President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort was yesterday sentenced to about 3-1/2 more years in prison by a judge who assailed him over his lies and criminal behaviour.
Manafort was then was hit with a new indictment in New York on a fresh set of charges outside the reach of a potential presidential pardon.
The sentence by US District Judge Amy Berman Jackson in Washington, adding to one given by a different judge in Virginia last week, means Manafort will spend six years and nine months behind bars, after being credited for nine months already served in an important chapter of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russia’s role in the 2016 US election.
Jackson sentenced Manafort, a veteran Republican political operative who earned millions of dollars working for pro-Russia politicians in Ukraine, to six years and one month for two conspiracy counts to which he pleaded guilty in September 2018 related to money laundering, unregistered lobbying and attempted witness tampering.
Jackson said 2-1/2 years of her sentence will run at the same time as the sentence in Virginia, where he was given 47 months in prison after being convicted by a jury of tax evasion and bank fraud in another case prosecuted by Mueller.
Just minutes after Jackson read her sentence, the Manhattan district attorney unveiled a separate indictment of Manafort charging him with residential mortgage fraud and other New York state crimes.
The charges are especially significant because unlike federal crimes they cannot be erased by a presidential pardon, a prospect the Republican Trump has not ruled out for Manafort.
“No one is beyond the law in New York,” District Attorney Cyrus Vance, a Democrat, said in a statement.
The 16-count indictment accused Manafort and others of falsifying business records to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in mortgages.
The allegations appeared to mirror some of the fraud charges in his Virginia trial.
Unlike at his sentencing hearing last week, Manafort said he was sorry for his actions, but Jackson then told him his expression of remorse rang hollow.
Jackson told Manafort that he had lied repeatedly and committed fraud repeatedly, and there was no good explanation for the leniency he sought.
“Saying ‘I’m sorry I got caught’ is not an inspiring plea for leniency,” Jackson told Manafort, who was brought into the courtroom in a wheelchair because of a condition called gout.
Jackson could have given Manafort up to 10 years in prison in the Washington case — five for each of the two conspiracy counts.
“I am sorry for what I have done and for all the activities that have gotten us here today,” Manafort told Jackson.
“This case has taken everything from me already — my properties, my cash, my life insurance, trust accounts for my children and grandchildren, and even more,” Manafort added.
“The defendant’s insistence that none of this should be happening to him...is just one more thing that is inconsistent with the notion of any genuine acceptance of responsibility,” the judge told Manafort.
Jackson said at the outset of the sentencing hearing she would not be influenced by last Thursday’s sentence imposed by US
District Judge T S Ellis in Alexandria, Virginia, where Manafort was convicted in August 2018 by a jury for bank fraud, tax fraud and failing to disclose foreign bank accounts.
That 47-month sentence was two decades below the upper limit of federal sentencing guidelines, prompting criticism among some legal experts that it was too light.
Kevin Downing, Manafort’s lawyer, criticised Jackson’s sentence as an unjustified punishment of his client. “It was hostile and it was totally unnecessary,” Downing told reporters outside the courthouse.
He did not address the Manhattan charges.
Jackson ruled on February 13 that Manafort had breached his agreement in the Washington case to co-operate with Mueller’s office by lying to prosecutors about three matters pertinent to the Russia probe including his interactions with a business partner they have said has ties to Russian intelligence.
Manafort yesterday wore a dark suit and tie to the hearing. At last week’s sentencing, Manafort wore a green prison jumpsuit emblazoned with the words “Alexandria Inmate” on the back.
In the Washington case, Manafort was sentenced for conspiracy against the United States, which included a range of conduct from money laundering to unregistered lobbying, and a second conspiracy count related to witness tampering.
During yesterday’s hearing, Jackson ruled that Manafort should get a tougher sentence because he acted in a leadership role, directing others to participate in a crime.
But Jackson said Manafort should get credit for accepting responsibility because he pleaded guilty to the conduct at issue, though he later breached his co-operation deal with prosecutors.
Jackson suggested that the oft-repeated talking point of Manafort’s attorneys that his crimes did not prove that Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia was aimed at winning a presidential pardon.
Mueller’s team did not make a specific recommendation on Manafort’s sentencing in the Washington case.
But prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said during the hearing that Manafort had engaged in an extensive cover-up that deceived the US
government and the American public, and continued to try to undermine the investigation even after he pleaded guilty.
“Paul Manafort’s upbringing, his education, his means, his opportunities could have led him to be a leading example for this country. At each juncture, though, Mr Manafort chose to take a different path,” Weissmann said.
“He engaged in crime again and again. He has not learned a harsh lesson. He has served to undermine, not promote, American ideals,” Weissmann added.
Jackson’s sentence may mark the end of a two-year-old legal battle between Manafort, who worked for Trump’s campaign for five months in 2016, and Mueller, who made exposing Manafort’s covert lobbying for pro-Kremlin politicians in Ukraine a centerpiece of his Russia probe.
Manafort’s lawyers noted that none of the Mueller’s charges against him related to the special counsel’s core mandate: collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign.
“But for a short stint as a campaign manager in a presidential election, I don’t think we’d be here today,” Downing told Jackson.
Mueller is preparing to submit to US Attorney General William Barr a report on his investigation into whether Trump’s campaign conspired with Russia and whether Trump has unlawfully sought to obstruct the probe.
Trump has denied collusion and obstruction and Russia has denied US intelligence findings that it interfered in the 2016 election in an effort to boost Trump.
Manafort is one of the 34 people and three companies charged by Mueller.
Several others including former campaign aides Rick Gates and George Papadopoulos, former national security adviser Michael Flynn and former Trump personal lawyer Michael Cohen have pleaded guilty, while longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone has pleaded not guilty.
The two criminal cases pursued by Mueller case caused a remarkable downfall for Manafort, a prominent figure in Republican Party circles for decades who also worked as a consultant to such international figures as former Angolan rebel leader Jonas Savimbi, former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and pro-Russia former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych.
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