Manafort had $10 million loan from
Russian oligarch: court filing
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[June 28, 2018]
(Reuters) - A search warrant
application unsealed on Wednesday revealed closer links than previously
known between President Donald Trump’s former campaign manager Paul
Manafort and a Russian oligarch with close ties to the Kremlin.
In an affidavit attached to the July 2017 application, an FBI agent said
he had reviewed tax returns for a company controlled by Manafort and his
wife that showed a $10 million loan from a Russian lender identified as
Oleg Deripaska.
The application to search Manafort's Virginia apartment was granted,
providing key evidence for Special Counsel Robert Mueller's indictments
of Manafort as part of his investigation into Russia's alleged meddling
in the 2016 presidential campaign.
Mueller has been investigating the financial links between Manafort and
Deripaska, a metals magnate who is known to be close to Russian
President Vladimir Putin. Deripaska was among the Russian oligarchs
sanctioned by the United States in April.
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Mueller also has indicted Konstantin Kilimnik, a political operative who
sometimes served as an intermediary between Manafort and Deripaska. In
court filings Mueller's prosecutors have said Kilimnik has ties to
Russian spy agencies, which Kilimnik denies.
The affidavit unsealed on Wednesday also disclosed that Deripaska had
financially backed Manafort's consulting work in Ukraine when it started
in 2005-2006, citing information from a source whose name was redacted,
a sign that a former Manafort associate may have cooperated with the
investigation.
On Tuesday a federal judge in Virginia dealt a blow to Manafort by
rejecting a motion to dismiss the case on the argument Mueller did not
have the mandate to prosecute him.
Manafort, who was Trump's campaign manager during part of his 2016
presidential campaign, has been indicted in Washington and Virginia on
charges ranging from conspiring to launder money, bank and tax fraud and
failing to register as a foreign agent for the pro-Russia Ukraine
government.
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Paul Manafort, former campaign manager for U.S. President Donald
Trump, departs after a hearing at U.S. District Court in Washington,
DC, U.S., April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
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Manafort has pleaded not guilty. His Virginia trial starts in July
and his Washington trial is scheduled for September.
The search warrant application also confirmed that Mueller has been
investigating Manafort’s role in a June 9, 2016, meeting that he
attended at the Trump Tower in New York between Donald Trump Jr. and
a Russian lawyer and self-professed Kremlin informant who
purportedly was carrying damaging information on Hillary Clinton,
the Democratic nominee for president.
The FBI sought “communications, records, documents and other files
involving any of the attendees of the June 9, 2016, meeting at Trump
tower, as well as Aras and Amin Agalarov,” said the application,
which misspelled the first name of Emin Agalarov.
Aras Agalarov is a Russian oligarch close to Putin who joined the
elder Trump in staging the 2013 Miss Universe contest in Moscow. His
son, Emin, is a popular singer.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in New York; Additional reporting by
Jonathan Landay in Washington; Editing by Bill Trott)
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