Before wrapping up their first day of deliberations on Thursday,
the jury sent the judge a note with four questions, including
one about the law on disclosing foreign bank accounts and
another seeking a definition for "reasonable doubt."
It was the "reasonable doubt" question that caught some legal
experts most by surprise as it suggested one or more jurors may
be grappling with whether the prosecution met this standard of
proof on certain counts.
"The fact that they are sending questions on reasonable doubt
tells me that the group is divided," said jury consultant
Alexandra Rudolph. "There is at least one juror who has not
decided the case and who is not convinced."
While the general rule is that juries reach a verdict on Friday
so they won't have to return after the weekend, Rudolph said she
now believed it was likely the trial would carry over into early
next week.
Manafort faces five counts of filing false tax returns, four
counts of failing to disclose his offshore bank accounts, and
nine counts of bank fraud. If convicted on all the charges, he
could spend the rest of his life in prison.
The jury, composed of six men and six women, is scheduled to
gather again at 9:30 a.m. on Friday at the federal courthouse in
Alexandria, Virginia.
The case is the first to go to trial stemming from Special
Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russia's role in the
2016 U.S. election, although the charges largely predate
Manafort's five months working on Donald Trump's campaign.
In addition to the "reasonable doubt" question, jurors asked the
judge about when someone must disclose a foreign bank account to
the Treasury Department, about the definition of a "shelf
company" -- an inactive company often sold to people aiming to
bypass the registration process -- and about whether the exhibit
list could be amended to show which exhibits correspond with
what counts.
David Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor in Miami, cautioned
about reading too much into the questions, noting it was still
early into deliberations after 10 days of testimony.
"There is no easy way to read the tea leaves we have seen in the
jury notes," Weinstein said.
(reporting by Nathan Layne in Alexandria, Virginia; Editing by
Michael Perry)
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