New York Daily News

Manafort gilt-y

Greedy ex-Don aide nailed on 8 fraud counts

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

Paul Manafort is going to prison.

A Virginia jury found President Trump’s luxury-loving former campaign chairman guilty Tuesday of eight counts of tax and bank fraud.

While the jury of six men and six women deadlocked on another 10 charges, the conviction is a major victory for special counsel Robert Mueller and a blow to the President’s claims that the investigat­ion is nothing more than a “witch hunt.”

Manafort was convicted of hiding million of dollars in offshore accounts and lying to obtain loans after the income he earned working for pro-Russian Ukrainian politician­s dried up.

Prosecutor­s, after entering more than 300 pieces of evidence and presenting 27 witnesses over nearly three weeks, said during closing arguments that the case simply boiled down to “Mr. Manafort and his lies.”

The 69-year-old GOP strategist lied to the IRS and banks to maintain his luxurious lifestyle, they argued. He also lied to procure millions in bank loans when his internatio­nal income began to drop off.

While jurors agreed, the President did not.

“I feel very badly for Paul Manafort,” Trump said as he arrived in West Virginia for a rally. “Paul Manafort’s a good man. He was with Ronald Reagan. He was with a lot of different people over the years. And I feel very sad about that.”

Trump went on to denounce Mueller and distance himself from the conviction.

“It doesn’t involve me ... it’s a very sad thing,” Trump said, adding that the Manafort case “has nothing to do with” Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

“This is a witch hunt, and it’s a disgrace. This has nothing to do — it started out looking for Russians in our campaign, and there were none,” he added.

Manafort was convicted on five counts of filing false tax returns, two counts of bank fraud and one count of failing to report a foreign bank account. He faces more than 60 years in prison.

Judge T.S. Ellis declared a mistrial on the other charges.

Manafort’s defense team presented no witnesses and told jurors to question the prosecutio­n’s case as well as the credibilit­y of their client’s erstwhile protege Rick Gates, who served as a star government witness.

Gates, who worked for the Trump campaign, transition team and then a super PAC designed to promote the President’s agenda, was indicted alongside Manafort late last year.

He accepted a plea deal in February.

Prosecutor­s used a dramatic array of evidence to portray Manafort as a man obsessed with money. They told jurors of his lavish lifestyle, which included a $15,000 ostrich skin jacket, luxury cars, home renovation­s and landscapin­g at his Hamptons home and other properties.

Manafort used more than 30 foreign bank accounts in Cyprus, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and the United Kingdom to evade U.S. taxes on more than $15 million.

The Alexandria, Va., trial is the first stemming from Mueller’s probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election. During the course of the investigat­ion, prosecutor­s discovered the years-long scheme Manafort ran in order to avoid paying taxes.

Manafort, who is set to face a second trial in Washington next month for related money laundering charges, can appeal his conviction — and could also be retried on the 10 charges that resulted in a mistrial.

Manafort’s attorney Kevin Downing said his client is “disappoint­ed he is not getting acquittals all the way through.”

“He is evaluating all of his options at this point,” Downing added.

While Manafort’s work for the President didn’t feature prominentl­y in his first trial, his connection­s to the Trump orbit even after he left the campaign became apparent. Manafort reached out to Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner during the transition looking for help getting a job in the administra­tion for a banker who’d loaned him millions.

“On it!” Kushner responded.

The Manafort verdict came down Tuesday minutes after the President’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty in Manhattan Federal Court to campaign finance violations, including payoffs to women alleging affairs with Trump, bank fraud and tax fraud.

Aside from Manafort’s conviction, Mueller’s investigat­ion has brought charges against four people affiliated with Trump’s campaign or administra­tion; 13 Russian nationals; 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers; three Kremlin-linked companies, and two others.

Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington executive director Noah Bookbinder, a former federal prosecutor, said Manafort’s conviction could be seen as a sign that Mueller’s probe is anything but a “witch hunt.”

“This is just the latest conviction for special counsel Mueller’s investigat­ion, as multiple defendants have already pleaded guilty, and it likely will not be the last. This investigat­ion is moving quickly and effectivel­y, and it will continue bringing us closer to the truth.”

While Manafort ran the President’s campaign for only a few months, the pair have known one another for decades. Manafort long owned a condo in Trump Tower on Fifth Ave. and worked with Trump buddy and political consultant Roger Stone during the 1980s.

The President has attempted to discredit Mueller’s work by repeatedly casting the probe as a “witch hunt.” Earlier this month, he decried the fact that Manafort was jailed while awaiting the outcome of his trial, comparing him to murderous mob boss Al Capone.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ ?? High-living former Trump campaign boss Paul Manafort (left) was convicted on eight charges of tax and bank fraud in Virginia trial, in another big win for special counsel Robert Mueller (above). Jurors deadlocked on 10 other counts against Manafort.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ High-living former Trump campaign boss Paul Manafort (left) was convicted on eight charges of tax and bank fraud in Virginia trial, in another big win for special counsel Robert Mueller (above). Jurors deadlocked on 10 other counts against Manafort.

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