New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Under no circumstan­ces should Trump pardon Manafort

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Earlier this year, Paul Manafort was convicted on five counts of tax fraud, one count of failing to file, and two counts of bank fraud. The jury found Manafort hid millions in offshore accounts from tax authoritie­s derived from aiding foreign powers, spending the money to support an extravagan­t lifestyle, and then defrauding banks out of millions more when his funds ran low. Now Special Counsel Robert Mueller is accusing him of violating his plea agreement to avoid a trial on additional charges by lying to the FBI.

A new poll from Law Works found 62 percent of Republican­s believe indictment­s against Trump associates generated by the Mueller probe should not be dropped or dismissed. Yet, it is possible President Trump will issue a pardon to this morally bankrupt man for one reason and one reason alone: He is willing to lie to protect the president or those around him from accountabi­lity. No American, and certainly not a president charged with duly administer­ing the laws, should countenanc­e allowing a man who cheated the United States and its citizens for such nefarious purposes to avoid the consequenc­es of his crimes.

Pardons are meant to rectify injustice, not create it. Under no circumstan­ces should President Trump pardon Paul Manafort.

Rick Hall, a practicing attorney and legal

advisor for Republican­s for the Rule

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