For Manafort's sentencing, a trip to the
pre-cellphone era
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[March 13, 2019]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - If you need to get
news out of the federal courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, bring plenty
of quarters.
Cellphones and laptops aren't allowed in the building. Cameras and voice
recorders are banned as well.
Reporters at the Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse have two
options: run to the pay phone on the second floor, or scramble outside
and look for an iPhone stashed away earlier.
On the afternoon of March 7, U.S. President Donald Trump's former
campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, was wheeled into a ninth-floor
courtroom to learn his fate.
Crippled by gout and wearing a green prison uniform, Manafort faced up
to 24 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of hiding millions
of dollars from tax authorities and lying to banks about his financial
status.
Reuters correspondents Sarah N. Lynch, Andy Sullivan and Jan Wolfe
watched from the gallery. Photographer Jim Young and cameraman Gershon
Peaks waited on the plaza outside - keeping an eye on the courthouse
doors and the correspondents' phones. Editor Will Dunham and what
Reuters calls its "speed team," which publishes breaking news as quickly
as possible, stood ready in the Washington bureau.
It was one of the most important days yet in Special Counsel Robert
Mueller's investigation into whether Trump's campaign had links to or
co-ordinated with Russia during the 2016 election.
The biggest news boiled down to one number: the amount of time Manafort
would serve behind bars. But other aspects would be important as well.
Would Manafort speak? Would Judge T.S. Ellis make any remarks? Would
prosecutors reveal anything more about Mueller's investigation?
As the hearing began, Ellis made clear that he did not want reporters
rushing out of the courtroom, and that anyone leaving would not be
allowed back in. That prompted reporters Lynch and Sullivan to move to
an overflow room, where they could leave without disrupting proceedings.
There, they strained to follow the action on a blurry video link. Wolfe
remained in the courtroom.
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President Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort arrives at
a hearing at U.S. District Court in Washington, U.S., January 16,
2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
After several hours of legal process, it was time for Manafort to
address the court. With no audio recorders allowed, reporters
scribbled furiously on legal pads and compared notes to see if they
had captured his words correctly. Manafort said he had been
"humiliated" by the case, but expressed no contrition.
Sullivan dashed down to the pay phone on the second floor, only to
find it occupied. Running out of the courthouse, he was met with
blinding lights and a volley of questions from television crews who
thought he might be bearing news of Manafort's sentence. "I'm not
guilty," he said to the waiting microphones.
Sullivan retrieved his phone and called the Reuters Washington
bureau to report Manafort's comments. Dunham updated the story and
published the latest version for Reuters clients worldwide.
Meanwhile, in the courtroom, the judge sentenced Manafort to
slightly less than four years in prison, about one-fifth of the
recommended sentence.
Now it was time for Lynch to dash to the second-floor pay phone -
which this time was free. She called in the all-important number to
the speed team, who issued alerts as Dunham once more updated the
story.
Lynch then sped out of the building to find her phone in order to
call in more details to the newsroom, as captured in the first 15
seconds of this Reuters television coverage.
(Reporting and writing by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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