Ex-Trump campaign official Gates sentenced to 45 days in jail

The Hill logoRichard Gates, a former Trump deputy campaign chairman and top aide, on Tuesday was sentenced to 45 days in jail after pleading guilty to charges involving financial fraud and lying to federal investigators.

Gates also received three years of probation and a $20,000 fine. But he avoided a significant prison sentence thanks to the assistance he gave to prosecutors. Federal sentencing guidelines would have recommended between 46 months and 57 months in prison based on Gates’s charges.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who was appointed by former President Obama, ruled that Gates could choose to serve the jail sentence intermittently and when it’s convenient for him.  Continue reading

Rick Gates was offered cash to stonewall Mueller probe: prosecutors

AlterNet logoProsecutors recommended no prison time for former Trump deputy campaign chief Rick Gates after he resisted pressure and even a cash offer to stonewall investigators and provided “extraordinary assistance” in former special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation.

Prosecutors said in a court filing that they will not oppose Gates’ request to be sentenced to probation after he pleaded guilty in 2018 to conspiracy, lying to federal investigators and other charges.

Gates cooperated with Mueller’s team after the plea and testified at the trials of former Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort and longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone, who were both convicted of numerous charges, as well as attorney Greg Craig, who was acquitted. Prosecutors said this week that Gates is still assisting with “a number of different ongoing matters.”

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The money behind Trump’s $107 million inauguration

AlterNet logoThe inauguration of President Donald Trump was the most expensive in U.S. history, costing $107 million. All that money had to come from somewhere, and an in-depth report by a team of New York Times reporters is taking a close look at the money behind Trump’s inauguration.

Trump’s inauguration, the Times notes in its report, cost “more than double the previous record set by Barack Obama.” The Times discusses some of the key figures in the inauguration, from Elliott Broidy to Rick Gates to Tom Barrack — noting some of the events in their lives since the inauguration.

Broidy, the Times points out in its report, stepped down as deputy finance chairman for the Republican National Committee (RNC) after it came out that he had agreed to pay $1.6 million to a former Playboy model, Shera Bechard, who became pregnantduring an affair.

View the complete July 1 article by Alex Henderson on the AlterNet website here.

Mueller focus shifts to Rick Gates

The focus of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation is about to shift to Richard Gates.

Gates, Paul Manafort’s ex-business partner and President Trump’s former deputy campaign chairman, has been quietly cooperating with federal prosecutors for over a year on Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

He’s also a cooperating witness to other undisclosed federal probes.

View the complete March 14 article by Morgan Chalfant on The Hill website here.

Following the Money: Trump and Russia-Linked Transactions From the Campaign to the Presidential Inauguration

Credit: Yuri Kadobnova, AFP/Getty Images

Overview

At the heart of the inquiry into the alleged collusion between Trump and Russia is money. It provides concrete evidence of relationships, methods, and motives.

Introduction and summary

At the turn of the 18th century, a newly elected president of the United States—only the second in the nation’s then-brief history—cautioned the American people about “the danger to our liberties if anything partial or extraneous should infect the purity of our free, fair, virtuous, and independent elections.” In particular, John Adams pointed to threats from abroad, warning that if a changed election outcome “can be obtained by foreign nations by flattery or menaces, by fraud or violence, by terror, intrigue, or venality, the Government may not be the choice of the American people, but of foreign nations. It may be foreign nations who govern us, and not we, the people, who govern ourselves.” Speaking before a joint session of Congress, he thus pleaded with the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives to “[preserve] our Constitution from its natural enemies,” including “the profligacy of corruption, and the pestilence of foreign influence, which is the angel of destruction to elective governments.”1

The threat of foreign influence over our elections did not wane in the intervening 220 years: Today, the United States has a president whose election was aided by the fraud and intrigue of a foreign nation. Americans who watched how President Donald Trump, in the words of the late Sen. John McCain, “abased himself … abjectly before a tyrant” in Helsinki, cannot be faulted for wondering whether John Adams’s long-ago warning has become a reality.2

View the complete December 17 article by Diana Pilipenko and Talia Dessel on the Center for American Progress website here.

Want to Know More About … the Manafort Trial

Jonathan Karl: “In A Dramatic Moment, David, Gates Told The Court, ‘I’m Here To Tell The Truth, I’m Here To Take Responsibility.’, And Then, He Added That Paul Manafort Had The Same Opportunity, The Implication Is Of Course, That He Did Not Take It.”

[World News Tonight, ABC, 8/7/18; VIDEO]

David Wright: “It Was A Grueling Day On The Stand For Rick Gates. He Is The Government’s Star Witness In This Case But The Defense Did Its Best To Pummel His Credibility.”

[Good Morning America, ABC, 8/8/18; VIDEO]