Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 3 PageID# 1450 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Alexandria Division UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. Case No. 1:18-CR-83 (TSE) PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR., Defendant. GOVERNMENT’S STATUS REPORT REGARDING MOTION TO REVOKE OR REVISE DEFENDANT PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR.’S CURRENT ORDER OF PRETRIAL RELEASE IN DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA The United States of America, by and through Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller, III, submits this status report notifying the Court that the government filed a motion to revoke or revise the order in United States v. Manafort, 1:17-CR-201 (D.D.C.) (ABJ) (Doc. 9) authorizing the pretrial release of defendant Paul J. Manafort, Jr. (Manafort) to the high-intensity supervision program in the District of Columbia. A copy of the government’s filing is attached hereto as Exhibit 1. See Manafort, 1:17-CR-201 (D.D.C.) (Doc. 315). By way of background, on May 9, 2018, Manafort filed a renewed motion to reconsider the conditions of his release in the District of Columbia. (Doc. 291). In connection with this filing, the government filed Exhibit 1 as its supplemental response. As described more fully in Exhibit 1, there is probable cause to believe that Manafort has violated 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1) by attempting to tamper with potential witnesses in the District of Columbia case while on pretrial release. The alleged obstructive conduct relates to allegations in the District of Columbia Superseding Indictment that Manafort violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act, 22 U.S.C. § 611 et seq., which is not part of the charged conduct in the Eastern District of Virginia. The government, Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 3 PageID# 1451 2 however, provides this notice to the Court as the conduct may independently implicate Manafort’s conditions of release in this district. * Respectfully submitted, ROBERT S. MUELLER III Special Counsel Dated: June 4, 2018 Uzo Asonye Assistant United States Attorney Eastern District of Virginia By: /s/ Andrew Weissmann Andrew Weissmann Greg D. Andres Special Assistant United States Attorneys U.S. Department of Justice Special Counsel’s Office 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20530 Telephone: (202) 616-0800 Attorneys for the United States of America * “Defendant may not violate federal, state, or local law while on release.” March 9, 2018 Order of Release, United States v. Manafort, 1:18CR83 (E.D. Va.) (TSE) (Doc. 25). Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 3 PageID# 1452 3 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that on the 4th day of June, 2018, I will cause to be filed electronically the foregoing with the Clerk of Court using the CM/ECF system, which will then send a notification of such filing (NEF) to the following: Thomas E. Zehnle (VA Bar No. 27755) Law Office of Thomas E. Zehnle 601 New Jersey Avenue, N.W., Suite 620 Washington, D.C. 20001 tezehnle@gmail.com Jay R. Nanavati (VA Bar No. 44391) Kostelanetz & Fink LLP 601 New Jersey Avenue, N.W., Suite 620 Washington, D.C. 20001 jnanavati@kflaw.com /s/ Andrew Weissmann Andrew Weissmann Special Assistant United States Attorney Senior Assistant Special Counsel U.S. Department of Justice Special Counsel’s Office 950 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W. Washington, D.C. 20530 Telephone: (202) 616-0800 Fax: None E-mail: AAW@usdoj.gov Attorney for the United States of America Case Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 91 Page D# 1453 EXHIBIT 1 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 91 PageID# 1454 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 18 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR., Crim. No. 17-201-1 (ABJ) Defendant. GOVERNMENT’S MOTION TO REVOKE OR REVISE DEFENDANT PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR.’S CURRENT ORDER OF PRETRIAL RELEASE Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3148, the United States of America, by and through Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller, III, hereby moves the Court to revoke or revise the current Order authorizing the release of defendant Paul J. Manafort, Jr. (Manafort) to the Pretrial Services Agency’s high-intensity supervision program. The evidence set forth below and in the attached declaration of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agent Brock W. Domin establishes probable cause to believe that Manafort has violated 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1) by attempting to tamper with potential witnesses while on pretrial release and, accordingly, has violated the conditions of his release. That violation triggers a statutory presumption that no conditions or combination of release conditions will assure the safety of the community and of others. See 18 U.S.C. § 3148(a)-(c). The government therefore requests that the Court promptly schedule the hearing called for by the statute to determine Manafort’s release status. See id. § 3148(b). 1 1 By minute order entered on May 31, 2018, the Court granted the government leave to file a supplemental response to Manafort’s motion to reconsider the conditions of his release (Doc. 291). The government submits this motion as its supplemental response to avoid any question about the Court’s authority to revoke the release Order under Section 3148. Cf. United States v. Koumbairia, No. 07-cr-61, 2007 WL 1307909, at *2 (D.D.C. May 3, 2007) (noting that the “question of whether a revocation proceeding could be initiated without . . . a written government motion remained unresolved”). Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 91 PageID# 1455 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 18 A. Factual Background 1. Manafort Was Released To Home Confinement Subject To The Standard Condition That He Not Commit Any Federal, State, Or Local Crime On October 27, 2017, Manafort was first indicted by a grand jury in this District on nine counts, including conspiracy to defraud and commit offenses against the United States, conspiracy to launder money, failure to file reports of foreign bank accounts, making false and misleading statements, and acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign principal. The charges included allegations that Manafort lied to a wide array of people to carry out the charged crimes. Doc. 13. On October 30, 2017, Manafort was permitted to surrender to the government after providing his passport to the FBI. Following his arraignment, Manafort was, upon the parties’ consent, ordered released to the Pretrial Service Agency’s high-intensity supervision program and subject to the condition of home confinement and a $10 million bond. See Doc. 9; 10/30/2017 Tr. 19. The order releasing Manafort to home confinement, which Manafort signed, informed him that he was “not to commit any criminal offense nor violate any condition of this release order – a rearrest for any offense based upon probable cause may be grounds for revoking your release.” Doc. 9 at 2. Since Manafort was released into the high-intensity supervision program, his conditions of release have been the subject of repeated motions concerning the security necessary to release him from home detention. See, e.g., Doc. 32, 66, 153, 182, and 229. None of those motions has altered the basic requirement that Manafort not commit a federal, state, or local crime during the period of his release. Cf. 18 U.S.C. § 3142(b) (providing that, even when a defendant is released “on personal recognizance,” release is “subject to the condition that the person not commit a Federal, State, or local crime”). For instance, on November 4, 2017, Manafort moved this Court to modify his conditions of release to permit, among other things, travel within the District of Columbia and the states of 2 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 91 PageID# 1456 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 18 Florida, New York, and Virginia. Doc. 32. On November 6, the Court held a hearing on the motion and found that release on Manafort’s personal recognizance with an unsecured appearance bond would not reasonably assure his appearance. 