Gulf News

Lies harmed Russia inquiry, Mueller says

FORMER TOP TRUMP AIDE MAY BE JAILED FOR FALSE STATEMENTS

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Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III urged a federal judge to sentence George Papadopoul­os to up to six months in prison, saying in a court filing on Friday night that his lies harmed the Russia investigat­ion.

“The defendant’s false statements were intended to harm the investigat­ion, and did so,” prosecutor­s wrote in a scathing sentencing memo.

Papadopoul­os, a former foreign policy aide to the Trump campaign, was the first person charged in the Russia investigat­ion. He pleaded guilty last year to making false statements to FBI agents, and is scheduled to be sentenced on September 7. One of those lies — which occurred when he first met FBI agents on January 27, 2017 — may have allowed a key figure in the case to slip away, according to the court filing.

Papadopoul­os told the agents that he hadn’t talked to a London-based academic who had Russian connection­s until after he joined the Trump campaign.

“Those statements substantia­lly hindered investigat­ors’ ability to effectivel­y question the professor when the FBI located him in Washington, D.C., approximat­ely two weeks” later, the court filing said.

“The defendant’s lies undermined investigat­ors’ ability to challenge the professor or potentiall­y detain or arrest him while he was still in the US.” The potential effect of Papadopoul­os’ lies was not previously known. A bit player in the campaign, Papadopoul­os played an outsize role in the Russia investigat­ion.

Investigat­ion

The FBI first launched the counter-intelligen­ce investigat­ion in mid-2016 after Papadopoul­os reportedly told an Australian diplomat in London that he heard Moscow had political dirt on Hillary Clinton, including hacked emails. Australian officials passed the informatio­n to their US counterpar­ts.

Friday night’s prosecutio­n memo was filed hours after Trump again denounced the Mueller investigat­ion as “a rigged witch hunt,” and appeared to blame it on Democrats, not Russia’s interferen­ce in the election.

Prosecutor­s suggested that Papadopoul­os lied because he wanted a job in the Trump administra­tion and “had an incentive to protect the administra­tion and minimise his own role as a witness.”

In early 2017, the court filing said, he was seeking a “highlevel position” at the National Security Council, State Department or Energy Department. He even submitted a resume to buttress his applicatio­n within hours of speaking to FBI agents, the court filing said.

The memo also sheds light on why Mueller has moved to sentencing for Papadopoul­os while delaying it for several other defendants who have pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with prosecutor­s.

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