The News-Times

Manafort denies lying to Mueller

Court papers say he never meant to mislead investigat­ors for special counsel

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WASHINGTON — Lawyers for Paul Manafort, of New Britain, submitted a heavily redacted 10-page filing aimed at knocking down claims by special counsel Robert Mueller’s office that he intentiona­lly lied and breached his plea agreement.

Manafort’s guilty plea to conspiracy charges in September required him to cooperate with prosecutor­s and tell the truth about what he knew. Months later, prosecutor­s accused him of repeatedly lying to them.

The lawyers said Wednesday that any misstateme­nts by Manafort reflected an inconsiste­nt recollecti­on of facts and events rather than an intentiona­l effort to mislead.

“Indeed, many of these events occurred years ago, or during a high-pressure U.S. presidenti­al campaign he managed when his time was extraordin­arily limited,” the defense lawyers said, “or during the difficult time that followed his departure from the 2016 presidenti­al campaign because of the allegation­s leveled at him and the investigat­ions that followed.”

Among the allegation­s is that Manafort lied when he denied having shared polling data from the 2016 campaign with Konstantin Kilimnik, a business associate who the U.S. has said has ties to Russian intelligen­ce.

A hearing is set for Friday. Manafort, who is currently jailed in Virginia, asked for permission to skip it.

But U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson denied the request, citing among other reasons “the number of court appearance­s defendant has been permitted to waive” and “the significan­ce of the issues at stake.”

The September guilty plea resolved allegation­s in the District of Columbia. He was found guilty of eight financial crimes last year in a separate case in Virginia and is to be sentenced there next month.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media File photo ?? Paul Manafort
Hearst Connecticu­t Media File photo Paul Manafort

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