11/6/2017 Tr. 24:25-25:5. On December 15, 2017, the Court further ordered that Manafort would, upon the satisfactory posting of a sufficient bond and the fulfillment of various other conditions, be released from home confinement and permitted to travel within a limited geographic area around his residence. See Doc. 95; see also 12/11/17 Tr. 15:14-16:9 (noting that the Court was prepared to modify the condition of home confinement but “required financial information that would satisfy . . . the two applicable conditions under the Bail Reform Act”). Manafort’s inability to satisfy the financial conditions necessary to ensure his release have, to date, prevented him from securing the modification he seeks. Like the October 30 Order, the Court’s December 15 Order provided that Manafort’s pretrial release must, in accordance with the Bail Reform Act, be “subject to the condition that [he] not commit a Federal, State, or local crime.” Doc. 95 at 1 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3142(c)); see also Doc. 95 at 2 (determining, as a necessary condition of release, that “Defendant must not commit any federal, state, or local crime”). 2. Manafort’s Attempts to Influence Potential Witnesses On February 23, 2018, the grand jury returned the operative Superseding Indictment of Manafort. Doc. 202. As relevant here, the Superseding Indictment included new allegations concerning a part of Manafort’s lobbying scheme that is alleged to have violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), 22 U.S.C. § 611 et seq. Informally referred to by Manafort and his co-conspirators as the “Hapsburg” group, this part of the charged illegal United States lobbying scheme involved the secret retention of a group of former senior European politicians who would act as third-party paid lobbyists for Ukraine. Manafort was alleged to have funneled to the 3 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 91 PageID# 1457 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 18 Hapsburg group more than 2 million euros from overseas accounts he controlled. See Superseding Indictment ¶¶ 30–31. Two individuals who were principals of a public-relations company (Company D) acted as intermediaries between Manafort, Person A, co-defendant Richard Gates, and the Hapsburg group. Those two individuals are described herein as Persons D1 and D2. Manafort, with the assistance of Person A and Gates, managed the work of Persons D1 and D2 on behalf of Ukraine (along with the work of Companies A, B, and C, and others). 2 Persons D1 and D2’s work for Manafort, which included their work directing the Hapsburg group, was—from its inception—directed at both the United States and Europe. Manafort himself wrote a June 25, 2011 memorandum to Person D1 describing the goals and deliverables of Persons D1 and D2’s work for Ukraine. Manafort stated that a “goal of the program . . . is to educate western media, expand the media awareness of what is really happening and establish mechanisms to maintain a constant flow of information into Europe and the US,” including “Washington.” Domin Decl. ¶ 6. Similarly, Manafort noted in a “conference call agenda” that one deliverable of Persons D1 and D2’s work would be “Print/electronic media coverage in European [sic] and US,” and that Ukraine’s contract with Persons D1 and D2’s company would “cover the EU and the US.” Id. Pursuant to Persons D1 and D2’s scope of work—and in coordination with Manafort, Person A, Persons D1 and D2, and others—the Hapsburg group directly lobbied and conducted public-relations work in the United States. For example, in September 2012, Manafort and Gates, 2 The references to anonymized companies and individuals in this motion mirror those used in the Superseding Indictment (e.g., Doc. 202 ¶¶ 24, 29, 31) and in other pleadings in this and related cases. See, e.g., Gov’t Sent. Mem. at 2, United States v. van der Zwaan, No. 1:18-cr-31 (D.D.C. March 27, 2017) (Doc. 19). 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 6 of 91 PageID# 1458 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 18 with the assistance of Persons D1 and D2, arranged for members of the Hapsburg group to contact United States senators directly to lobby on behalf of Ukraine in connection with the Senate’s potential condemnation of the imprisonment of Yulia Tymoshenko. Domin Decl. ¶ 9. In addition, in early 2013, Manafort and Gates arranged for members of the Hapsburg group to meet with members of Congress and their staffs. Manafort and Gates further directed Persons D1 and D2 to draft an op-ed in the name of one of the members of the Hapsburg group, and arranged for its placement in The Hill—a newspaper published in Washington, D.C—at or around the time that the member of the Hapsburg group was in the United States. Id. ¶ 10. Persons D1 and D2 did the same with respect to another op-ed by a member of the Hapsburg group placed in The New York Times in January 2014. Id. ¶ 12. Following the public disclosure of the February 23 Superseding Indictment, Manafort and Person A—who is a longtime associate of Manafort’s—repeatedly contacted Persons D1 and D2 in an effort to secure materially false testimony concerning the activities of the Hapsburg group. Neither Person D1 nor D2 had had any recent contact with Manafort or Person A. But after the Superseding Indictment was publicly disclosed, Manafort called Person D1 on Persons D1’s cellular phone. Person D1 sought to avoid Manafort, so Person D1 ended the call. Domin Decl. ¶¶ 14, 20. The day after the Superseding Indictment was made public, Manafort also sent Person D1 a text message on an encrypted application, stating “This is paul.” Domin Decl. ¶ 14. 3 Two days later, on February 26, 2018, Manafort used the same encrypted application to send Person D1 a news article describing the Superseding Indictment’s allegations concerning the Hapsburg group, 3 Persons D1 and D2 both preserved the messages they received from Manafort and Person A, which were sent on encrypted applications, and have provided them to the government. Domin Decl. ¶ 12 n.1 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 7 of 91 PageID# 1459 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 6 of 18 which included the statement that “two European politicians were secretly paid around €2 million by Manafort in order to ‘take positions favorable to Ukraine, including by lobbying in the United States.’” 4 One minute after sending the news article, Manafort wrote: “We should talk. I have made clear that they worked in Europe.” Domin Decl. ¶ 15. Toll records for one of Manafort’s phones indicate that Manafort had a short call with Person D1 on February 24, 2018, and that Manafort attempted to call Person D1 again on February 25 and 27, 2018. Id. ¶ 14. As noted in Special Agent Domin’s declaration, Person D1 has told the government that he understood Manafort’s outreach to be an effort to “suborn perjury,” because Person D1 knew that the Hapsburg group worked in the United States—not just Europe. Domin Decl. ¶ 19. In an effort to connect Manafort with Person D1, Person A reached out to Person D2, a longtime partner of Person D1. On February 28, five days after the Superseding Indictment, Person A attempted to contact Person D2 via an encrypted messaging application. Person A wrote: “My friend P is trying to reach [Person D1] to brief him on what’s going on.” Domin Decl. ¶ 17. Two minutes later, Person A added: “Basically P wants to give him a quick summary that he says to everybody (which is true) that our friends never lobbied in the US, and the purpose of the program was EU.” Id. Approximately five hours later, Person A switched to another encrypted application and sent a similar series of messages to Person D2, including a message relaying Manafort’s “summary” that the Hapsburg group never lobbied in the United States. Id. The February 2018 messages were not Person A’s only efforts to put Manafort in contact with Persons D1 and D2. In April 2018, Person A reached out to Person D1, relaying the message: 4 Michael Kranz, Former European leaders struggle to explain themselves after Mueller claims Paul Manafort paid them to lobby for Ukraine, Business Insider (Feb. 25, 2018), available at http://www.businessinsider.com/former-european-leaders-manafort-hapsburg-group-20182?r=UK&IR=T 6 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 8 of 91 PageID# 1460 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 7 of 18 “My friend P is looking for ways to connect to you to pass you several messages. Can we arrange that.” Domin Decl. ¶ 18. Person A contacted Person D2 via two encrypted applications the same day, reiterating his need for help in connecting Person D1 with Manafort. Person A added in his final text to Person D2: “I tried him [i.e., Person D1] on all numbers.” Id. 5 Like Person D1, Person D2 understood that Manafort and Person A were reaching out to him and Person D1 in an effort to influence the testimony of potential witnesses. Domin Decl. ¶ 19, 20. Person D2 explained that he and Person D1 had been responsible for interfacing with the Hapsburg group, and acted as “intermediaries” between Manafort and Ukraine government officials and the Hapsburg group. Id. ¶ 20. Person D2 further stated his opinion that Manafort and Person A’s outreach to him and Person D1 was an effort to get them to relay a message to the Hapsburg group: if the members of the Hapsburg group were contacted by anyone, they should say that their lobbying and public relations work was exclusively in Europe—a representation that would be contrary to Person D’s knowledge that the Hapsburg group worked in both Europe and the United States. Id. ¶ 19, 20. B. Legal Standard “The Bail Reform Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. § 3141 et seq., permits the revocation of release and an order of detention for a person who has been released under 18 U.S.C. § 3142 and has violated a condition of that release.” United States v. Addison, 984 F. Supp. 1, 2 (D.D.C. 1997). As relevant here, an “attorney for the Government may initiate a proceeding for revocation of an order of release by filing a motion with the district court.” 