White House distances itself from Paul Manafort, who reportedly laundered money to himself from a pro-Putin party’s “black ledger”
White House press secretary Sean Spicer has been downplaying Manafort's role in the Trump campaign
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A month after it was reported that a Ukrainian parliament member had attempted to blackmail Paul Manafort — the former campaign manager for President Donald Trump — with documents over Manafort’s alleged connections to pro-Putin forces in Ukraine, that same parliament member has released documents allegedly showing Manafort laundering money from a pro-Putin party’s so-called “black ledger.”
“Serhiy Leshchenko, a lawmaker and journalist, released a copy of an invoice on letterhead from Manafort’s Alexandria, Va.-based consulting company from Oct. 14, 2009, to a Belize-based company for $750,000 for the sale of 501 computers,” reports The Washington Post. “On the same day, Manafort’s name is listed next to a $750,000 entry in the ‘black ledger,’ which was viewed as a party slush fund.”
Leshchenko is now claiming that Manafort forged the Belize invoice as a way of concealing the true nature of the $750,000 payment to himself. During a news conference, Leshchenko told reporters that Manafort “used offshore jurisdictions and falsified invoices to get money from the corrupt Ukrainian leader,” a reference to former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, for whom Manafort worked and who is widely viewed as having been a pro-Putin puppet.
Manafort’s connection to Yanukovych led to his resignation as Trump’s campaign manager in August, specifically due to the revelation that he was connected to secret payments of $12.7 million by Party of Regions, Yanukovych’s political party. Manafort denied any wrongdoing.