Trump's ex-campaign chief Manafort to
seek dismissal of charges
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[April 19, 2018]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Paul Manafort, U.S.
President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman, will try on Thursday
to convince a judge to throw out charges brought by Special Counsel
Robert Mueller, arguing Mueller has overstepped his authority.
Manafort, hit with two indictments accusing him of conspiracy against
the United States and other crimes, backed away from an earlier request
to the same judge for dismissal of the special counsel's charges during
an April 4 hearing in a related civil lawsuit.
On Thursday, Manafort's attorney Kevin Downing is expected to tell U.S.
District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson during a hearing in Washington
that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein's order in May 2017
appointing Mueller was overly broad, and that Mueller's case falls
outside the boundaries of what he was permitted to investigate.
The hearing gives Manafort a chance to seek dismissal of charges in an
indictment against him in Washington before the case can go to trial in
September. That indictment charged him with offenses including
conspiring to launder money and failing to register as a foreign agent
in connection with his lobbying for the Ukrainian government under
pro-Russian former President Viktor Yanukovych.
The other indictment, in Alexandria, Virginia, charges Manafort with
bank fraud and filing false tax returns, among other offenses.
Manafort's lawyer is set to ask for a dismissal of those charges in May.
Both indictments arose from Mueller's investigation into Russian
involvement in the 2016 election. Manafort is expected to have two
separate criminal trials, with the Virginia one starting in July.
Thursday's hearing is the latest development stemming from a special
counsel investigation that potentially could threaten Trump's
presidency. While Manafort has pleaded not guilty, the special counsel's
office has extracted guilty pleas from other former campaign figures
including Manafort's former deputy and business partner Rick Gates.
Manafort is hoping to convince the judge that the Washington indictment
should be tossed because the charges fall outside the scope of the
investigation Rosenstein authorized.
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Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort departs a motions
hearing in the indictment filed against him by Special Counsel
Robert Mueller, at U.S. District Court in Washington, U.S., April 4,
2018. REUTERS/Al Drago
Rosenstein's order directed Mueller to investigate whether Trump's
presidential campaign colluded with Russia and gave Mueller the
power to investigate any other matters that arise from the probe.
Trump and Russia have denied any such collusion.
In a court filing, Downing said the scope of Rosenstein's order is
"tantamount to a blank check" that Mueller "has cashed, repeatedly."
The charges, Downing added, are not related to Russia or potential
coordination with the Trump campaign.
Downing also said the charges did not arise from Mueller's work,
noting the FBI previously investigated Manafort's Ukraine business
dealings and closed out the probe in 2014 without pursuing charges.
Downing presented similar claims in Manafort's civil lawsuit against
Mueller and Rosenstein, aiming to convince Jackson to decide that
Rosenstein's order naming Mueller was overly broad and violated
Justice Department rules on special counsel appointments.
During this month's hearing, Jackson tore into Downing's legal
arguments, at one point exclaiming that she did not understand what
was left of his case.
Mueller's team has filed evidence in the criminal case to show he
had explicit authority from Rosenstein in August 2017 to probe
Manafort's Ukraine dealings.
Short of dismissing the entire indictment, Downing is also expected
to ask Jackson to consider tossing a number of individual counts on
more technical legal grounds.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Will Dunham)
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