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b). Section 3148 further provides that the judicial officer hearing the motion: shall enter an order of revocation and detention if, after a hearing, the judicial 5 A chart summarizing the contacts and attempted contacts discussed in this motion is attached to Special Agent Domin’s Declaration as Exhibit N. 7 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 9 of 91 PageID# 1461 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 8 of 18 officer— (1) finds that there is— (A) probable cause to believe that the person has committed a Federal, State, or local crime while on release; or (B) clear and convincing evidence that the person has violated any other condition of release; and (2) finds that-(A) based on the factors set forth in [18 U.S.C. § 3142(g)], there is no condition or combination of conditions of release that will assure that the person will not flee or pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the community; or (B) the person is unlikely to abide by any condition or combination of conditions of release. Id. (emphasis added). The government’s motion here is based on Section 3148(b)(1)(A), which requires “probable cause to believe” that Manafort has committed (as pertinent here) a federal “crime while on release.” The probable-cause standard is not an onerous one. As the Second Circuit explained in an analogous case, “[p]robable cause under § 3148(b)(1)(A) requires only a practical probability that the evidence supports a finding that the defendant has committed a crime while on bail.” United States v. LaFontaine, 210 F.3d 125, 133 (2d Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks, citation, and ellipses omitted); accord, e.g., United States v. Aron, 904 F.2d 221, 224 (5th Cir. 1990) (“[T]o satisfy the probable cause requirement of § 3148(b)(1)(A), the facts available to the judicial officer must warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that the defendant has committed a crime while on bail.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). Notably, once a court finds probable cause to believe that the defendant committed a crime while on release, “a rebuttable presumption arises that no condition or combination of conditions will assure that the person will not pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the 8 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 10 of 91 PageID# 1462 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 9 of 18 community.” 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b). If the defendant rebuts that presumption and a court finds “that there are conditions of release that will assure that the person will not flee or pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the community, and that the person will abide by such conditions,” then the court “shall treat the person in accordance with the provisions of [18 U.S.C. § 3142] and may amend the conditions of release accordingly.” Id.; see United States v. McKethan, 602 F. Supp. 719, 722 (D.D.C. 1985) (explaining that, where the government seeks detention “based upon a charge that a defendant has committed a felony while on release, § 3142 does not come into play unless and until the judicial officer finds under § 3148(b)(2)(B) that the defendant has overcome the statutory rebuttable presumption”). Nonetheless, the statutory “presumption does not disappear once the defendant has produced some rebuttal evidence, but continues to be weighed along with other factors.” LaFontaine, 210 F.3d at 130 (quotation marks omitted). C. The Defendant Has Violated The Release Condition That He Not Commit Any Federal Crime The facts set forth above and in Special Agent Domin’s Declaration establish probable cause to believe that Manafort has violated his conditions of release by attempting to tamper with witnesses, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1). A violation based on commission of a federal crime triggers the statutory presumption in favor of detention. 1. Section 1512(b)(1) proscribes “knowingly . . . corruptly persuad[ing]” or “attempt[ing] to” corruptly persuade another person “with intent to . . . influence . . . the testimony of any person in an official proceeding.” 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1). 6 As relevant here, the statute’s plain language 6 Section 1512(b)(1) provides in full: (b) Whoever knowingly uses intimidation, threatens, or corruptly persuades another person, or attempts to do so, or engages in misleading conduct toward another person, with intent to— 9 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 11 of 91 PageID# 1463 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 10 of 18 reaches “non-coercive attempts to tamper with witnesses,” United States v. Khatami, 280 F.3d 907, 912 (9th Cir. 2002), including attempts “to persuade a witness to give false testimony,” United States v. Cruzado-Laureano, 404 F.3d 470, 487 (1st Cir. 2005). See also United States v. Baldridge, 559 F.3d 1126, 1142 (10th Cir.) (“All circuits that have considered the issue have” held “that a non-coercive attempt to persuade a witness to lie to investigators constitutes a violation of § 1512(b).”), cert. denied, 556 U.S. 1226 (2009). That straightforward construction of the statute—that Section 1512(b)(1) reaches noncoercive witness tampering—is borne out by the D.C. Circuit’s decisions applying the statute. In United States v. Morrison, 98 F.3d 619 (D.C. Cir. 1996), for example, the court affirmed the conviction of a defendant who had tried to corrupt a witness “by exhorting her to violate her legal duty to testify truthfully in court,” an effort that the witness understood as a request that she “‘perjure’ herself.” Id. at 630. More recently, the defendant in United States v. Gurr, 471 F.3d 144 (D.C. Cir. 2006), was charged with conspiracy and other offenses arising from his role in financial malfeasance at a credit union. After his arrest, the defendant and another credit-union employee attempted to persuade a witness to sign an affidavit falsely stating that the witness had authorized money to be transferred from her account. Id. at 154. The D.C. Circuit upheld Gurr’s conviction under Section 1512(b)(1), rejecting his argument that the evidence was insufficient “because there was no evidence of cooperation between Gurr and the other credit union employee and no evidence that the witness was intimidated or threatened.” Id. The court explained that Gurr (1) influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person in an official proceeding; *** shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both. 10 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 12 of 91 PageID# 1464 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 11 of 18 “was not charged with intimidating or threatening [the witness], and the jury could reasonably find that Gurr, with the assistance of [the other employee], attempted to ‘corruptly persuade [ ]’ [the witness] in order to influence her testimony by having her sign a false affidavit.” Id. In support of its conclusion, the court in Gurr cited with approval several out-of-circuit decisions involving non-coercive efforts to influence witness testimony that are similar to Manafort’s conduct here. For example, United States v. LaShay, 417 F.3d 715 (7th Cir. 2005), involved a gas station employee’s efforts to convince a co-worker to lie for him about a $2,000 check that the defendant had received from the gas station’s owner. The court in LaShay followed decisions of the Second Circuit holding that “corrupt” persuasion occurs (1) “where a defendant tells a potential witness a false story as if the story were true, intending that the witness believe the story and testify to it,” and (2) where a “defendant trie[s] to persuade a witness to give a false account that tracked the defendant’s position.” Id. at 718 (quoting, respectively, United States v. Gabriel, 