A federal judge has denied a request to delay the prison sentence of the ex-Trump adviser who sparked the US inquiry into Russian meddling.
George Papadopoulos, 31, began serving his two-week-long sentence on Monday, as Judge Randolph Moss ruled.
Papadopoulos pleaded guilty last year to lying to the FBI about the timing of meetings with alleged go-betweens for Russia and was sentenced in September.
His lawyer has said that he will not appeal the judge’s decision.
Papadopoulos reported to the Federal Correctional Institution prison in Oxford, Wisconsin, on Monday.
In a 13-page opinion on Sunday, Judge Moss said there was a “remote” chance that an appeals court would find Papadopoulos’s request for bail reasonable.
Papadopoulos’s team had argued for a delay citing a pending challenge against special counsel Robert Mueller, the head of the investigation into an alleged Kremlin plot to sway the 2016 US vote.
The defence said if Mr Mueller’s appointment was found to be unlawful, Papadopoulos’s conviction should be set aside.
When Papadopoulos pleaded guilty, he also waived most of his rights to appeal his sentence.
The judge added that the former adviser had waited “until the eleventh hour” to bring forth his request, which he filed on 16 November, and that there were no “extenuating circumstances” for such a last-minute stay.
In a statement, Papadopoulos’s lawyer Chris LaVigne said he would not appeal the judge’s decision, calling it “an unfortunate result in an inequitable case”.
“Given the immense power of the special counsel’s office and the costs to Mr Papadopoulos of continuing to fight, he will serve his sentence tomorrow, and hopes to move on with his life.”
Shortly before reporting to prison on Monday, Papadopoulos tweeted that he has “never met a single Russian official”.
His wife, Simona Mangiante, has been supportive of him on social media, saying he does not deserve to go to jail and, last week, tweeting at President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump asking for a pardon.
Papadopoulos was the first former Trump aide arrested in the Russia investigation.
He falsely claimed that he had met with two individuals with Russian connections prior to working with Donald Trump’s campaign in March 2016, but had in fact met with them after joining.