A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, September 16, 2018
Manafort will cooperate with Mueller as part of guilty plea, prosecutor says
Former Trump campaign chairman
Paul Manafort pleaded guilty to two charges on Sept. 14, and will
cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation. (Jenny Starrs /The Washington Post)

Kathleen Manafort, left, wife of Paul Manafort, enters federal court in Washington on Friday. (Keith Lane for The Washington Post)
President Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort agreed Friday
to provide testimony to special counsel Robert S. Mueller III as part of
a plea deal that could answer some of the most critical questions about
whether any Americans conspired with Russian efforts to influence the
2016 election.
The decision to cooperate with Mueller in hopes of a lesser prison
sentence is a stunning development, signaling Manafort’s surrender to
criminal charges that he cheated the Internal Revenue Service, violated
foreign lobbying laws and tried to obstruct justice while opening a new
potential legal vulnerability for Trump.
“I plead guilty,” Manafort told U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson
at a hearing Friday morning in federal court in the District. As part of
his plea, Manafort admitted to years of financial crimes to hide his
money from the IRS and promised to tell the government about “his
participation in and knowledge of all criminal activities.”
Flipping Manafort gives Mueller a cooperating witness who was at key
events relevant to the Russia investigation — a Trump Tower meeting
attended by a Russian lawyer, the Republican National Convention and a
host of other behind-the-scenes discussions in the spring and summer of
2016.
“This is a big win for Mueller’s team. Gaining Manafort’s cooperation
has always been viewed as the Holy Grail of this investigation,” said
Robert Mintz, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice. “It
now remains to be seen what Manafort can provide, but it is unlikely
that prosecutors would have been willing to strike this deal unless they
were already convinced that he has valuable information.”
Court papers indicate Manafort was talking in detail to prosecutors at
least as early as Monday — making multiple statements and a written
proffer to investigators as the two sides worked toward a deal.

Kathleen Manafort, left, wife of Paul Manafort, enters federal court in Washington on Friday. (Keith Lane for The Washington Post)
In return for his cooperation, Manafort hopes to have years shaved off a
potential 10-year prison sentence and see his family hold on to some
property.
Kevin Downing, an attorney for Manafort, gave a brief statement outside
the courthouse after the hearing. “He wanted to make sure his family
remained safe and live a good life,” Downing said of Manafort. “He has
accepted responsibility.”
When asked whether the deal with Mueller’s team is a full cooperation
agreement, Downing replied, “It is.” He did not respond to questions
about whether Manafort has been interviewed by Mueller’s team or whether
Manafort’s defense team remains in a joint defense agreement with
Trump’s attorneys.
Manafort’s defenders have long insisted that he would not cooperate with
Mueller and that he does not have information that would incriminate
the president.
Before he joined the Trump
campaign, Paul Manafort made a name for himself in the D.C. lobbying
world, but his past caught up with him. (Dalton Bennett , Jon Gerberg, Jesse Mesner-Hage/The Washington Post)
Manafort’s cooperation was first revealed by prosecutor Andrew Weissmann at the outset of the hearing.
Jackson noted that Manafort had agreed to cooperate “fully and
truthfully” with the investigation conducted by the office of special
counsel, including participating in interviews and debriefings,
producing any documents in his control, testifying, and agreeing to
delay sentencing until a time set by the government.
Under the terms of the deal, Manafort faces a possible maximum prison
sentence of about 10 years, though that does not include any likely
sentence for his conviction last month in Virginia. His attorneys may
seek a lower sentence, and prosecutors did not agree to recommend any
sentence.
Before Manafort pleaded guilty, Weissmann spent about 40 minutes
describing in detail Manafort’s criminal conduct — from a 10-year scheme
to act as an unregistered agent of a foreign government, to hiding
millions of dollars he earned from that work, and then, when
investigators were on his trail, trying to tamper with witnesses in the
case.
After a year of denying the charges and fighting them at every stage of
the investigation, Manafort admitted Friday that he did what prosecutors
had long said — cheat the IRS out of $15 million and lie repeatedly to
try to cover his tracks. While he pleaded guilty to just two of the
seven charges he faced at trial, prosecutors forced him to admit to the
broad scope of his financial and secret lobbying schemes.
“I believe it’s fair to say that’s probably the longest and most
detailed summary that ever preceded this question, but is what the
prosecutor said a true and accurate description of what you did in this
case?” Jackson asked Manafort.
“I did. It is,” Manafort said, resting both hands on the lectern before him.
The deal will preempt Manafort’s trial scheduled for this month.
Manafort pleaded guilty to two charges — conspiring to defraud the
United States and conspiring to obstruct justice.
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders issued a brief
statement after the announcement. “This had absolutely nothing to do
with the President or his victorious 2016 Presidential campaign,” she
said. “It is totally unrelated.”
