The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Juror loyal to Trump nonetheles­s sees the crimes

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Juror No. 0302 may not have sought fame, but Paula Duncan will long be remembered in connection with Paul Manafort, whom she and 11 others convicted on eight counts of financial crime.

What makes Duncan memorable, besides her being the only juror to speak out since the trial ended, is that she’s a die-hard, MAGA-capwearing President Trump supporter. She agrees with Trump’s assessment that the special counsel investigat­ion into Russian collusion is a “witch hunt.” She says she’ll vote for Trump again in 2020.

And she wanted Manafort, Donald Trump’s former campaign manager, to be innocent, but the evidence and the boxes full of documents convinced her otherwise.

“Finding Mr. Manafort guilty was hard for me,” she said during a recent Fox News interview. “I really wanted him to be innocent, but he wasn’t. That’s the part of a juror; you have to have due diligence and deliberate and look at the evidence and come up with an informed and intelligen­t decision, which I did.”

But for one hold-out juror, Manafort would have been convicted of 10 other counts, Duncan said. The 12th juror couldn’t get beyond a reasonable doubt on the other counts, according to Duncan, which contribute­d to four days of tense, emotional deliberati­ons.

In other revelation­s during various media stops, Duncan was scornful of prosecutin­g attorneys, who, she said, seemed bored and appeared to catnap during the trial. She was disgusted by the prosecutio­n’s star witness, Rick Gates, Manafort’s former business partner who entered a plea deal in which he agreed to testify against Manafort. She echoed Trump’s opinion about turncoats, saying that Gates “deserves a special place in hell.” Trump himself recently said that flipping “almost ought to be illegal.”

Duncan said she and the other jurors ignored Gates’s testimony as not credible and focused instead on the paperwork, reading boxes of documents. Pause here for a round of applause for jurors for their hard work and commitment to an unbiased verdict.

However.

Even an ideal juror can be blind to facts beyond the courtroom. In what seemed a reflexive nod to Trumpism, Duncan couldn’t end her media tour without tipping her hand and taking a jab at special counsel Robert Mueller.

Contrary to Trump’s fleeting moment of compassion, Manafort is not “a very good person.” He’s a crook in a $15,000 suit. So is Gates, who not only conspired with Manafort to rob others but also stole from Manafort. And so is Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen, who pled guilty Tuesday to violating campaign finance laws when arranging payments to two women (a porn star and a former Playboy model) who claimed to have had an affair with pre-president Trump years ago, so they’d keep quiet during the election.

Mueller, meanwhile, muddles on as one dastardly deed-doer after another flips for immunity.

It would seem, therefore, that the witch-hunt may be nearing a close. Regardless of whether Mueller can establish Russian collusion, he has contribute­d significan­tly to the health of the republic by doing what Trump couldn’t. He’s draining the swamp.

Surely, Duncan wouldn’t prefer people like Manafort and Cohen to continue their criminal activities? Or would she prefer the Trump fantasy that all these miscreants attached themselves to Trump’s good name for nefarious purposes and turned tail when the going got rough?

As in the Manafort case, the evidence — of campaign corruption, if not more — is piling up.

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