse Trump of wrongdoing or charge Stone with conspiring with WikiLeaks or with the Russian intelligen­ce officers Mueller says hacked the emails. They also did not allege that Trump aides knew in advance of the hacking.

The prosecutio­n mirrors other Mueller cases in alleging cover-ups and deception, accusing Stone of lying to lawmakers about WikiLeaks, tampering with witnesses and obstructin­g a House intelligen­ce committee probe into whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russia to tip the election.

Trump attorney Jay Sekulow said the indictment “does not allege Russian collusion by Roger Stone or anyone else.” Trump, in a tweet Saturday, said that if Stone “was indicted for lying to Congress,” then “what about the lying” by top law enforcemen­t and Obama-era national security officials, though he presented no specifics to support his assertion of such “lying.”

CNN aired video of the raid at Stone’s home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, showing agents in body armor using large weapons and night-vision equipment, running up to the home and banging on the door.

“FBI open the door!” one shouts. “FBI, warrant!” Stone could then be seen in the doorway in his sleepwear before he was led away.

Though not uncommon for the FBI to make early-morning arrests of targets under indictment, it’s the first time Mueller has used that tactic. In court papers, prosecutor­s wrote they had concerns that if Stone was tipped off to the indictment, it would increase the risk he would flee or destroy evidence.

Hours after his arrest, Stone appeared in court in a blue polo shirt and jeans. In releasing him on $250,000 bond, a magistrate judge restricted Stone’s travel to South Florida, Washington and New York City and ordered him to avoid contact with witnesses. He’s due Tuesday in a court in Washington, where the case was filed.

“This morning, at the crack of dawn, 29 FBI agents arrived at my home with 17 vehicles, with their lights flashing, when they could simply have contacted my attorneys and I would have been more than willing to surrender voluntaril­y,” Stone said outside court.

Known for his political antics, conspiracy theories and hard-ball tactics, Stone has revelled in being a Washington wheelerdea­ler dating back to former President Richard Nixon’s administra­tion. On Friday, he mimicked Nixon’s famous “V’’ gesture as he left the courthouse.

 ??  ?? Former campaign adviser for President Donald Trump, Roger Stone walks out of the federal courthouse following a hearing
Former campaign adviser for President Donald Trump, Roger Stone walks out of the federal courthouse following a hearing

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