I realize some of you are nose-deep in the SNC-Lavalin business which, perhaps wrongly, is becoming a bit tedious to me.
My attention is on the federal court, DC district, where this afternoon Team Mueller is scheduled to file its sentencing submission on Paul Manafort's convictions for conspiracy against the United States and conspiracy witness tampering. This is not the fraud and tax evasion case.
Those who should know think Mueller's submissions may spill the beans on many aspects of the special counsel's investigation into Trump and Russian meddling in the 2016 election. The idea is to get it out in the open before Trump's new Attorney General can bury it.
Prosecutors are set to outline all facts they believe the judge should consider at his sentencing, now set for March 13. That will likely include Manafort's criminal business schemes, his attempt to reach out to key contacts after his arrest and the lies he told to prosecutors and a grand jury after he agreed to cooperate with the Mueller investigation.
Often, in filings like these, prosecutors will pull together a complete retelling of the defendant's crimes, convictions and cooperation. Details about Manafort's cooperation have been especially guarded by prosecutors, since his interviews are a significant part of Mueller's investigation into Russian influence in the 2016 presidential election.
Prosecutors will also likely suggest a range the judge could give him in prison time.
The memo Friday will cover the two charges Manafort pleaded guilty to in September, conspiracy against the US and conspiracy witness tampering, which he committed after he was arrested by trying to reach out to former colleagues.
At the time of his plea, he also admitted to a litany of money laundering and foreign lobbying crimes that encompassed his work for Ukrainian politicians and other clients over several years. Co-conspirators, Manafort said, were his long-time colleagues Rick Gates, who is still cooperating with Mueller, and Konstantin Kilimnik, whom prosecutors say is connected to Russian intelligence and who is at the heart of their inquiry.
The memo will also likely cover his and Kilimnik's alleged contact with potential witnesses in his case after Manafort's October 2017 arrest, and his lies about his interactions with Kilimnik in 2016 and other topics.
Previously, prosecutors said Manafort should face up to 25 years in prison and pay tens of millions of dollars for tax and bank fraud. Friday's sentencing memo will speak to consequences that could pile on top of the those.Stay tuned.
.. last I saw Friday.. this good for those like moi .. not paid re Star, Globe and other paywalls NYT, Washington Post etc, even The stale Post Media has ID'd me as a visitor not friendly haha to Scheer, Kenney, Trudeau, Singh et al.. non partisans truly confuse them too.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/mueller-memo-manafort-sentencing-recommendations-not-public-despite-deadline
This does not bode well from Trump et al, GOP.. or those thinking they went undiscovered .. the redactions speak loud.. very. When Mueller has a judge readily accepting request to seal documents.. its BIG .. BROAD .. National Security or Criminal Conspiracy related
Team Mueller have been pretty conscientious about court deadlines so one can presume they met this one. Yet it's not been released to the public. Something must be up.
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