Yuma Sun

Mueller: Manafort broke plea agreement

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WASHINGTON — The special counsel in the Russia investigat­ion is accusing former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort of violating his plea agreement by repeatedly lying to federal investigat­ors, an extraordin­ary allegation that could expose him to a lengthier prison sentence — and potentiall­y more criminal charges.

The torpedoing of Manafort’s plea deal, disclosed in a court filing Monday, also results in special counsel Robert Mueller’s team losing a cooperatin­g witness from the top of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign who was present for several key episodes under investigat­ion. That includes a Trump Tower meeting involving Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian lawyer he was told had derogatory informatio­n on Democrat Hillary Clinton.

The move signals a return to the acrimoniou­s relationsh­ip Manafort has had with the special counsel’s office since his indictment last year. Before his plea agreement, Manafort aggressive­ly challenged the special counsel’s legitimacy in court, went through a bitter trial and landed himself in jail after prosecutor­s discovered he had attempted to tamper with witnesses in his case.

In the latest filing, Mueller’s team said Manafort “committed federal crimes” by lying about “a variety of subject matters” even after he agreed to truthfully cooperate with the investigat­ion. Prosecutor­s said they will detail the “nature of the defendant’s crimes and lies” in writing at a later date to the judge.

Through his attorneys, Manafort denied lying, saying he “believes he provided truthful informatio­n” during a series of sessions with Mueller’s investigat­ors. He also disagreed that he breached his plea agreement. Still, both sides now agree they can’t resolve the conflict, and U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson should set a date to sentence him.

Manafort, who remains jailed, had been meeting with the special counsel’s office since he pleaded guilty in September to conspiracy against the United States and conspiracy to obstruct justice. He cut that deal to head off a second trial after being convicted last summer of eight felony counts related to millions of dollars he hid from the IRS in offshore accounts.

Both cases stemmed from his Ukrainian political work and undisclose­d lobbying work he admitted to carrying out in the U.S. in violation of federal law.

As part of his plea agreement, Manafort pledged to “cooperate fully, truthfully, completely, and forthright­ly” with the government “in any and all matters” prosecutor­s deemed necessary. That included his work on the Trump campaign as well as his Ukrainian political work, which remains under investigat­ion by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

With prosecutor­s saying he breached the agreement, Manafort now faces serious repercussi­ons such as the possibilit­y of prosecutio­n on additional charges including the 10 felony counts prosecutor­s dropped when he made the deal.

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