you told me to go read the indictment... where was that in the indictment?
you just made a bunch of shit up about the indictment....
so tell us did you have any reasons to say that there was dirty russian money being laundered during the trump campaign in the indictment...
what a fricken troll
here is what wikipedia has to say... in part...
Chairman of Donald Trump's 2016 campaign[edit]
In February 2016 Manafort approached
Donald Trump through a mutual friend,
Thomas J. Barrack Jr. He pointed out his experience advising presidential campaigns in the United States and around the world, described himself as an outsider not connected to the Washington establishment, and offered to work without salary.
[31] In March 2016 he joined Trump's
presidential campaign to take the lead in getting commitments from convention delegates.
[32] In June 2016, Trump fired campaign manager
Corey Lewandowski and promoted Manafort to the position. Manafort gained control of the daily operations of the campaign as well as an expanded $20 million budget, hiring decisions, advertising, and media strategy.
[33][34][35]
On June 9, 2016, Manafort,
Donald Trump Jr., and
Jared Kushner were participants in
a meeting with Russian attorney
Natalia Veselnitskaya and several others at
Trump Tower. A British music agent, saying he was acting on behalf of
Emin Agalarov and the Russian government, had told Trump Jr. that he could obtain damaging information on
Hillary Clinton if he met with a lawyer connected to the Kremlin.
[36] At first Trump Jr. said the meeting had been about the
Magnitsky Act; later he said the offer of information about Clinton had been a pretext to conceal Veselnitskaya's real agenda.
[37]
In August 2016, Manafort's connections to former
Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and his pro-Russian
Party of Regions drew national attention in the US, where it was reported that Manafort may have illegally received $12.7 million in off-the-books funds from the Party of Regions.
[38]
On August 17, 2016, Donald Trump received his first security briefing.
[39] The same day, August 17, Trump shook up his campaign organization in a way that appeared to minimize Manafort's role. It was reported that members of Trump's family, particularly Jared Kushner who had originally been a strong backer of Manafort, had become uneasy about his Russian connections and suspected that he had not been forthright about them.
[40] Manafort stated in an internal staff memorandum that he would "remain the campaign chairman and chief strategist, providing the big-picture, long-range campaign vision".
[41] However, two days later, Trump announced his acceptance of Manafort's resignation from the campaign after
Stephen Bannon and
Kellyanne Conway took on senior leadership roles within that campaign.
[42][43]
Upon Manafort's resignation as campaign chairman,
Newt Gingrich stated that “nobody should underestimate how much Paul Manafort did to really help get this campaign to where it is right now.”
[44] Gingrich later added that, for the Trump administration, “It makes perfect sense for them to distance themselves from somebody who apparently didn’t tell them what he was doing.”
[45]
The connection is the part where Trump hired this guy when he had no skills to manage a campaign and his only contribution was changing RNC's stance on Russia. Not to mention the 38 year association and shady financial deals Trump himself has indulged in.