125 F.3d 89, 102 (2d Cir. 1997), and LaFontaine, supra, 210 F.3d at 132). Applying those principles to the facts before it, the Seventh Circuit affirmed the employee’s Section 1512 conviction, concluding that “[a] jury could properly view LaShay’s remarks [to his co-worker] as an unstated invitation to lie.” Id. at 719. In LaFontaine, one of the Second Circuit decisions discussed in LaShay, the district court revoked the bail of a defendant who had tampered with a witness after her indictment. See 210 F.3d at 128-33. The defendant there participated in a fraudulent-billing scheme in which her health clinic performed cosmetic surgeries for patients but billed them out as necessary procedures to obtain insurance payments. After her arrest in the scheme, the defendant was recorded on a jail call “reminding” a relative and former employee (Reyes) that Reyes’ mother had undergone the procedures listed on the clinics’ false bills. When she was released from custody, the defendant 11 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 13 of 91 PageID# 1465 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 12 of 18 then met with Reyes several times, including one occasion on which the defendant played for Reyes a recording of the jail call “reminder” about her mother’s surgeries. The Second Circuit upheld the decision revoking the defendant’s bail, concluding that her “attempt to review the ‘facts’ that would likely become part of Reyes[’s] trial testimony . . . satisf[ies] the requirements of the witness tampering statute and, consequently, of the bail revocation statute.” Id. at 133. In so concluding, the court rejected the defendant’s argument that the jail call did “not show any threats or intimidation of Reyes,” explaining that Section 1512(b)(1) “plainly does not require ‘physical force’ or ‘threats’ to support a tampering charge; corrupt influence is sufficient.” Id. Finally, the First Circuit’s decision in Cruzado, supra, involved a corrupt mayor who extorted money and kickbacks from local businesses and, after learning of the investigation, pressured various individuals to conform their stories to his. The First Circuit characterized Cruzado’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence as “simple: all he did was urge witnesses to tell the truth, which is not a crime.” 404 F.3d at 487. But the court rejected that challenge. While “Cruzado did ask that [witnesses] tell the truth,” the court explained, “his version of ‘the truth’ that he urged upon them was anything but the truth.” Id. The jury could therefore find that Cruzado was trying to persuade witnesses to testify to something other than their true beliefs, which was sufficient to support his Section 1512(b)(1) convictions. Id. 2. Under these decisions, the evidence recited above and in Special Agent Domin’s Declaration establishes probable cause to believe that Manafort violated Section 1512(b)(1) by attempting to persuade Persons D1 and D2—both directly and through an intermediary—to support a materially false narrative in connection with the charges in the Superseding Indictment. The string of communications with Persons D1 and D2 establishes a violation of Section 1512(b)(1) under the probable-cause standard. Manafort sent Person D1 a news article 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 14 of 91 PageID# 1466 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 13 of 18 that reported on allegations in the recent Superseding Indictment that members of the Hapsburg group performed lobbying and public-relations work in the United States, not just in Europe, which is a key difference for purposes of liability under FARA. See 22 U.S.C. § 611(c)(1) (defining “agent of a foreign principal” as a person who, as relevant here, engages in various acts “within the United States”). Manafort then messaged Person D1 that he had “made clear that” the Hapsburg group “worked in Europe,” a message that Person D1 reasonably understood to embody one form of corrupt persuasion criminalized by Section 1512(b)(1)—viz., an attempt “to persuade a witness to give a false account that track[s] the defendant’s position.” LaShay, 417 F.3d at 718. Indeed, Person D1’s understanding of the message as an effort to “suborn perjury” is itself a strong indication that Manafort acted both “corruptly” and with the intent to “influence” a third party’s testimony, as required by Section 1512(b)(1). See, e.g., Morrison, 98 F.3d at 629–30 (affirming Section 1512 conviction where witness understood defendant’s request to provide false testimony as asking her “to ‘perjure’ herself”). Person A’s outreach to Person D2 on behalf of Manafort is equally probative of a Section 1512(b)(1) violation. As described in Special Agent Domin’s Declaration, Person D2 perceived Person A’s series of messages as an effort by Manafort to influence the accounts of potential witnesses in his case about the nature of the work performed behalf of Ukraine. At the very least, Person A’s statements and Person D2’s description of them establish “a practical probability that the evidence supports a finding that the defendant has committed a crime while on bail.” LaFontaine, 210 F.3d at 133. As an initial matter, the content and context of Person A’s messages indicate that Person A was reaching out to Person D2 at Manafort’s request. That much is evident from Person A’s initial message to Person D2 that Manafort was “trying to reach [Person D1] to brief him on what’s going 13 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 15 of 91 PageID# 1467 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 14 of 18 on.” It would strain credulity to suggest that Person A—a close confidant of Manafort for years— undertook that outreach without Manafort’s knowledge and approval, especially given the timing of the messages (they followed closely on the heels of Manafort’s own outreach to Person D1, after a lengthy hiatus with no communications with Persons D1 or D2), their content (they sought to arrange a communication with Manafort), and the person with an overriding legal interest in the communication (Manafort). The inference that Person A acted on Manafort’s behalf is all the more reasonable in light of evidence already before this Court demonstrating that Manafort and Person A coordinated in connection with an op-ed that appeared in the Kyiv Post during Manafort’s home confinement. See Decl. of Special Agent Brock W. Domin, Doc. 123, Exs. A & B (Dec. 8, 2017). Furthermore, the story that Person A conveyed to Person D2 was, like the message Manafort conveyed to Person D1, false. Person A wrote: “Basically P wants to give him a quick summary that he says to everybody (which is true) that our friends never lobbied in the US, and the purpose of the program was EU.” Domin Decl. ¶ 17. As explained above, that description of the geographic reach of the Hapsburg group’s activities is both false and central to the applicability of FARA to Manafort’s “Hapsburg group” scheme. Person A’s message is thus a “false story” conveyed “as if the story were true,” LaShay, 417 F.3d at 718, and an attempt “to persuade a witness to give a false account that tracked the defendant’s position,” id. See also Cruzado, 404 F.3d at 487 (affirming Section 1512(b) conviction where, although the defendant asked witnesses to “tell the truth,” the “version of ‘the truth’ that he urged upon them was anything but the truth”). Person A’s message consequently amounts to an attempt to corruptly persuade a witness proscribed by Section 1512(b)(1). 14 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 16 of 91 PageID# 1468 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 15 of 18 It is no defense that Manafort conveyed messages to Person D2 through an intermediary. Section 1512(b)(1)’s language is sufficiently expansive to reach acts designed “to influence testimony at a proceeding by corruptly persuading [one] person through another.” United States v. Norris, 753 F. Supp. 2d 492, 505 (E.D. Pa. 2010) (emphasis added); see also United States v. Amato, 86 F. App’x 447, 450 (2d Cir. 2004) (unpublished) (upholding Section 1512 conviction where the defendant believed a third party was cooperating against him, the defendant was concerned the third party would testify against him at trial, and the “defendant directed intermediaries” to reach out to the third party and deliver a message). And even if Section 1512 alone did not reach corrupt persuasion accomplished through intermediaries, 18 U.S.C. § 2 makes it a crime both to cause an unwitting third party to corruptly persuade a potential witness and to aid and abet a complicit party in committing corrupt persuasion. In sum, the government’s evidence establishes probable cause that Manafort violated the witness-tampering statute both through his direct outreach to Person D1 and his intermediary’s outreaches to Persons D1 and D2. As a result, Manafort violated the condition of release requiring that he not commit any federal, state, or local crime. See LaFontaine, 210 F.3d at 133. 