The Columbus Dispatch

Manafort’s fate now up to the jury

- By Chad Day, Matthew Barakat and Stephen Braun

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Paul Manafort lied to keep himself flush with cash and later to maintain his luxurious lifestyle when his income dropped off, prosecutor­s told jurors Wednesday in closing arguments at the former Trump campaign chairman’s financial-fraud trial. Jurors will begin deliberati­ons Thursday.

In his defense, 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.

The conflictin­g strategies played out over several hours of argument that capped nearly three weeks of testimony in the first courtroom test for special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion. The verdict, now in the hands of 12 jurors, will provide a measure of the special counsel’s ability to make charges stick.

And while the case doesn’t involve allegation­s of Russian election interferen­ce or possible coordinati­on by the Trump campaign, it has been closely watched by President Donald Trump as he seeks to publicly undermine Mueller’s probe through a barrage of attacks on Twitter and through his lawyers.

In the closing arguments, prosecutor Greg Andres said the government’s case boils down to “Mr. Manafort and his lies.”

“When you follow the trail of Mr. Manafort’s money, it is littered with lies,” Andres said as he made his final argument that the jury should find Manafort guilty of 18 felony counts.

Attorneys for Manafort, who is accused of tax evasion and bank fraud, spoke next, arguing against his guilt by saying he left the particular­s of his finances to other people, including his former deputy Rick Gates.

Neither Manafort nor Gates has been charged in connection with his Trump campaign work. But Mueller’s legal team says it discovered Manafort

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