The Sentinel-Record

Manafort chooses not to testify as defense rests its case

- CHAD DAY MATTHEW BARAKAT

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Paul Manafort’s defense rested its case Tuesday without calling any witnesses in the former Trump campaign chairman’s tax evasion and bank fraud trial. Manafort himself chose not to testify.

The decision not to call witnesses clears the way for the jury to hear closing arguments in the first trial to emerge from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion. Those arguments are scheduled for Wednesday morning.

Manafort is accused of hiding millions of dollars in income he received advising Ukrainian politician­s. The defense has tried to blame Manafort’s financial mistakes on his former deputy, Rick Gates. Defense attorneys have called Gates a liar, philandere­r and embezzler as they’ve sought to undermine his testimony.

Manafort’s decision not to testify and not to call witnesses was announced by his attorney, Kevin Downing, before the jury on Tuesday afternoon. Asked by U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III whether he wished to testify in his defense, Manafort responded: “No, sir.”

The announceme­nt came after a more than two-hour hearing that was closed to the public. The judge has not given any explanatio­n for the sealed proceeding, only noting that a transcript of it would become public after Manafort’s case concludes.

After announcing that they were resting their case, Downing told reporters outside the courthouse that they did so because they believe “the government has not met its burden of proof.”

Also Tuesday, Ellis rejected a defense motion that the case should be dismissed on those same grounds. Manafort’s lawyers asked the judge to toss out all the charges, but they focused in particular on four bank-fraud charges.

The government says Manafort hid at least $16 million in income from the IRS between 2010 and 2014 by disguising the money he earned advising politician­s in Ukraine as loans and hiding it in foreign banks. Then, after his money in Ukraine dried up, they allege he defrauded banks by lying about his income on loan applicatio­ns and concealing other financial informatio­n, such as mortgages.

Manafort’s lawyers argued there is no way that one of the banks, Federal Savings Bank, could have been defrauded because its chairman, Stephen Calk, knew full well that Manafort’s finances were in disarray but approved the loan to Manafort anyway. Witnesses testified that Calk pushed the loans through because he wanted a post in the Trump administra­tion.

Ellis, in making his ruling, said the defense made a “significan­t” argument, but he ultimately ruled the question “is an issue for the jury.”

Prosecutor­s rested their case on Monday, closing two weeks of a testimony in which they introduced a trove of documentar­y evidence as they sought to prove Manafort’s guilt on 18 separate criminal counts. The prosecutio­n depicted Manafort as using the millions of dollars hidden in offshore accounts to fund a luxurious lifestyle.

The case against Manafort does not relate to any allegation­s of Russian election interferen­ce or possible coordinati­on with the Trump campaign, the main thrust of Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Still, the proceeding­s have drawn President Donald Trump’s attention — and prompted tweets — as the president has worked to undermine the standing of the Mueller investigat­ion in the public square.

Trump has distanced himself from Manafort, who led the campaign from May to August 2016 with Gates at his side. Gates struck a plea deal with prosecutor­s and has provided much of the drama of the trial so far.

Gates testified that he helped Manafort commit crimes in an effort to lower his tax bill and fund his lavish lifestyle. During testimony, Gates was also forced to admit embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from Manafort and conducting an extramarit­al affair.

After jurors were excused on Tuesday, lawyers for both sides conferred with the judge in open court on the language Ellis will use to instruct the jurors in their deliberati­ons.

The only dispute was about what jurors should be told about how to interpret questions and comments interjecte­d by the judge during the course of the trial.

Prosecutor­s, who have been frustrated by Ellis’ tendency to interrupt and chide prosecutor­s in front of the jury, sought stronger language to make clear that jurors do not need to adopt any opinions expressed by the judge.

At one point in the discussion, Ellis asked prosecutor­s whether they thought he had ever interjecte­d his own opinions. Prosecutor Greg Andres, who has had the strongest confrontat­ions with Ellis, said “yes.”

Ellis eventually came up with compromise language that was agreeable to both sides.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? MANAFORT: Defense attorney Kevin Downing, second from right, makes a statement to the media after leaving federal court in the trial of former Donald Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, in Alexandria, Va., Tuesday. The defense has rested their case. With Downing are members of the defense team for Manafort, from left, Thomas Zehnle, Jay Nanavati and Brian Ketcham.
The Associated Press MANAFORT: Defense attorney Kevin Downing, second from right, makes a statement to the media after leaving federal court in the trial of former Donald Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, in Alexandria, Va., Tuesday. The defense has rested their case. With Downing are members of the defense team for Manafort, from left, Thomas Zehnle, Jay Nanavati and Brian Ketcham.

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