3. A finding of probable cause to believe that Manafort violated his conditions of release by committing the federal crime of witness tampering triggers the statutory presumption that no condition or combination of conditions can assure that Manafort “will not pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the community.” 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b); see United States v. Cook, 880 F.2d 1158, 1162 (10th Cir. 1989) (explaining that “[o]nce the presumption arises, the ball is in the defendant’s court, and it is incumbent on the defendant to come forward with some evidence to rebut the presumption.”) (internal citation omitted). And with respect to “danger to . . . the community,” courts have recognized that a defendant’s “attempts to influence the testimony of” 15 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 17 of 91 PageID# 1469 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 16 of 18 potential witnesses “constitute the type of danger to the community that [can] support detention.” LaFontaine, 210 F.3d at 135; see, e.g., United States v. Gilley, 771 F. Supp. 2d 1301, 1308 (M.D. Ala. 2011) (explaining that a probable-cause finding that a defendant engaged in witness tampering goes to “the very integrity of [the court’s] own processes and the fair administration of justice,” and implicates “not only the singular concern of keeping a defendant from engaging in illegal conduct, but also the public concern of encouraging all witnesses and all potential witnesses to come forward and provide information helpful to the implementation of justice”) (internal brackets and quotation marks omitted). The Second Circuit’s decision in LaFontaine, supra, is instructive. The fraud defendant there argued that she posed no danger to the community because, unlike in other witness-tampering cases, she was “a white-collar criminal with no connection to the mob . . . or to narcotics,” and the evidence showed at most that she “persistently ‘fed’ [a witness] false testimony with the expectation that [the witness] would adopt it.” 210 F.3d at 134. The Second Circuit rejected that argument. It explained that “obstruction of justice ha[d] been a traditional ground for pretrial detention by the courts, even” before the Bail Reform Act of 1984 made “dangerousness” a basis for detention. Id.; see id. (stating that “pretrial trial detention [i]s even more justified in cases of violations related to the trial process (such as witness tampering) than in cases where the defendant’s past criminality was said to support a finding of general dangerousness”). And although the court acknowledged that “witness tampering that is accomplished by means of violence may seem more egregious,” it concluded that “the harm to the integrity of the trial is the same no matter which form the tampering takes.” Id. at 135. The court therefore affirmed the district court’s conclusion that the defendant “posed a danger to the community,” id. at 134, and that revocation was warranted under Section 3148(b), id. at 135. 16 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 18 of 91 PageID# 1470 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 17 of 18 Revocation of the terms of the current Order is appropriate here for many of the same reasons. Manafort’s efforts to influence the testimony of potential witnesses, both directly and through an intermediary, threaten “the integrity of the trial” even though those efforts have not been violent in nature and the underlying prosecution involves “white-collar” offenses rather than “narcotics” or violent crimes. See LaFontaine, 210 F.3d at 134. At the same time, Manafort’s obstructive conduct—carried out at a time when he was seeking relief from his current conditions of release—instills little confidence that restrictions short of detention will assure Manafort’s compliance with the Court’s orders and prevent him from committing further crimes. To the contrary, that conduct is strong evidence that Manafort is conscious of his guilt of the FARA allegations added in the Superseding Indictment and that he has a greater incentive to flee than this Court (and another) already found him to possess in connection with the earlier indictments. See 11/6/2017 Tr. 24-25 (citing Manafort’s “risk of flight” as one factor weighing against release on personal recognizance); Doc. 25 at 2, United States v. Manafort, No. 1:18-cr-63 (E.D. Va. March 9, 2018) (finding that Manafort “poses a substantial risk of flight”). CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, the government moves the Court to conduct a hearing pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b) and to revoke or revise its current Order authorizing Manafort’s release to the Pretrial Services Agency’s high-intensity supervision program. 17 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 19 of 91 PageID# 1471 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315 Filed 06/04/18 Page 18 of 18 Respectfully submitted, ROBERT S. MUELLER, III Special Counsel Dated: June 4, 2018 By: /s/ Andrew Weissmann Andrew Weissmann Greg D. Andres (D.D.C. Bar No. 459221) Scott A.C. Meisler Brian M. Richardson Special Counsel’s Office 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20530 Telephone: (202) 616-0800 Attorneys for the United States of America 18 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 20 of 91 PageID# 1472 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. Crim. No. 17-201-1 (ABJ) PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR., Defendant. ORDER This matter having come before the Court pursuant to the government’s motion to revoke or revise the Court’s Order releasing defendant Paul J. Manafort, Jr., to the Pretrial Services Agency’s high-intensity supervision program, it is hereby ORDERED that a hearing on the government’s motion shall be held on [DATE] at [TIME]; and it is further ORDERED that the parties shall be prepared to address at the hearing whether probable cause exists to believe that Manafort has violated a condition of his release by committing a federal crime and, if so, whether the Court’s release order should be revoked or revised. ________________ Date __________________________________ HON. AMY BERMAN JACKSON UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 21 of 91 PageID# 1473 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. Crim. No. 17-201-1 (ABJ) PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR., Defendant. DECLARATION IN SUPPORT OF THE GOVERNMENT’S MOTION TO REVOKE OR REVISE DEFENDANT PAUL J. MANAFORT, JR.’S CURRENT ORDER OF PRETRIAL RELEASE I, Brock W. Domin, hereby state as follows: A. Affiant 1. I am a Special Agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) working directly with the Special Counsel’s Office. I have been a Special Agent with the FBI since 2015. I have training and experience related to national security investigations, as well as federal financial crimes. Prior to my employment with the FBI, I spent seven years in the software industry and have extensive experience working with computer technology. 2. I make this declaration in support of the government’s motion to revoke or revise the release order of defendant Paul J. Manafort, Jr., pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3148. This declaration is based upon my personal knowledge, my review of documents and other evidence, my conversations with other law enforcement personnel, and my training and experience. Where the contents of documents or the statements and conversations of others are reported herein, they are reported in substance and in pertinent part, except where otherwise indicated. Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 22 of 91 PageID# 1474 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 8 B. The “Hapsburg” Group 3. As part of its ongoing investigation, the government identified a public-relations firm—called, along with its successor, “Company D” in what follows—and two principals at that firm (Persons “D1” and “D2”) who communicated with Manafort, Gates, and Person A regarding the lobbying scheme described in the Superseding Indictment. Persons D1 and D2’s work with Manafort, Gates, and Person A encompassed lobbying work on behalf of the Ukrainian government, which included the lobbying work by the Hapsburg group members. Persons D1 and D2 also communicated with individual(s) at Law Firm A, Company A, and Company B, and Ukrainian government personnel, among others, regarding Manafort’s scheme to lobby on behalf of Ukraine in the United States. 