Texarkana Gazette

Prosecutor­s say Manafort believed he was above law

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ALEXANDRIA, Va.—Paul Manafort orchestrat­ed a multimilli­on-dollar conspiracy to evade U.S. tax and banking laws, leaving behind a trail of lies as he lived a lavish lifestyle, prosecutor­s said Tuesday as they laid out their case against the former Trump campaign chairman.

Prosecutor Uzo Asonye told the jury during his opening statement that Manafort considered himself above the law as he funneled tens of millions of dollars through offshore accounts. That “secret income” was used to pay for personal expenses such as a $21,000 watch, a $15,000 jacket made of ostrich and more than $6 million worth of real estate paid for in cash, Asonye said.

“A man in this courtroom believed the law did not apply to him—not tax law, not banking law,” Asonye said as he sketched out the evidence gathered by special counsel Robert Mueller’s team in Manafort’s bank fraud and tax evasion trial.

Manafort’s trial is the first arising from Mueller’s investigat­ion into potential ties between Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia. It opened with extraordin­ary anticipati­on amid unresolved questions about whether Trump associates coordinate­d with the Kremlin to tip the election in the president’s favor.

But it was clear from the outset that the case would not address that question: Prosecutor­s did not once reference Manafort’s work for the Trump campaign nor mention Mueller’s broader and ongoing investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce. Mueller was not present in the courtroom.

Manafort, the lone American charged by Mueller who has opted to stand trial instead of cooperate with prosecutor­s, was described by his defense lawyer as a hugely successful internatio­nal political consultant who left the details of his finances to others.

He relied on a team of financial experts to keep track of the millions of dollars he earned from his Ukrainian political work and to ensure that that money was being properly reported, said attorney Thomas Zehnle. He especially trusted business associate Rick Gates, who pleaded guilty in Mueller’s investigat­ion and is now the government’s star witness. But that trust was misplaced, Zehnle said in an opening statement that made clear that underminin­g the credibilit­y of Gates—a former Trump campaign aide who spent years working for Manafort in Ukraine—is central to the defense strategy.

Zehnle warned jurors that Gates could not be trusted and was the type of witness who would say anything he could to save himself from a lengthy prison sentence and a crippling financial penalty.

“Money’s coming in fast. It’s a lot, and Paul Manafort trusted that Rick Gates was keeping track of it,” Zehnle said. “That’s what Rick Gates was being paid to do.”

Manafort, who has been jailed for nearly two months, wore a black suit and appeared fully engaged in his defense, whispering with his attorneys during jury selection and scribbling notes as the prosecutio­n began its opening statement.

The government’s first witness, Democratic strategist Tad Devine, testified about his collaborat­ions with Manafort on behalf of Ukrainian presidenti­al candidate Viktor Yanukovych and his Party of Regions. Devine testified that Manafort ran a tightly discipline­d, profession­al campaign that contribute­d to his candidate’s victory.

Central to the government’s case are allegation­s that Manafort funneled more than $60 million in proceeds from his Ukrainian political consulting through offshore accounts, including in Cyprus, and hid a “significan­t” portion of it from the IRS. He created “bogus” loans, falsified documents and lied to his tax preparer and bookkeeper to conceal the money, which he obtained from Ukrainian oligarchs through a series of shell company transfers and later from fraudulent­ly obtained bank loans in the U.S., prosecutor­s said.

But Zehnle said there was no evidence that Manafort ever intended to deceive the IRS. He denied allegation­s that Manafort had tried to conceal his earnings by storing money in bank accounts in Cyprus, saying that arrangemen­t was not of Manafort’s doing but was instead the preferred method of payment of the supporters of the pro-Russia Ukrainian political party who were paying his consulting fees.

Defense lawyers also sought to address head-on Manafort’s wealth and the images of a gaudy lifestyle that jurors are expected to see. “Paul Manafort travels in circles that most people will never know and he’s gotten handsomely rewarded for it,” Zehnle said. “We do not dispute that.”

The judge even interrupte­d the prosecutor during his opening statements to caution him against suggesting there was something criminal about being a multimilli­onaire.

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