Prosecutors to wrap up Manafort case, may
soon go to jury
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[August 13, 2018]
By Nathan Layne
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (Reuters) - U.S.
prosecutors on Monday plan to wrap up their tax and bank fraud case
against former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort, making it likely the
case will go to the jury by midweek if the defense decides not to call
any witnesses.
The trial is in its 10th day in Alexandria, Virginia, federal court and
is not scheduled to resume until Monday afternoon. The case arose from
U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller's probe of Russian meddling in the
2016 presidential election.
Before completing their case, prosecutors will call James Brennan, an
executive at the Federal Savings Bank. On Friday, a former salesman at
Federal testified that the bank's chief executive personally approved
$16 million in loans to Manafort while seeking Manafort's help getting a
post in President Donald Trump's cabinet.
The prosecution also wants to recall Paula Liss, an agent with the
Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. The defense
is seeking to block further questioning of her, and the judge has not
yet ruled. Liss testified last week that Manafort did not disclose his
foreign bank accounts.
Manafort's lawyers will then face a choice: call their own witnesses or
hope the prosecution's case is not strong enough to outweigh defense
attacks on the credibility of Rick Gates and the testimony of more than
two dozen other witnesses.
Gates testified last week that Manafort, his former boss, directed him
to help commit the tax and bank frauds, but the defense portrayed him as
living a "secret life" of infidelity and embezzlement.
Prosecutors contend Manafort hid a significant portion of the
approximately $60 million he earned as a consultant for pro-Russian
politicians in Ukraine, then lied to borrow millions more in a bid to
maintain an extravagant lifestyle when the Ukraine work dried up.
Shanlon Wu, who represented Gates before he pleaded guilty in February
and started cooperating with Mueller's probe, said he expected the
defense to rest its case and move on to closing arguments.
While the prosecution has built a solid case, Manafort's lawyers
appeared to have raised some doubts about the testimony of Gates and
other witnesses, Wu said.
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Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort arrives for arraignment
on a third superseding indictment against him by Special Counsel
Robert Mueller on charges of witness tampering, at U.S. District
Court in Washington, U.S., June 15, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst/File Photo
"The big question is, did the government do enough to show
willfulness," said Wu, who is no longer involved in the case and
said he was speaking from knowledge of the publicly available
evidence.
If the defense decides not to call any witnesses, the court may on
Monday hold a conference with the lawyers to decide what
instructions should be given to the jury before they begin
deliberations, Judge T.S. Ellis said on Friday.
Closing arguments may take place on Tuesday. Ellis ordered each side
to limit its summation to two hours.
It was unclear if Ellis will make public the reason behind an
unexpected recess on Friday that lasted into the midafternoon and
included a lengthy discussion with the lawyers and judge at the
bench, the contents of which remain under seal.
Some legal experts have speculated that it may have been triggered
by a problem with the jury after Ellis reminded jurors in unusual
detail and multiple times about the defendant's presumed innocence,
the need to "keep an open mind" about the trial and not to talk to
anyone about the case.
"My sense is that it probably has to do with juror misconduct," said
Joshua Dressler, a law professor at Ohio State. But it was not
likely severe enough to prompt the judge to declare a mistrial, he
said, noting Ellis resumed witness testimony on Friday afternoon.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Alexandria, Virginia and Karen
Freifeld in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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