The Hamilton Spectator

Manafort judge won’t name jurors

Judge received threats and fears jurors will too

- MATTHEW BARAKAT, STEPHEN BRAUN AND JEFF HOROWITZ

ALEXANDRIA, VA. — The judge in former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort’s fraud trial refused Friday to release the names of jurors, saying he has received threats and fears for their safety as well.

U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III revealed his concerns in explaining why he doesn’t intend to make jurors’ names public at the end of the trial, now in the second day of jury deliberati­ons.

Jurors ended their second day of deliberati­ons Friday a halfhour early, without reaching a verdict. They return Monday morning.

A coalition of media organizati­ons, including The Associated Press, filed a motion requesting the names of jurors as well as access to sealed transcript­s of bench conference­s that have occurred during the three-week trial.

Jury lists are presumed to be public unless a judge articulate­s a reason for keeping them secret.

Ellis said during a hearing Friday afternoon he is concerned for the “peace and safety of the jurors.”

“I’ve received criticism and threats,” Ellis said. “I imagine they would, too.”

The judge said he is currently under the protection of U.S. marshals. He declined to delve into specifics but said he’s been taken aback by the level of interest in the trial.

Also Friday, President Donald Trump issued a fresh defence of Manafort, calling him a “very good person.”

Manafort is accused of hiding from the IRS millions that he made advising Russia-backed politician­s in Ukraine and then lying to banks to get loans when the money dried up. He faces 18 felony counts on tax evasion and bank fraud.

“I think the whole Manafort trial is very sad,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“When you look at what’s going on, I think it’s a very sad day for our country,” he said. “He worked for me for a very short period of time. But you know what, he happens to be a very good person and I think it’s very sad what they’ve done to Paul Manafort.”

The financial fraud trial is the first courtroom test of the ongoing Russia probe led by special counsel Robert Mueller. While allegation­s of collusion are still being investigat­ed, evidence of bank fraud and tax evasion unearthed during the probe has cast doubt on the integrity of Trump’s closest advisers during the campaign.

But Manafort’s fate was far from clear. The case calls on the dozen jurors to follow the complexiti­es of foreign bank accounts and shell companies, loan regulation­s and tax rules. It exposed details about the lavish lifestyle of the one-time political insider, including a $15,000 jacket made of ostrich leather and $900,000 spent at a boutique retailer in New York via internatio­nal wire transfer.

The jury ended its first day of deliberati­ons with a series of questions to the judge, including a request to “redefine” reasonable doubt. The questions came after roughly seven hours of deliberati­on, delivered in a handwritte­n note to Ellis.

Along with the question on reasonable doubt, the jury asked about the list of exhibits, rules for reporting foreign bank accounts and the definition of “shelf companies,” a term used during the trial to describe some of the foreign companies used by Manafort.

Ellis told the jurors they need to rely on their collective memory of the evidence to answer most questions. As for reasonable doubt, he described it as “a doubt based on reason” and told jurors it does not require proof “beyond all doubt.”

Manafort’s defence countered that he wasn’t culpable because he left the particular­s of his finances to others.

“When you follow the trail of Mr. Manafort’s money, it is littered with lies,” prosecutor Greg Andres said in his final argument earlier this week.

In his defence, Manafort’s attorneys told jurors to question the entirety of the prosecutio­n’s case as they sought to tarnish the credibilit­y of Manafort’s longtime protege — and government witness — Rick Gates.

Prosecutor­s say Manafort earned some $60 million consulting for the Russia-backed political party in Ukraine and hid at least $16 million in income from the IRS between 2010 and 2014.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES ?? Kevin Downing, left, Brian Ketcham and Thomas Zehnle, lawyers for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, leave the courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, on Friday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A GETTY IMAGES Kevin Downing, left, Brian Ketcham and Thomas Zehnle, lawyers for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, leave the courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, on Friday.

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