The FBI’s predawn search of Paul Manafort’s northern Virginia home in July yielded important new evidence crucial to the indictment of Donald Trump’s campaign chairman and one of his close associates, according to the indictments unsealed yesterday by special counsel Robert Mueller.
The “no-knock” raid by agents who picked the lock on Manafort’s front door turned up records showing the longtime political operative had been directly involved in a secret lobbying campaign on behalf of a Ukrainian political party closely aligned with Vladimir Putin’s Russian government, according to the court papers. Manafort, who ran Trump’s campaign for several crucial months last year, has been charged, along with his longtime business partner Rick Gates, with running a scheme to conceal and avoid paying taxes on millions of dollars in fees they collected for their work.
Manafort and Gates appeared in federal court in Washington and pleaded not guilty to all charges. Manafort and Gates were both released to home confinement. Manafort was freed on a $10 million bond meant to guarantee his future court appearances. Gates’s bond was $5 million.
Outside the courthouse, Manafort attorney Kevin Downing attacked the charges, saying “there is no evidence that Mr. Manafort or the Trump campaign colluded with the Russian government.”
Related:
- Manafort Attorney: DOJ Case a “Ridiculous” Sham; Charges Predate Trump Campaign By Two Years
- Manafort’s Judge Was Obama & Hillary’s Top Pick for Supreme Court; Also is Relative of RINO & Anti-Trumper Paul Ryan
- Tax fraud is among the charges Manafort faces
- Paul Manafort has been indicted by special counsel Robert Mueller and told to surrender
- Mueller team under fire for ‘brass-knuckle’ tactics in bid to squeeze Manafort