March 28, 2024

Paul Manafort: New Charges, Another Russian Defendant


Paul Manafort, President Trump’s former campaign chairman, is facing more federal criminal charges along with a new Russian co-defendant. / Jose Luis Magana, AP


Prosecutors unsealed more charges on Friday against Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and also accused a new defendant of conspiring with Manafort to obstruct justice.


By Philip Ewing / 06.08.2018


Prosecutors allege that a Russian partner of Manafort’s, Konstantin Kilimnik, helped him try to persuade witnesses to lie to the jury when Manafort’s case comes to trial in Washington, D.C., this autumn.

So in addition to the alleged conspiracy, money laundering, tax evasion and other charges brought against Manafort, he now faces charges that he allegedly obstructed justice and conspired to obstruct justice.

Kilimnik also faces those charges of obstruction and conspiracy to obstruct.

Manafort’s lawyers filed a response Friday that “the Special Counsel contrives dubious allegations … [from] a scant record.” They maintain the communications cited by the prosecutors “do not establish any witness tampering.'” They add that Manafort’s right to an impartial jury in Washington “may have been irreparably damaged by the Special Counsel’s … very public and very specious” motion.

The office of Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller has indicted Russians before in its Russia investigation, but so far none of them have been extradited to face the charges inside the United States. It isn’t clear yet whether Kilimnik might appear in court in Washington.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has told at least one foreign journalist that he would not agree to extradite Russians who have been charged by American prosecutors.

New allegations

Manafort and Kilimnik worked together on behalf of the former government of Ukraine, prosecutors say. One project was to assemble a team of European political leaders who could advocate for Ukraine’s then-President Viktor Yanukovych — apparently independently.

In reality, according to court documents, the group was working at Manafort’s direction and in the pay of the Ukrainian government. The group’s lobbying work included advocacy on behalf of Yanukovych in Washington, D.C., with members of Congress and officials in the executive branch.

Prosecutors complained to a federal judge earlier this week that Manafort — and, apparently, Kilimnik — had been contacting people who knew about that work to ask them to tell jurors that the Ukraine lobbying had only taken place inside Europe.

One of the charges Manafort is facing is failing to properly register as a foreign agent.

The superseding indictment revealed on Friday makes clear that the Justice Department considered the alleged tampering serious enough to file formal charges and add a new defendant.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson has scheduled a hearing for June 15 at which she ordered Manafort, prosecutors and witnesses to appear to deal with the alleged witness-tampering. The government wants Berman Jackson to rescind Manafort’s bail and put him in jail ahead of his trial.


Originally published by NPR, reprinted with permission for non-commercial purposes.