Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Another trial looms for Manafort in D.C.

- MATTHEW BARAKAT Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Stephen Braun of the Associated Press.

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — As jurors weigh Paul Manafort’s fate in a sprawling financial fraud case, President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman still has another trial looming in the nation’s capital — and prosecutor­s there have a whole new set of charges and a huge volume of evidence.

The trial now underway in Alexandria, Va., is the first case brought by special counsel Robert Mueller to go to trial. The jury will return Monday to begin a third day of deliberati­ons on 18 counts, including tax and bank fraud and failure to disclose foreign bank accounts.

In the District of Columbia, Manafort is scheduled to go on trial in September on charges including conspiracy to defraud the United States, failing to register as a foreign agent, money laundering, witness tampering and making false statements.

Neither case involves allegation­s of Russian election interferen­ce or possible coordinati­on by the Trump campaign, which are at the heart of Mueller’s larger investigat­ion. But Trump has expressed a keen interest in Manafort’s fate.

The charges in D.C. could result in an even lengthier sentence than what Manafort faces in Virginia. In a status report filed in February, prosecutor­s did a preliminar­y calculatio­n of how federal sentencing guidelines would apply to Manafort if convicted on all charges. In Virginia, they calculated a sentence of roughly eight to 10 years on the tax fraud charges plus an additional four to five years on the bank fraud. In the District, they calculated a guideline range of 15 to 20 years — and that was before prosecutor­s brought the witness tampering charge.

Those guidelines are only rough estimates and will be officially calculated by a probation officer before sentencing. And sentencing guidelines are not binding on the judge.

The fact that Manafort faces a second trial is entirely of his own choosing. Prosecutor­s preferred to bring all the charges in the District of Columbia, where their investigat­ion is based and where all other defendants have been charged. But prosecutor­s lacked venue to bring the tax and bank-fraud charges against Manafort anywhere but Virginia, where Manafort owns a home.

Prosecutor­s requested that Manafort waive his venue rights so all charges could be brought in D.C., but he refused.

The judge in the Virginia case, T.S. Ellis III, has expressed skeptical opinions about the government’s case from the outset. In a pretrial hearing, he speculated that prosecutor­s only decided to bring charges against Manafort to pressure him to “sing” against Trump. He also questioned the fairness of a special counsel law that has allowed Mueller to commit millions of taxpayer dollars to his investigat­ion.

During the trial, prosecutor­s have been frustrated by comments Ellis has made in front of the jury about the evidence and his frequent exhortatio­ns to move the threeweek trial along at a quicker pace.

Despite those frustratio­ns, prosecutor­s were able to introduce hundreds of documents, including emails from Manafort himself seeming to acknowledg­e some of the financial misdeeds prosecutor­s say are at the heart of the case.

In the District, meanwhile, Manafort will face a judge who has already seen fit to put him in jail ahead of trial. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who will oversee the criminal trial in Washington, ordered Manafort jailed because of concerns about allegation­s he tried to contact two witnesses. Prosecutor­s filed witness tampering charges against him in June.

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