Robert Mueller May Indict Paul Manafort Again
It looks as though a superseding indictment is in the works:
"The charges against the former Trump campaign boss appear to have been only an opening salvo in a legal barrage on the presidentās confidants, informed observers say.
From its inception, two things about special counsel Robert Muellerās investigation were clear: first, the White Houseās biggest concern was that Mueller would follow the money; and second, Mueller is following the money.
Itās been seven months since Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein ordered Bob Mueller to take over the FBIās counterintelligence probe into possible links between the Kremlin and people associated with the Trump campaign. Trumpās lawyers have long said they expected the probe to stay focused and end quickly. Instead, Mueller has assembled a team of prosecutors with expertise in handling financial investigations and white-collar crime, and obtained guilty pleas for crimes that werenāt committed during the election year.
And, most importantly, heās sent a thinly veiled warning to the White House: No oneās finances are off limits. If 2017 had the presidentās inner circle sweating, 2018 could feel like a sauna.
And no one may feel more heat than Paul Manafort. In Washington legal circles, thereās a broad expectation that Mueller will file whatās called a superseding indictment of Manafort and Rick Gates, his erstwhile business partnerāand alleged partner in crime. Gates and Manafort both pleaded not guilty when Muellerās team filed their indictment on Oct. 30. Legal experts say there may be more charges to come.
āI would expect a superseding indictment to come down relatively soon,ā said Jonathan Turley, a professor at George Washington Universityās law school."
It looks as though a superseding indictment is in the works:
"The charges against the former Trump campaign boss appear to have been only an opening salvo in a legal barrage on the presidentās confidants, informed observers say.
From its inception, two things about special counsel Robert Muellerās investigation were clear: first, the White Houseās biggest concern was that Mueller would follow the money; and second, Mueller is following the money.
Itās been seven months since Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein ordered Bob Mueller to take over the FBIās counterintelligence probe into possible links between the Kremlin and people associated with the Trump campaign. Trumpās lawyers have long said they expected the probe to stay focused and end quickly. Instead, Mueller has assembled a team of prosecutors with expertise in handling financial investigations and white-collar crime, and obtained guilty pleas for crimes that werenāt committed during the election year.
And, most importantly, heās sent a thinly veiled warning to the White House: No oneās finances are off limits. If 2017 had the presidentās inner circle sweating, 2018 could feel like a sauna.
And no one may feel more heat than Paul Manafort. In Washington legal circles, thereās a broad expectation that Mueller will file whatās called a superseding indictment of Manafort and Rick Gates, his erstwhile business partnerāand alleged partner in crime. Gates and Manafort both pleaded not guilty when Muellerās team filed their indictment on Oct. 30. Legal experts say there may be more charges to come.
āI would expect a superseding indictment to come down relatively soon,ā said Jonathan Turley, a professor at George Washington Universityās law school."