Trump ex-campaign chief Manafort seeks
more time to review claims about lying
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[December 12, 2018]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lawyers for
President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort told a
U.S. judge on Tuesday they needed more time to evaluate prosecutors'
allegations that Manafort lied to Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team
and breached his plea deal.
During a U.S. District Court hearing in Washington, Manafort's lawyer
Richard Westling said the defense team had learned more details earlier
in the day about the allegations and was not sure yet if any of the
issues were in dispute.
Judge Amy Berman Jackson ordered the defense to file a response by Jan.
7 raising any concerns, and tentatively set a hearing for Jan. 25.
Westling said he was not sure if a hearing would be necessary.
Mueller's team in November accused Manafort of breaching a plea
agreement reached two months earlier by lying repeatedly to
investigators, and prosecutors on Friday for the first time provided
details to back up their assertion.
They said Manafort among other things lied about interactions with a
former business partner named Konstantin Kilimnik accused by prosecutors
of having ties to Russian intelligence, and about contacts with Trump
administration officials after being charged by Mueller.
Manafort, who earned millions of dollars for his political consulting
work for Ukraine's former pro-Russia government, has emerged as a key
figure in Mueller's ongoing investigation into Russia's role in the 2016
U.S. election and whether Trump's campaign conspired with Moscow's
operations.
The judge said the prosecution's submission lacked "sufficient
information" to help inform her decision on whether Manafort did lie and
breach his deal. Westling said he agreed.
Asked by Jackson whether the defense team agrees with the basic facts in
the Mueller team's filing, Westling said he still could not say.
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President Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort departs
U.S. District Court after a motions hearing in Alexandria, Virginia,
U.S., May 4, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
"We had a conversation with the government earlier today where they
were more forthcoming ... and I think we can continue to work
through getting the detail we need to be able to answer that
question," Westling said.
Mueller's investigation, which threatens Trump's presidency, has led
to guilty pleas by a series of former Trump aides and criminal
charges against a variety of Russian individuals and entities. Trump
has called the investigation a witch hunt and has denied colluding
with Russia.
Prosecutors said in Friday's filing Manafort falsely denied trying
to contact administration officials either directly or indirectly,
but they uncovered evidence showing he was in touch with one senior
official through February 2018 and authorized another person to
contact the administration on his behalf.
Many of the details of his alleged lies, particularly relating to
Kilimnik, were heavily redacted from the filing.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Will Dunham)
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