4. As referenced in the Superseding Indictment, in late 2011, Manafort, with Person D1, developed what became the “Hapsburg group.” Manafort proposed the project to the Ukrainian government in the “Eyes Only” memorandum excerpted in the Superseding Indictment. See, e.g., Superseding Indictment of February 23, 2018 (Doc. 202), ¶ 31. 5. Person D1 told the government that Manafort wanted the Hapsburg group to remain “under the radar,” and that the Hapsburg group would speak as ostensible third-party endorsers on behalf of Ukraine, but the fact that they were paid millions of euros would be kept secret. Manafort and Person D1 selected individuals who could be discreet. 6. In or about June 2011, Manafort arranged a conference call with Person D1 to discuss the goals and deliverables of Company D’s work. Manafort then sent Person D1 a memorandum describing a “framework” for Company D’s work: the “goal of the program . . . is to educate the western media, expand the media awareness of what is really happening and establish mechanisms to maintain a constant flow of information into Europe and the US,” 2 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 23 of 91 PageID# 1475 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 8 including “Washington.” Manafort’s agenda for the conference call proposed a contract that would “cover the EU and the US.” And, indeed, a contract sent by Person A to Person D1 regarding Company D’s work described a “campaign . . . aimed at media, decision-makers, think[] tanks and business and political leaders in Europe and the United States.” The contract included, as “agreed deliverables,” work on “Print/electronic media coverage in Europe and US.” A copy of Manafort’s e-mail regarding the June 2011 conference call is attached hereto as Exhibit A, and a copy of the contract is attached hereto as Exhibit B. 7. In or about June 2012, Person D1 wrote a memorandum to Manafort describing a group of “Third-Party Champions on Ukraine,” which Person D1 described as a “small chorus of high-level European third-party endorsers and politically credible friends who can act informally and without a formal government relationship . . . .” In this memorandum, Person D1 described a phone call with a former senior politician who would eventually become the head of the Hapsburg group, during which the former politician embraced the “idea of what he called ‘underground commenting.’” Person D1’s memorandum to Manafort is attached hereto as Exhibit C. 8. As alleged, the government has developed substantial evidence showing that the Hapsburg group performed a variety of lobbying tasks in the United States. That work included, among other things, the dissemination of ghostwritten articles in the American press and the arrangement of meetings with politicians in the legislative branch and members of the Executive Branch (in coordination with Companies A and B). 9. As one example of the Hapsburg group’s lobbying directed towards the United States, in September 2012, members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee were considering a resolution condemning as “politically motivated” the prosecution of Yulia Tymoshenko. Manafort and Gates, with the assistance of Persons D1 and D2, arranged for members of the 3 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 24 of 91 PageID# 1476 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 8 Hapsburg group to lobby United States senators on behalf of Ukraine. Manafort emphasized that one of the senators should be made aware that one member of the Hapsburg group was a “representative of the President of the [European Parliament],” but did not disclose that that member was a paid lobbyist for Ukraine. A copy of the correspondence memorializing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’s instructions, Manafort’s guidance, and outreach to senators is attached hereto as Exhibit D. 10. As another example, in early 2013, Manafort, Gates, and Persons D1 and D2 arranged for members of the Hapsburg group to meet with politicians and others in Washington, D.C. In connection with one member’s visit to Washington, D.C., Gates and others arranged for the member of the Hapsburg group to submit an op-ed to The Hill. See Ex. E. Persons D1 and D2 drafted the op-ed, and redrafted it after receiving Manafort’s direction that it not appear “too partisan” for the Hapsburg group member. Once satisfied with the piece, Manafort noted that it was “[a]lmost a waste not to use this on the FT, NYT, WSJ, WP, caliber newspapers.” See Ex. F. The article was placed in The Hill, a newspaper and website published in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 2013. 11. In connection with another member of the Hapsburg group’s trip to Washington in early 2013, Gates and Manafort communicated with Persons D1 and D2 regarding the trip. Gates sent Manafort an agenda memorializing the member’s scheduled meetings with senators, congressmen, and members of their staffs. That agenda is attached hereto as Exhibit G. As explained by an employee of Company B to an embassy employee making border entry arrangements, the Hapsburg group member would “be traveling to Washington, DC next week” and would “be meeting with US Government officials and Members of Congress.” See Ex. H. Person D2 told the government that he attended the meetings in Washington, D.C. with the member 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 25 of 91 PageID# 1477 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 8 of the Hapsburg group and members of Congress, among others. Person D2 further stated that after the meetings with United States government officials, the member of the Hapsburg group, Person D2, and Manafort met at the Willard Hotel for drinks. After the member of the Hapsburg group left, Person D2 and Manafort remained at the hotel and discussed how the meetings had gone. Manafort reported that he had received positive feedback regarding the meetings from a “backchannel” source, and, in Person D2’s view, Manafort was happy with the results. 12. As a final example, when an editorial regarding Ukraine appeared in The New York Times in January 2014, Gates forwarded the article to Persons D1 and D2 with instructions that a member of the Hapsburg group should write a “response.” See Ex. I. Persons D1 and D2 drafted an op-ed on behalf of one of the members of the Hapsburg group, see Ex. J, Gates offered comments, see Ex. K, and the op-ed ran in The New York Times in or around February 2014, see Ex. L. C. Efforts to Contact Persons D1 and D2 13. Documents produced by Persons D1 and D2, statements made by Persons D1 and D2 to the government, telephone records obtained by the government, and documents recovered pursuant to a court-authorized search of Manafort’s iCloud account evidence that Manafort, while on bail from this Court, and with the assistance of Person A, contacted and attempted to contact Persons D1 and D2 in an effort to influence their testimony and to otherwise conceal evidence. The investigation into this matter is ongoing. 1 14. On February 24, 2018—the day after Gates pleaded guilty—Manafort sent Person D1 the message “This is paul.” Manafort’s toll records for his cell phone indicate that he called a number associated with Person D1 the same day, and that the two had a call lasting 1 minute and 1 Persons D1 and D2 provided the content of the text messages described below in May 2018. 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 26 of 91 PageID# 1478 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 6 of 8 24 seconds. On February 25 and 27, 2018, Manafort attempted to call another phone number associated with Person D1, but did not connect. Person D1 told the government that in or around this period, Manafort called Person D1, and that the two had not spoken since July of the previous year. Person D1 stated that after answering the call and after the caller identified himself as Manafort, Manafort stated that he wanted to give Person D1 a heads-up about Hapsburg. Person D1 immediately ended the call because he was concerned about the outreach. 15. On February 26, 2018, Manafort sent Person D1 a series of messages using an encrypted application on his phone. The messages read as follows: - 23:56:http://www.businessinsider.com/former-european-leaders-manafort-hapsburggroup-2018-2?r=UK&IR=T 23:57: We should talk. I have made clear that they worked in Europe. The government confirmed that these messages were sent by Manafort, upon review of Manafort’s iCloud account pursuant to a court-authorized search. Information contained in Manafort’s iCloud account further indicates that Manafort attempted to call Person D1 from the same encrypted application on February 27, 2018. 