Ex-Trump aide Paul Manafort is first to
go on trial in Russia probe
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[July 30, 2018]
By Nathan Layne and Karen Freifeld
(Reuters) - Paul Manafort on Tuesday will
become the first of President Donald Trump's former aides to go on
trial, accused of bank and tax fraud by federal investigators probing
Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Despite a focus on financial crimes, the trial could yield politically
damaging headlines about a man who ran Trump's campaign for three months
and attended a June 2016 meeting with Russians offering damaging
information about Trump's Democratic rival Hillary Clinton that is now a
focal point of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's 14-month-old probe.
"My guess is you will see O.J.-type frenzy at this court event," said
Michael Caputo, a former Trump aide and longtime Manafort associate,
referring to the 1995 O.J. Simpson murder case. "I really hope the
president continues to watch and make public comments about this case."
He said Trump could help the public understand what is at stake in
Mueller's probe, which both Trump and Caputo have called a "witch hunt"
aimed at ending his presidency.
Prosecutors are expected to argue that Manafort's lavish spending on
suits, homes and luxury items did not match the income declared on his
tax returns and that he misled lenders when he borrowed tens of millions
of dollars against New York real estate.
Joshua Dressler, a law professor at Ohio State University, said the
evidence against Manafort, 69, appears strong, but that he drew a
favorable judge in the 78-year old T.S. Ellis, who is known to be tough
on prosecutors, and said the politically charged climate increases the
chances of a hung jury.
Manafort, who has pleaded not guilty, faces 18 counts. The nine bank
fraud and conspiracy charges alone carry maximum sentences of 30 years
each, and Judge Ellis noted in April that Manafort was potentially
facing the rest of his life behind bars.
Given the strength of the evidence, however, some legal experts have
suggested Manafort may be banking on an eventual pardon from Trump, who
has called his former campaign chairman a "nice guy" who has been
treated unfairly.
The trial, starting with selection of a 12-member jury, coincides with
growing speculation that Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen
may cooperate with federal investigators against the president, now 18
months in office.
Mueller's team has estimated it could take 8 to 10 days to present its
case to the jury, suggesting the trial may last at least three weeks.
A TRUMP PARDON?
Mueller submitted 500 pieces of evidence, including tax filings and
mortgage statements, and pictures of luxury watches and homes to
illustrate Manafort's wealth. There are 35 potential witnesses, many of
them bankers and accountants expected to verify documents and speak to
Manafort's alleged intent to violate the law. Five witnesses were
granted immunity.
Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for Trump, said no one facing trial should
proceed expecting a pardon, but he did not rule one out. Giuliani said
he and Jay Sekulow, another Trump lawyer, had told the president: "This
would be a very bad thing to do now."
But once Mueller's Russia investigation ends, Giuliani told Reuters, “he
has a right to consider it ... It’s his power.”
Mueller's team said it would not present evidence about any possible
campaign collusion with Russia at the trial in the Washington suburb of
Alexandria, Virginia, potentially saving it for a second Manafort trial
in Washington in September.
Even so, prosecutors have asked permission to discuss Manafort's work
for pro-Russia politicians in Ukraine, which they allege was a source of
wealth he laundered through overseas bank accounts. Manafort is seeking
to exclude information on the details of that work. The judge has yet to
rule.
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President Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort departs U.S.
District Court after a motions hearing in Alexandria, Virginia,
U.S., May 4, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
RUSSIAN CONNECTIONS?
If allowed, prosecutors may delve deeper into Manafort's Russian
connections. Last month Mueller's team disclosed in a court filing
what it said was a $10 million loan to Manafort from Oleg Deripaska,
a magnate known to have close ties to Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
"It seems to me we’re seeing deeper ties that Manafort has had
financially with his business deals in the Ukraine and with Russia,"
said Shanlon Wu, a former lawyer for Manafort associate Rick Gates,
who pleaded guilty in February and is aiding Mueller's probe. "He
could expose himself to further criminal culpability if he has to
expose the full extent of those ties."
One transaction set to take center stage is an alleged quid pro quo
arrangement between Manafort and a senior executive at the Federal
Savings Bank, which public records show lent Manafort $16 million
against New York properties in December 2016 and January 2017.
Prosecutors say the loans were a favor for Manafort bringing the
executive, who sources say is Federal CEO Stephen Calk, into Trump's
inner circle. Calk was named an adviser to the Trump campaign, and
Democratic lawmakers say he inquired about, but did not get, a key
Army post.
Federal did not respond to a request for comment.
Expected to be a key witness, Gates was Manafort's right-hand man
for years and has knowledge of their offshore accounts and work for
Deripaska and in Ukraine.
"Gates is going to be the narrator for this entire trial," said Dan
Goldman, a former federal prosecutor in New York.
Mueller's team has indicted or secured guilty pleas from 32 people
and three companies, including the indictment of 12 Russian
intelligence officials. Of the four former Trump aides ensnared by
the probe, Manafort is the only one to go to trial.
Gates, former national security adviser Michael Flynn and George
Papadopoulos, a foreign policy adviser on the campaign, have all
pleaded guilty.
Trump denies any collusion. But Trump and his aides have struggled
to control the damage from his acceptance at times of Putin’s
denials that Russia interfered over the word of American
intelligence agencies that it did.
(Additional reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington; Editing by
Howard Goller)
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