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Judge agrees Manafort lied to Mueller prosecutors and they do not have to honor deal

In a written order Wednesday, Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that prosecutors are no longer bound by a deal to recommend a lighter sentence for Manafort.
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A federal judge ruled Wednesday that prosecutors for special counsel Robert Mueller had proved that Paul Manafort lied on three occasions and agreed the prosecutors are no longer bound by a deal to recommend a lighter sentence for Manafort.

After a closed hearing, Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that Manafort, the former Trump campaign chair, had lied to the FBI, the special counsel’s Office and the Mueller grand jury regarding payments made by an unidentified "Firm A" to a law firm and that the matter was material to their investigation.

She also ruled that Manafort had made multiple false statements to the FBI, the special counsel’s office and grand jury regarding his interactions and communications with Konstantin Kilimnik, a Ukrainian-Russian associate, and that Manafort made false statements on Oct. 5, 2018, that were material to another Justice Department investigation.

The judge ruled that prosecutors had not established that Manafort lied in two other instances. She said that the special counsel’s office had failed to show that Manafort made false statements on Oct. 16, 2018, concerning Kilimnik’s role in an obstruction of justice conspiracy.

She also said prosecutors had not established that on the same day, "defendant intentionally made a false statement concerning his contacts with the administration.”

In September 2018, Manafort pleaded guilty to two federal charges in Washington, conspiracy to defraud the U.S. and witness tampering, and agreed to cooperate with investigators.

Manafort's deal included a recommendation for lighter sentencing, but the deal was contingent on his truthfulness in his statements to prosecutors and the grand jury.

In a separate federal case in the Eastern District of Virginia, a jury found Manafort guilty on eight of 18 charges, failing to reach a verdict on the other 10.