16. The web address included in Manafort’s “23:56” message contains an article describing the Superseding Indictment and its inclusion of allegations concerning the Hapsburg group and its work in the United States. See Michael Kranz, Former European leaders struggle to explain themselves after Mueller claims Paul Manafort paid them to lobby for Ukraine, Business Insider (Feb. 25, 2018), available at http://www.businessinsider.com/former-european-leadersmanafort-hapsburg-group-2018-2?r=UK&IR=T (attached hereto as Exhibit M) (“According to Mueller’s indictment, two European politicians were secretly paid around €2 million by Manafort in order to ‘take positions favorable to Ukraine, including by lobbying in the United States.’”). 17. On February 28, 2018, Person A separately contacted Person D2 via an encrypted messaging application. Person D2 worked for years with Person D1, and was known to Manafort 6 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 27 of 91 PageID# 1479 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 7 of 8 and Person A as a key associate of Person D1. Person D2 told the government that he worked on press strategy for the Hapsburg group, and did work on behalf of Ukraine in the United States and Europe. Person A’s texts to Person D2 read as follows: - 01:49: [Person D2], hi! How are you? Hope you are doing fine. ;)) 01:51: My friend P is trying to reach [Person D1] to brief him on what's going on. 01:51: If you have a chance to mention this to [Person D1] - would be great. 01:53: Basically P wants to give him a quick summary that he says to everybody (which is true) that our friends never lobbied in the US, and the purpose of the program was EU Approximately four hours later, Person A switched to another encrypted application and sent a similar series of messages to Person D2. 18. Approximately one month later, Person A reached out to Person D1 directly as well. On April 4, 2018, Person A sent a message to Person D1: “Hi. This is [Person A’s first initial]. My friend P is looking for ways to connect to you to pass you several messages. Can we arrange that.” Person A reached out to Person D2 the same day, and reiterated his need for help in connecting Person D1 with Manafort. Person A added in his text to Person D2: “I tried him [i.e., Person D1] on all numbers.” A timeline summarizing the above-described communications is attached hereto as Exhibit N. 19. Person D1 told the government that Person D1 understood Manafort’s messages to be an effort to “suborn perjury” by influencing Person D1’s potential statements. Person D1 well knew and believed from frequent interactions with its members that the Hapsburg group in fact lobbied in the United States, and that Manafort and Person A knew that fact. 20. Person D2 told the government that Person D1 had also told him that Manafort had called Person D1 to discuss the new indictment, but that Person D1 abruptly ended the call. Person D2 further stated that he received the messages from Person A “out of the blue,” but did not open them at the time for fear of alerting Person A that he had read them. (Person D2 could, however, 7 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 28 of 91 PageID# 1480 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-2 Filed 06/04/18 Page 8 of 8 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 29 of 91 PageID# 1481 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-3 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 4 EXHIBIT A Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 30 of 91 PageID# 1482 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-3 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 31 of 91 PageID# 1483 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-3 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 32 of 91 PageID# 1484 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-3 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 33 of 91 PageID# 1485 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 12 EXHIBIT % Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 34 of 91 PageID# 1486 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 35 of 91 PageID# 1487 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 36 of 91 PageID# 1488 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 37 of 91 PageID# 1489 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 38 of 91 PageID# 1490 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 6 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 39 of 91 PageID# 1491 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 7 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 40 of 91 PageID# 1492 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 8 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 41 of 91 PageID# 1493 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 9 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 42 of 91 PageID# 1494 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 10 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 43 of 91 PageID# 1495 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 11 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 44 of 91 PageID# 1496 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-4 Filed 06/04/18 Page 12 of 12 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 45 of 91 PageID# 1497 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-5 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 4 EXHIBIT & Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-5 Filed 06/04/18 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 46Page of 912PageID# 1498 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-5 Filed 06/04/18 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 47Page of 913PageID# 1499 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-5 Filed 06/04/18 of 4 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 48Page of 914PageID# 1500 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 49 of 91 PageID# 1501 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-6 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 5 EXHIBIT ' Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 50 of 91 PageID# 1502 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-6 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 5 Subject: Re: an urgent request ON IT From: Person D1 Date: 9/19/12, 9:29 AM To: Rick Gates Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 54 of 91 PageID# 1506 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-7 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 2 EXHIBIT ( Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 55 of 91 PageID# 1507 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-7 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 2 Subject: Re: DC Updates From: Person D2 Date: 3/1/13, 6:31 AM To: Rick Gates Thanks Sent from my iPad On Mar 1, 2013, at 15:05, Paul Manafort Sent: Friday, 1 March 2013, 13:14 Subject: Re: Draft Op Ed for Hill Person D2 Person A Person D1 I don’t like the tone of this op ed. The message is the right message but at this time it is too partisan for It will damage his "non-partisan" image. The problem with the op ed is that it contains all of our core messages. It could be given by VY of the Foreign MInister. This op ed should be more focused and narrow. I recommend that you re-write it from the standpoint of Europe with the theme of Ukraine's importance to Europe as a part of the security umbrella provided by NATO. The messages can include energy security as well as continental defense. The piece should be more macro focusing on the big themes and the importance of Ukraine in those themes. P From: Person D1 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 58 of 91 PageID# 1510 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-8 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 3 Reply-To: Date: Friday, March 1, 2013 7:03 AM To: Rick Gates , Person D1 PThis email contains the following documents in regards to the 's visit to the US. 1. Current agenda (as of 1100pm 3/8) – there are still some meetings to confirm but this will provide an overview on the meetings thus far. In addition, there is a point of contact for each of the meetings (either Company B or Company A ) 2. Logistics Sheet – this document is just for our internal use. It has all of the logistical information and POCs for the trip. 3. Draft Carnegie Speech Points – need to be reviewed and modified There are 3 additional items which will be coming over the weekend. 4. Congressional TPs 5. Briefing books for meetings 6. Draft Oped Attachments: Agenda - as of 1100pm 3.8.13.docx 16.5 KB Visit POCs.docx 61.8 KB Carnegie Speech [1].doc 40.0 KB Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 61 of 91 PageID# 1513 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-9 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 4 " ! " ' ) ,-" ) ,." ! &' ,-" 69:: $ " ! " ' $ !% $ &" "& 1 & # $ &%2 $ !