Paul Manafort, the former chairman of US President Donald Trump's presidential campaign, has agreed to enter a guilty plea in federal case filed by the Office of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, media reported on Friday.
READ MORE: Paul Manafort, Special Counsel Reach Preliminary Plea Deal — Report
Although the details of the plea deal are not clear, Manafort will likely admit he has committed federal crimes, a newspaper The Washington Post reported citing an official.
According to the Office of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, the number of felony charges against Manafort in his second trial has been reduced from seven to just two.
"A superseding criminal information against Paul J. Manafort, Jr., 69, of Alexandria, Va., has been filed today in the District of Columbia, which alleges a conspiracy against the United States (money laundering, tax fraud, failing to file Foreign Bank Account Reports, violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act, and lying and misrepresenting to the Department of Justice) and a conspiracy to obstruct justice (witness tampering)," Mueller said in a statement.
Mueller is heading an investigation into allegations that Russia interfered in the 2016 election, as well as accusations of collusion between the Trump campaign and Moscow. Russia and Trump have repeatedly denied allegations of collusion, and Moscow has refuted charges of interfering in US internal affairs.