September trial date set for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort

Paul Manafort's trial is set for September 17.

The judge set the 68-year old’s trial to start on Sept. 17.

“The government is ready to go to trial as soon as possible,” prosecutor Greg Andres told the court.

It was Manafort’s first appearance after his longtime business partner, Rick Gates, pleaded guilty to a dramatically-reduced set of charges last week in exchange for his cooperation with Mueller’s probe.

As part of Gates’ plea deal, he now faces just two felony counts provided he cooperates fully with Special Counsel investigators.

Manafort reacted strongly on Friday to the Gates’ deal, releasing a terse statement to the media.

However, Judge Amy Berman Jackson on Wednesday said that action violated her gag order. She said while she understood his need “to state your innocence,” she admonished both Manafort and his attorney and cautioned against any further violations, saying she would hold them accountable next time.

Manafort is scheduled to enter a second plea on Friday in a Virginia federal court where he now faces a total of 18 felony charges.

Jackson - in DC federal court Wednesday - cautioned that there could be “overlap” in both cases as they head to trial.

“It seems like the government is setting itself up” for “duplicative motions” and a “risk of inconsistent rulings and motions.”

Andres said the government had anticipated that, but he noted that it was the defense that opted for the separate venue in Virginia.

“I think the burden will fall heaviest on the defense,” Jackson warned.

In the Washington D.C. trial, the government said it anticipates using a written questionnaire to select a jury, and the judge cautioned that the document should contain no more than 50 “short” questions.

“Less is even better,” the judge said with a smile.

This is a developing story. Please refresh for details.