Trump’s personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani said: “Once again an
investigation has concluded with a plea having nothing to do with
President Trump or the Trump campaign. The reason: The president did
nothing wrong.”
A criminal information — a legal document filed by prosecutors to detail
the criminal conduct to be admitted by the defendant — was filed in
advance of the plea.
The document is a laundry list of Manafort’s admitted criminal conduct,
including funneling millions of dollars in payments into offshore
accounts to conceal his income from the IRS. “Manafort cheated the
United States out of over $15 million in taxes,” the document states.
The filing also offers new details about the various ways in which
Manafort sought to surreptitiously lobby the U.S. government and
influence American public opinion toward Ukraine.
In 2012, Manafort set out to help his client — Ukraine’s then-president,
Viktor Yanukovych — by tarnishing the reputation of Yanukovych’s
political rival, Yulia Tymoshenko, according to the document. “Manafort
stated that ‘[m]y goal is to plant some stink on Tymo,’ ” according to
the document. At the time he made that statement, he was trying to get
U.S. news outlets to print articles saying Tymoshenko had paid for the
murder of a Ukrainian official, according to the criminal information.
The document also says Manafort “orchestrated a scheme to have, as he
wrote in a contemporaneous communication, ‘[O]bama jews’ put pressure
on the administration to disavow Tymoshenko and support Yanukovych.”
Manafort set out to spread stories in the United States that a senior
U.S. Cabinet official “was supporting anti-Semitism because the official
supported Tymoshenko,” according to the document.
At one point, Manafort wrote to an associate: “I have someone pushing it
on the NY Post. Bada bing bada boom.” The document does not identify
the then-Cabinet official, and it was not immediately clear whether such
an article was published.
As part of the plea deal, the government plans to seize five properties
worth millions of dollars, including Manafort’s apartment in Trump
Tower. The deal also calls for forfeiture of a handful of financial
accounts and a life insurance policy.
The guilty plea is another reversal for Manafort, who has fought
vociferously — but unsuccessfully — against Mueller’s investigation. The
69-year-old political consultant was convicted last month in Alexandria, Va., federal court on charges of bank and tax fraud.
Manafort’s cooperation with Mueller could provide investigators new
evidence or leads to chase; the guilty plea, however, will prevent
weeks’ worth of headlines about the trial in the month before
congressional elections.
The longtime lobbyist resigned from his position as Trump campaign chairman in August 2016 amid increasing scrutiny of his work in Ukraine.
Over a 40-year career, Manafort redefined and expanded Washington’s
influence industry domestically and internationally, parlaying
successful campaigns into lobbying opportunities. But by the mid-2000s,
there were signs that his consulting career had slumped, and at times
his finances appeared to be shaky. It was in Ukraine that he revived
both — in ways prosecutors say violated the law.
Both cases brought against Manafort by the special counsel stemmed from
his work in Ukraine. The jury in Virginia found that Manafort hid
millions of dollars he made there to avoid paying taxes and then lied to
get loans when the political party that was paying him was ousted from
power and the funding dried up.
In the trial scheduled in Washington, Manafort faced charges of
conspiring against the United States, money laundering, failing to
register as a lobbyist, making false statements and conspiring to
obstruct justice by trying to influence witnesses.
Manafort had the choice to consolidate both cases into one but declined. He had been jailed since June as a result of the witness-tampering charges.
He has yet to be sentenced in Virginia, where legal experts say he faces
eight to 10 years in prison under federal guidelines on the eight of 18
counts on which he was convicted. A mistrial was declared on the
remaining 10 charges after jurors could not reach a unanimous verdict.
In the months leading up to the plea deal, law enforcement officials had
come to suspect that Manafort’s legal strategy rested in part on hoping
to win a pardon from the president, according to people familiar with
the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a
sensitive issue.
Trump has sought advice from attorneys on the possibility of pardoning
Manafort and other aides accused of crimes, Giuliani previously told The
Washington Post, and was counseled against pardoning anyone involved in
the Mueller probe. Trump agreed to wait at least until the
investigation ends, Giuliani has said.
Manafort’s decision to cooperate and provide evidence to Mueller may make a pardon less likely.
Several defendants have cooperated or pleaded guilty in connection with
the special counsel’s probe, including Manafort’s former right-hand man
Rick Gates; former national security adviser Michael Flynn; and former
Trump campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos, who was
sentenced to 14 days in jail last week after pleading guilty to lying to
the FBI.
The decision by Trump’s onetime personal attorney Michael Cohen to
plead guilty last month in a federal investigation in Manhattan
particularly angered the president, who denounced him as a “flipper” and
praised Manafort for being a “brave man” who would not break under
pressure from prosecutors.
Rosalind S. Helderman, Tom Jackman, Philip Rucker and Rachel Weiner contributed to this report.

