Updated at 1:31 p.m. ET
President Trump intensified his months-long attacks on the Justice Department with a new charge on Wednesday that special counsel Robert Mueller is trying to induce witnesses to lie.
A tweet on the president's thread cited the latest turns in the saga as further evidence for his argument that Mueller has run amok and that his office is simply cooking up a case against Trump.
Trump's account then reposted a tweet from another account featuring a meme that asked: "Now that Russia collusion is a proven lie, when do the trials for treason begin?"
The "collusion" question remains open, pending the outcome of the investigation.
The special counsel's office did not comment on the developments this week.
The major players
The tweet's allusion to "at least 3 major players" appeared to refer to the recent news accounts about the interactions of key witnesses with investigators, although it wasn't immediately clear which ones.
The New York Times reported late Tuesday that a lawyer for Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort has been briefing Trump's legal team about the evidence he has been giving since his plea agreement with federal prosecutors.
Those briefings are "highly unusual" but not illegal, the Times reported, and they've enabled the president's legal team to get a look inside the work of the special counsel's office, which has helped Trump's lawyers with their defense and public relations strategies.
That story appeared after Mueller's office notified a federal court that Manafort had lied during his interviews since his plea deal, which the office said voided the deal. So the special counsel's office asked a judge in the case to sentence Manafort as soon as possible without any consideration for his cooperation.
Federal Judge Amy Berman Jackson scheduled a conference in Manafort's case for Friday that could establish when he will be sentenced.
"The government will file a detailed sentencing submission ... in advance of sentencing that sets forth the nature of the defendant's crimes and lies, including those after signing the plea agreement," Mueller's attorneys said in their earlier court filing.
Who knew what about the meeting
The Times report suggested Mueller's office asked Manafort to affirm that Trump was aware of the much-dissected meeting in June 2016 between a delegation of Russians and Manafort, Trump's son and Trump's son-in-law.
If Trump authorized that meeting or simply knew about it beforehand, that would be important evidence in the investigation into whether anyone in his campaign conspired with the Russian attack on the election.
Trump has denied knowing anything at the time about the meeting or, more broadly, about Russia's campaign of active measures.
He and Donald Trump Jr. have acknowledged the conference was aimed at getting political dirt on Hillary Clinton but they have said that's common in politics and they didn't use the information they received.
Trump's post on Twitter may have suggested that when Manafort, in this construction, didn't agree to lie and tell prosecutors that Trump was aware of the meeting beforehand, the government opted to punish him by spiking his plea deal.
It isn't clear what statements prompted the government to rescind the deal with Manafort; prosecutors wrote in their court filing that he "committed federal crimes by lying to [the FBI] and the special counsel's office on a variety of subject matters."
Mueller's office has concluded several guilty pleas with people in the Russia case predicated upon false statements; in other examples, it has said in court documents that it had evidence that contravened statements made by people it interviewed.
Trump, meanwhile, has said he believed the questions he answered in writing from Mueller were "tricked up," designed to entrap him, and his Twitter post on Wednesday alluded to similar statements by others in the case.
Trump said in his answers that Stone did not tell him about WikiLeaks and that he did not learn about the Trump Tower meeting before the fact, according to a report by CNN on Wednesday.
The "major players"
The other two people involved could be Jerome Corsi, a conservative commentator who has been negotiating his own plea agreement with Mueller, and George Papadopoulos, a onetime junior campaign aide now in prison following his guilty plea for lying to investigators.
Corsi has told news organizations that he walked away from a potential guilty plea that would have been based on his statements about his connection to political consultant Roger Stone and Stone's alleged connection to WikiLeaks.
WikiLeaks released a blizzard of stolen documents in 2016, including emails, that embarrassed targets in the United States including the then-chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee and the chairman of Clinton's campaign.
Prosecutors say WikiLeaks and its boss, Julian Assange, got the material from Russia's military intelligence agency, the GRU, making it a key plank in its campaign of influence against the U.S.
Sealed charging documents against Assange may be on file in the Eastern District of Virginia; the Justice Department declines to confirm or deny what it has in store there.
Stone and Corsi deny they had any inside line to Assange in 2016; they say when they talked among themselves and, in Stone's case, with Trump's campaign bosses, they were just puffing themselves up with information that was already public from Assange's public comments.
Papadopoulos, meanwhile, tried to withdraw from his guilty plea and challenge the authority of Mueller's office. A judge rejected that bid on Sunday and ordered him to report to prison.
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