% $ 0 %%* 1) #$"( &$ !%#"$& & "! '$ ! ( % &2 - $ !& $ "!& ! !& 6956 !!%* ( ! 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"' #% "' %" ' #" 7==? && (& ''& ) ., & " '#", 8669< ! $ 0 Hapsburg Member %" $' #" " #"#% # Hapsburg Member $ %' #% ( & %$#%' ! &&+ '# %#) % "&$#%' ' #" $ %' '# % 3 # #* " $ ) % & Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 63 of 91 PageID# 1515 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 9 EXHIBIT + Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 64 of 91 PageID# 1516 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 9 Subject: Re: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member From: Person D2 Date: 3/13/13, 11:25 AM To: Company B CC: Company B Hi I just had a meeting with Comp. B and the team and that's what we will do. At every point there will be the relevant contact person to meet President and facilitate access. Haps. member However, like everyone else, he will have to go through security/metal detectors etc. We can discuss further details when I see you at 12:30pm. Best, D2 From: Date: Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:26 To: Person D2 Cc: Company B , Company B Subject: RE: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member Hy D2 It was a pleasure to talk to you. Just a very last detail…we suggest you to agree with the counterparts of each meeting which will be the access point/address on the occasion of each meeting, in order to avoid any problem/delay to President Ideally, for each meeting you should be in contact with someone of the organizers who should possibly wait for President ’s car at an agreed access point/address at a certain time. Our drivers know Washington very well and will be able to bring you anywhere, but the access to some institutional locations (like the Congress) could be tricky if no agreement has been taken in advance with someone coming and waiting from inside and it is not clear what is going to be the access point. This is obviously just and advice from our side. All the Best and see you in a couple of hours, From: Person D2 Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 9:34 AM Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 65 of 91 PageID# 1517 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 9 To: Company B Cc: Company B Subject: Re: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member Thanks for the introduction, Comp. B I just spoke to All in good hands. See you shortly. Best, D2 From: Company B Date: Wednesday, 13 March 2013 13:00 To: Company B Cc: Person D2 Hapsburg member Subject: FW: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hi Per the emails below, we are coordinating Prime Minister ’s visit to Washington. I am copying Person D2 who works for the Prime Minister. D2 will be with the Prime Minister throughout his stay. He needs to accompany you to the airport today to meet the Prime Minister so I am connecting you. D2 ’s cell number is . Please let me know if I can be off assistance on this matter. Thank you so much. Comp B From: Company B Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2013 6:02 PM To: Cc: Subject: Re: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member Grazie mille I am learning diplomacy Are you or anyone coming to his talk? Comp B Company B Company B Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 66 of 91 PageID# 1518 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 9 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 67 of 91 PageID# 1519 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 9 Hope to see you again tomorrow evening at Villa Firenze. Best, Comp B Wednesday, March 13th 1455 Arrival to Washington, DC Transfer to Hotel (if time permits) VIP Transfer – Embassy (will provide transportation during visit) HOTEL: 1700 – 1730 Senate Foreign Relations Committee Staff Briefing (Minority – Republicans) Location: Dirksen Senate Office Building - Room: TBD POC: Company A 1730 – 1800 Senate Foreign Relations Committee Staff Briefing (Majority – Democrats) Staff Director Location: Dirksen Senate Office Building – Room TBD POC: Company B 1815 Meeting with Paul and D2 Willard Intercontinental Hotel 1900 Dinner with Ambassador Location: Villa Frienze Thursday, March 14th 900 – 930 1000 – 1045 Senior Policy Advisor, House Representative Location: U.S. Capitol – Room: POC: Company A Congressman (R ) Chairman, House Location: Rayburn House Office Building POC: Company A Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 68 of 91 PageID# 1520 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 6 of 9 1215 – 1245 Congressman Ranking Member, (D ) Location: Cannon House Office Building POC: Company B 1330 – 1430 Bloomberg Interview 1399 New York Ave NW Washington, DC 20005 POC: Company B 1500 – 1530 Congressman Member, House Foreign (R- ) Location: Cannon House Office Building POC: Company B 1545 – 1600 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Meeting with CEIP Board and Leadership Location: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 1779 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20036 (202) 483-7600 POC: 1600 – 1730 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Speech – Hapsburg member Brief Q&A following Speech 1730 – 1815 Carnegie Reception in Honor of Hapsburg member 1815 Depart for Dulles Airport Embassy to Provide Transportation 2020 Depart to via Paris Company B From: Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2013 4:04 PM Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 69 of 91 PageID# 1521 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 7 of 9 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 70 of 91 PageID# 1522 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 8 of 9 Da: Company B Inviato: giovedì 7 marzo 2013 9.47 A: Oggetto: RE: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member His NY office is not coordinating the visit. He is doing it through his foundation. is the point of contact. E-mail: Mobile: From: Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2013 2:33 PM To: Company B Subject: R: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member Dear Comp B Hapsburg member with all great pleasure we shall provide all the necessary airport assistance to . I only kindly ask you to provide me with the contacts of the person who got in touch with you in order to get all the necessary details (and to avoid possible duplications with his staff in New York). Best, _______________________________ -----Messaggio originale----Da: Company B Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 71 of 91 PageID# 1523 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-10 Filed 06/04/18 Page 9 of 9 Inviato: mercoledì 6 marzo 2013 11.30 A: Oggetto: Expedited Port Courtesis for Hapsburg member Former Prime Minister Hapsburg member will be traveling to Washington, DC next week. During his trip he will be meeting with US Government officials and Members of Congress to discuss his work and to offer insights about EU-US relations and Russia. Hapsburg member is scheduled to arrive Dulles at 2:55p on Wednesday, March 13 and will depart on Thursday, March 14 at 8:20p. Could the Embassy assist with his trip by requesting expedited port courtesis through the e-gov system for Hapsburg member ? Best, Comp B Sent from my iPad image001.jpg Attachments: image001.jpg 4.6 KB Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 72 of 91 PageID# 1524 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-11 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 2 EXHIBIT , Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 73 of 91 PageID# 1525 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-11 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 2 Person D2 Person D1 Person D2 Person D1 Person D2 D1/D2 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 74 of 91 PageID# 1526 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-12 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 5 EXHIBIT - Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 75 of 91 PageID# 1527 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-12 Filed 06/04/18 Page 2 of 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 76 of 91 PageID# 1528 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-12 Filed 06/04/18 Page 3 of 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 77 of 91 PageID# 1529 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-12 Filed 06/04/18 Page 4 of 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 78 of 91 PageID# 1530 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-12 Filed 06/04/18 Page 5 of 5 Case 1:18-cr-00083-TSE Document 81-1 Filed 06/04/18 Page 79 of 91 PageID# 1531 Case 1:17-cr-00201-ABJ Document 315-13 Filed 06/04/18 Page 1 of 2 EXHIBIT . 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