Posted on 01/11/2018 4:01:40 PM PST by mojito
A senior Justice Department prosecutor in Robert Muellers Special Counsel office held a meeting with Associated Press journalists last spring to discuss an investigation into Paul Manaforts financial record, a day before the wire service published a major expose disclosing alleged money laundering made by the former and now embattled Trump campaign chairman.
Federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, now a senior attorney in the special counsels office, met with AP journalists on April 11 after reporters informed him of their own investigation into Manaforts dealings with Ukrainian officials. The reporters had reached out to Weissman on a different story earlier in the year and it was during that conversation, that the AP team told Weissmann of their investigation into Manafort, stated the sources. The AP published the explosive expose on April 12, a day after their meeting with Weissmann.
According to sources familiar with the meeting, the reporters had promised to share documents and other information gleaned from the own investigation with the Justice Department.
AP spokeswoman Lauren Easton said Thursday, we refrain from discussing our sources.
(Excerpt) Read more at saraacarter.com ...
I should correct myself a bit:
>
Congress should write such a law requiring mandatory (no trial) prison for prosecutors fabricating evidence or hiding evidence which proves the defendant guilty.
>
1) Wonder how that would work re: determining if such a law is Constitutional on its face
2) I’d leave it open to ANY ONE in govt
3) ...and wouldn’t have to be if they were found guilty. Proof of fabrication/hiding should be enough.
course, I’d expand it to include Judicial activism too :)
Tje o ly thing I can think of is that it shows he waspre biased against Manafort.
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