Posted on 12/07/2018 8:21:11 AM PST by yesthatjallen
Special counsel Robert Mueller on Friday is expected to file a bombshell report that describes how former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort eviscerated his plea agreement with federal prosecutors.
The highly anticipated memo, slated for release as a court filing, will likely shed more light on Muellers investigation into whether President Trumps campaign colluded with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election.
But just how much new information will be made public remains to be seen.
Still, whatever information is disclosed is expected to be revelatory in terms of the content and nature of Manaforts remarks to the special counsels office and other FBI investigators. In order to demonstrate that Manafort lied, Mueller will need to refer to evidence or reasons he has for believing Manafort did not tell the truth.
In laying out Manaforts lies and how they know theyre lies, were going to learn a lot about the investigation, said Elie Honig, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. There will be plenty of clues and indicators about where Mueller has gone and will go.
Any information that could compromise Muellers investigation or other probes is likely to be redacted, so the federal judge overseeing Manaforts case in Washington, D.C., District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson, and Manaforts attorneys would be permitted to view the document in full but the public will not.
Earlier this week, Mueller filed a sentencing memo laying out the cooperation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn. That document was heavily redacted to conceal information Flynn has provided in the probe and to at least two other matters under investigation by the Justice Department.
Glenn Kirschner, a former federal prosecutor with the U.S. attorneys office in D.C., said he expects the public memo on Manafort to include specifics about the defendants lies, unless those details touch on subjects central to the Russia investigation.
It may be that we see an equal number of redactions in the Manafort memo, Kirschner said, comparing it to the Flynn filing.
Still, Fridays deadline offers Mueller a fresh opportunity to put facts about the Manafort case and the broader investigation into the public realm. While Mueller and his team of prosecutors have refrained from speaking publicly or commenting on developments in their cases, the special counsel has notably put forth detailed court filings that illuminate an investigation that has captured intense public interest.
The prosecutor has an awful lot of discretion, Honig said. It could be a very terse, one- or two-page conclusory statement, or it could be a narrative-style submission.
It remains unclear exactly what Manafort lied about. He was initially ensnared in the Russia investigation on charges related to his foreign lobbying for pro-Russian forces in Ukraine. Manafort was viewed as a key cooperator with U.S. government investigators because of his visibility into the Trump campaign and information he could offer in related foreign lobbying investigations.
The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Manafort allegedly misled investigators about his lobbying work and contacts with Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian who worked for the offshoot of Manaforts firm in Ukraine. Kilimnik, suspected of ties to Russian intelligence, was charged alongside Manafort with witness tampering earlier this year but has remained out of reach of U.S. prosecutors.
Mueller first revealed last week that Manafort allegedly lied to the special counsels office and other FBI investigators on a variety of subject matters, noting that a forthcoming submission would explain the nature of the defendants crimes and lies, including those after signing the plea agreement herein.
Manafort has denied that he misled investigators in breach of his plea agreement.
Muellers disclosure came days after Trump submitted written answers to the special counsels questions about collusion, raising questions among some legal experts about the timing of the two developments.
If prosecutors accuse Manafort of lying about something that Trump has said publicly, it could signal the president also lied in his written answers to Mueller, according to former federal prosecutor Shanlon Wu.
Wu said that the Manafort memo, in addition to testimony from Trumps former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, could be very dangerous for the president if they contradict the written answers Trump provided on Nov. 20.
Cohen has pleaded guilty to several federal crimes in New York and formally agreed last week to cooperate with Mueller, reportedly sitting for interviews with the special counsels office that have totaled 70 hours.
Legal experts say its possible Manafort lied about others in the campaign who have had contact with Russian officials, but they noted its unlikely any of those names would be revealed in Fridays memo.
If hes disclosing information about somebody who ultimately wont be prosecuted because Mueller has fallen out of bed with Manafort, theres more reason to be less clear about it, said Joel Cohen, a white collar defense attorney and former federal and state prosecutor. Its unfair to identify someone as having done wrong if they wont ultimately be prosecuted for it.
If Manafort lied by omission, that would suggest he might be trying to protect individuals or avoid retribution from someone.
Ive dealt with dozens of cooperators in my time as a prosecutor, and the reason they go off the rails, as it appears Manafort has, is they are omitting they are protecting themselves or others, said Honig. I think its likely that Manafort withheld info from Mueller here. The question, then, is going to be what information was he holding back, who was he protecting, and why?
Berman Jackson, an Obama appointee, is giving Manaforts defense team until Dec. 12 to file a preliminary response to the prosecutions report. Manaforts attorney, Kevin Downing, said in court last week that he might request further investigation to prove Muellers allegations that his client lied to the FBI.
While Berman Jackson set March 5 as Manaforts target sentencing date, she said she will hold a hearing in mid-to-late January to determine whether Manafort breached his plea deal. As part of the deal, Manafort had agreed to plead guilty to two felony charges conspiracy against the U.S. and conspiracy to launder money and fully cooperate with Muellers probe. In return, prosecutors agreed to drop five other charges, including failure to register as a foreign lobbyists, making false statements and tampering with witnesses.
But prosecutors said in court last week they are considering bringing new charges against Manafort for lying to the FBI in breach of the agreement. Even if hes not charged, Joel Cohen said the judge can choose to give Manafort more time if it turns out he sent Mueller on a wild goose chase.
The Manafort filing is one of several Mueller will file this week in his sprawling Russia investigation. The special counsel is also slated to submit details Friday on Michael Cohens cooperation ahead of his sentencing on eight federal charges in New York.
Exactly I have no intrigue about anything he says now that his balls have been cut off.
shrug
I don’t care what the corrupt “Special Counsel” has to say.
Id like to hear more about all the FBI plants into the Trump campaign that set up all the intrigue.
This is what they used to call thin gruel.
Apparently he didn't ask for extra lettuce when he ate at Burger King on April 18, 2014.
Intrigue to those who want to bypass the election and over ride the will of the people, me it is just more garbage from the can..
so Mule head files when Comey goes to testify which will be I plead the 5th, if he is not jailed for contempt we will never know the full extent of our gangstamints corruption
There will be NO bombshell contained within this filing.
There will be a filing to compete and distract from the Comey manuscripts that are due to come out tomorrow.
Two other strong candidates for FBI/CIA plants are Michael Flynn and Carter Page.
Dropping on Friday for two reasons: First, so nobody in the real world ever reads it and Second, once that's assured, to allow the Sunday shows to obsessively spin it and create a narrative for everyone to run with next week.
And people try to say Mueller isn't political.
IGABTSY
Mueller is punishing Manafort for briefing the President on their dealings with the Inquisitor. No Trump ally will go unpunished
The prosecutor has an awful lot of discretion,
It remains unclear exactly what Manafort lied about.
Two key sentences!
Comey was wearing a wire when he visited the President in early 2017....
and didn't run immediately to his typewriter to enter his "recall" like he said. He transcribed the recording into his computer at that time, burned the bud, tossed it and has lied his butt off ever since.
He will never take the 5th...he will however preach “security” and no can do...
More low-life skullduggery from the weasels at the SC office..
What I love most about all this is how the president’s detractors call him a clown in one breath and an international political mastermind in the next.
I hated the Obama administration, but at my worst point I was never as incensed or driven to insanity like those who suffer from TDS seem.
The DS will not quit until they cash in their insurance policy thus reaching their goal.
Rush said long ago they won’t stop.
JMO. Do you get flamed for posting an opinion?
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