Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's new convention manager accused Ted Cruz's campaign of using "Gestapo tactics" after the Texas senator swept the party's convention-delegate selection process in Colorado.
"He's threatening," Paul Manafort said on NBC. "You go to these county conventions, and you see the tactics, Gestapo tactics, the scorched-earth tactics."
He didn't give any examples.
Cruz picked up all 34 delegates on offer in Colorado. The final 13 were selected at the end of a day-long convention in Colorado Springs.
Cruz, as well as much of the Republican Party's establishment, is trying to deny Trump enough delegates to be nominated on the first ballot in Cleveland - a rare event in modern US politics that would throw the nominating process wide open.
Trump is ahead with 743 delegates, according to Associated Press estimates.
Colorado's 34 delegates are a small fraction of the 1237 needed to win the nomination but take on more significance than usual with a contested convention becoming more likely. The next Republican contest is in New York on April 20.Cruz had 545 including the weekend's pickups, while Ohio Governor John Kasich lagged far behind at 143.
A new Fox News poll had Trump garnering 54 per cent support from likely voters in his home state.
Manafort, 67, who helped President Gerald Ford's delegate operation at the 1976 convention and managed Kansas Senator Bob Dole's 1996 presidential campaign, said Cruz was "not playing by the rules" and doesn't "care about the party".
"If they don't get what they want, they blow it up," said Manafort.
A Cruz spokeswoman said Trump's campaign was trying to distract from its lack of a ground game.
"It's no surprise that Trump's team will lash out with falsehoods to distract from their failure, as they have the entire time," said the spokeswoman, Catherine Frazier. "We have earned our success by working hard to build a superior organisation and are working within the process and rules that have been established - which has led now to four consecutive wins, 12 wins total."
Cruz's sweep in Colorado highlighted Trump's lack of a robust national organisation as a political novice.
Manafort said Trump's campaign wasn't "playing in Colorado" and had succeeded with efforts with Alabama, Michigan and Nevada. Trump is running his own campaign and "was doing very well on a model that made sense, but now, as the campaign has gotten to the end stages, a more traditional campaign has to take place," he said.