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| Paul Manafort, President Donald Trump's former campaign manager, has been ordered to jail pending trial |
A US federal judge sent Paul Manafort, President Donald Trump's former campaign manager, to jail on Friday ahead of his trial on money laundering, tax and bank fraud charges.
Judge Amy
Berman Jackson revoked Manafort's bail over claims he was tampering with
witnesses in the case against him brought by special counsel Robert Mueller,
who is investigating possible collusion between Trump's 2016 election campaign
and Russia.
Manafort,
69, had been under house detention while awaiting trial later this year in
Washington and in Virginia.
"You
have abused the trust placed in you six months ago," The Washington Post
quoted Jackson as telling Manafort. "The government motion will be granted
and the defendant will be detained."
Manafort is
the first former member of Trump's presidential campaign to be jailed in
connection with the Mueller investigation.
Mueller
filed new obstruction of justice charges last week against Manafort, who has
pleaded not guilty to the multiple counts against him.
The new
indictment came four days after prosecutors said Manafort had tried to contact
two witnesses in his money laundering and bank fraud case via Russian fixer
Konstantin Kilimnik to persuade them to make certain representations to
investigators.
Kilimnik, a
former army-trained linguist with alleged ties to Russian intelligence, was
included in an updated indictment of Manafort that accused both of witness
tampering.
It took the
number of people indicted by the 13-month-old investigation by Mueller to 20,
with three companies also facing charges.
'Very
unfair'
Trump has
denounced the Mueller probe as a political "witch hunt" and denied
there was any collusion with Russia by members of his election campaign.
Trump said
Friday that the ruling that sent Manafort to jail was a "tough
sentence" and "very unfair."
"Wow,
what a tough sentence for Paul Manafort, who represented Ronald Reagan, Bob
Dole and many other top political people and campaigns," Trump tweeted.
"Didn't
know Manafort was the head of the Mob," he said. "Very unfair!"
Speaking to
reporters earlier, Trump sought to play down Manafort's influence on the
campaign, saying he "worked for me for a very short period of time.
"He
worked for me, what, for 49 days or something?" he said.
The
Manafort case focuses on his work between 2004 and 2014 in Ukraine for
pro-Russia politicians including former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych.
Kilimnik
worked with Manafort in Ukraine during that time, and during the 2016 election
they were reportedly in regular contact.
According
to a Washington court filing earlier this week, Manafort contacted Kilimnik
recently to get his help to influence two unnamed people -- said to be
European-based public relations consultants -- in their testimony to Mueller on
the so-called Hapsburg Group.
The
Hapsburg Group were onetime European politicians Manafort allegedly secretly
paid more than two million euros ($2.5 million) to lobby for Yanukovych in
2012-2013. The group included one unidentified former European
chancellor.

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