Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutor­s shift focus to fraud charges in Paul Manafort trial

- BY ERIC TUCKER, STEPHEN BRAUN AND CHAD DAY

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — After three days of dramatic and even salacious testimony in the trial of Paul Manafort, prosecutor­s Thursday returned to the nuts and bolts of their case against the former Trump campaign chairman as they sought to show he obtained millions of dollars in bank loans under false pretenses.

Attorneys for special counsel Robert Mueller also got a rare — and narrow — acknowledg­ment from U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III that he likely erred when he angrily confronted them a day earlier over whether he had allowed a witness to watch the trial.

The judge’s comments and detailed testimony about Manafort’s loans opened the eighth day of his trial as prosecutor­s began presenting the bulk of their bank fraud case against him after spending days largely on tax-evasion allegation­s.

On Thursday, a bank employee told jurors how she discovered discrepanc­ies in the informatio­n he put on his loan applicatio­n, including holes in his claims about a New York City property. Melinda James, a Citizens Bank mortgage loan assistant, testified Manafort had told the bank the property would be used as a second residence, but she found it listed as a rental on a real estate website.

In another instance, James said Manafort maintained there were no mortgages on a separate New York property when there actually were. All the while, Manafort signed paperwork indicating he understood he could face criminal or civil penalties if he lied to the bank.

Airbnb executive Darin Evenson also told jurors that one of Manafort’s New York City properties was offered as a rental through much of 2015 and 2016 — a direct contradict­ion of the documents the longtime political consultant submitted to obtain a $3.4 million loan. Another bank employee said the distinctio­n matters because the bank caps loans for rentals at $1 million.

The prosecutio­n has put forward nearly 20 witnesses — including Manafort’s longtime deputy Rick Gates — and a trove of documentar­y evidence as they’ve sought to prove Manafort defrauded banks and concealed millions of dollars in offshore bank accounts from the IRS. But along the way they’ve not only faced an aggressive defense team but a combative relationsh­ip with Ellis.

The judge has subjected the prosecutio­n to repeated tongue-lashings over the pace of their questionin­g, their massive amount of trial exhibits and even their facial expression­s. But on Thursday, Ellis told jurors he went overboard when he erupted on prosecutor­s for allowing an expert witness to remain in the courtroom during the trial.

“Put aside my criticism,” Ellis said, adding: “This robe doesn’t make me anything other than human.”

The judge’s comments on the eighth day of the trial were in response to a written filing by prosecutor­s arguing that Ellis should instruct the jury that he made an error in admonishin­g them during the Wednesday testimony of IRS agent Michael Welch.

Ellis had heatedly confronted prosecutor Uzo Asonye, saying he hadn’t authorized Welch to watch the entirety of the trial. Witnesses are usually excluded from watching unless allowed by the judge.

But in their filing, prosecutor­s attached a transcript showing that in fact Ellis had approved the request a week before. They said his outburst prejudiced the jury by suggesting they had acted improperly and could undermine Welch’s testimony.

Welch had told jurors that Manafort didn’t report at least $16 million on his tax returns between 2010 and 2014. He also said Manafort should have reported multiple foreign bank accounts to the IRS in those years.

Prosecutor­s had asked Ellis to instruct the jury that they hadn’t done anything improper in an attempt to repair any unfair prejudice.

Ellis has repeatedly tussled with prosecutor­s, interrupti­ng them and pressuring them to hurry through their case even during a dramatic three days in which Gates, Manafort’s protégé, implicated his former boss in a years-long financial scheme.

Gates, the government’s star witness in Manafort’s financial fraud trial, testified how, at the behest of his longtime boss, he helped conceal millions of dollars in foreign income and submitted fake mortgage and tax documents.

Defense lawyers have painted Gates as a liar, embezzler and philandere­r, getting him to acknowledg­e an extramarit­al affair and reminding jurors how he falsified hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense reports.

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