Judge tells ex-Trump adviser Manafort to stop communicating with media

Manafort was chided for ghost-writing an opinion piece that was published in the Kyiv Post, an English-language newspaper in Ukraine, lauding his political work for the Ukraine.

President Donald Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort arrives at court on Monday.
AP

President Donald Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort arrives at court on Monday.

A US federal judge on Monday issued a stern warning to President Donald Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort to refrain from making statements to the media that could harm his right to a fair trial.

US District Judge Amy Berman Jackson chided Manafort for ghost-writing an opinion piece that was published last week in the Kyiv Post, an English-language newspaper in Ukraine, lauding Manafort's political work for Ukraine.

Jackson said she would consider any similar future behavior to be a violation of her Nov. 8 gag order not to discuss the case with the media or make public statements in ways that could affect the case's outcome.

Jackson stopped short of granting a request from Special Counsel Robert Mueller to deny Manafort's proposal for more lenient bail terms, saying she would take Manafort's proposal to lift his house arrest in exchange for posting four real estate properties as collateral under advisement and rule at a later date.

Prosecutors had previously asked her to deny Manafort's request, saying his behind-the-scenes ghost-writing violated her order and raised issues of trust.

"Mr. Manafort, that order applies to you, and not just your lawyer," Jackson said.

Tainting the jury

She added that the op-ed, while not published in a United States newspaper, could potentially taint a local jury pool because of the global nature of media.

"All that has to happen is for that favorable article, which is going to ... look on its face to be entirely independent, but is actually in part a message crafted and shaped by you ... is to have somebody you know post it on Facebook, Twitter or a blog, and you have accomplished your goal, given the power of retweeting," she said.

Manafort and his business associate Rick Gates are facing charges including conspiracy to launder money and failing to register as a foreign agent working on behalf of former pro-Russian Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s government.

Jackson set the next status conference hearing for January 16.

Bail package

Jackson said she has some outstanding concerns about Manafort's proposed bail package, including his reliance on the real estate website Zillow to come up with some of the property value estimates.

Manafort earlier this month pledged about $8 million in real estate assets in New York City and elsewhere, as well as life insurance worth about $4.5 million as security for bond.

In a court filing on Monday, Manafort provided information including real estate tax assessments, appraised market values and comparable sales data for the properties in New York, Virginia and Florida. Many items cited Zillow.

Jackson also expressed frustration that the defendants were not always giving pre-trial services ample notice about their whereabouts, saying, "It has to be more than an hour in advance."

She added that Gates has repeatedly filed requests to get out of house arrest on the weekends to go to his children's' sporting events, and she urged his lawyers to reach a bail agreement with the government so the court could "get out of the business of monitoring soccer practice." (Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Writing by David Alexander; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Leslie Adler)

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