Chicago Sun-Times

Manafort judge has sharp wit, tongue

- BY CALVIN WOODWARD

WASHINGTON — “I’m not in the theater business,” Judge T.S. Ellis asserted during jury selection in Paul Manafort’s financial fraud trial. “You have to be better-looking for that.”

Objection, Your Honor.

The trial of President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman has plenty of drama and it’s coming from the judge.

Easily exasperate­d, and with a sharp wit, the U.S. district judge called out attorneys for both sides this week when he heard they’d been rolling their eyes, apparently at him. The judge judged their expression­s to mean, “Why do we have to put up with this idiot judge?”

Privately, lawyers who have appeared before him say Thomas Selby Ellis III likes to be seen as the smartest person in the courtroom, not a huge leap for a judge. With his Princeton-Harvard-Oxford education and experience spanning consequent­ial cases in an era of war and terrorism — “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh’s among them — Ellis is known to cut lawyers down to size, sometimes subtly, sometimes not so much.

That’s what happened when Justice Department attorney Michael Dreeben, a legend in legal circles, appeared at a pre-trial hearing in the Manafort case. As soon as Dreeben began making his arguments for the prosecutio­n, Ellis cut in — “Would you spell your name for the record?” That’s not a question he asks others appearing in his Washington-area Eastern District of Virginia court.

In the Manafort trial, Ellis, 78, is trying to keep a handle on a case that centers on the Trump associate’s consulting work for wealthy Ukrainian clients and whether he fraudulent­ly hid millions from banks and the IRS. It stems from special counsel Robert Mueller’s broad investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election and any collusion between Russians and the Trump campaign.

It’s not about Trump or Russia, but that matter is the elephant in the room.

In the pretrial hearing where Dreeben’s presence made waves, Ellis supposed that the Manafort case was really about the government trying to make the defendant “sing” on Russia and the Trump campaign. Prosecutor­s “don’t really care” about Manafort, he said, but instead care about getting informatio­n from him to go after Trump.

That delighted the president, who called the judge “really something very special” in an NRA speech in May.

But Trump’s opinion about people can turn on a dime, and this week, without identifyin­g the judge, he blasted the decision by Ellis to house Manafort in solitary confinemen­t, a move the prosecutio­n says was to keep him safe. Trump suggested the justice system might be treating Manafort more harshly than it did Al Capone, the legendary mob boss who went crazy in Alcatraz.

An immigrant from Bogota, Colombia, Ellis came to the bench in 1987, nominated by President Ronald Reagan after an early career as a Navy aviator in the 1960s and a lawyer in private practice in the 1970s.

He’s welcomed new generation­s of immigrants as the presiding judge at naturaliza­tion ceremonies, addressing Spanish-speakers among them in his and their native language.

In 2002, Ellis sentenced Lindh to 20 years in prison without parole in a plea deal for the American who fought with the Taliban, telling him, “You made a bad choice.”

In the Manafort trial, Ellis has shown impatience with meandering arguments from either side while being tougher on the prosecutio­n out of the gate.

When prosecutor­s addressed Manafort’s relationsh­ip with Ukrainian “oligarchs,” he told them to knock it off. Prosecutor­s are inferring that Manafort associates himself with “despicable people and therefore he’s despicable,” he said. “That’s not the American way.”

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