The Mercury News

Manafort lawyers go on attack against Gates

- By Chris Megerian and Eliza Fawcett

ALEXANDRIA, VA. >> Paul Manafort’s attorneys mounted a concerted effort Tuesday to beat back criminal charges against President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman, hammering again and again at the credibilit­y of Richard Gates, Manafort’s former business partner and confidante.

Gates faced a withering cross-examinatio­n by Manafort’s lawyers, who insisted that he had told so many lies that he could not keep track of them all. They portrayed him as an admitted embezzler who had siphoned money from Manafort’s company and who could not be trusted.

At one point, they accused the government’s star witness of living a “secret life” in London, where he had conducted an extramarit­al affair and kept an apartment for their trysts.

“After all the lies you’ve told and all the fraud you’ve committed, you expect the jury to believe you?” Kevin M. Downing, one of Manafort’s lawyers, demanded.

“Yes,” Gates responded. “I’m here to tell the truth. I took responsibi­lity for my actions.”

In two days of often-riveting testimony, Gates told the court that he had helped Manafort use a shadowy network of offshore shell companies and bank accounts to avoid paying millions of dollars in U.S. taxes. He also admitted to stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from Manafort’s company while they were advising politician­s in Ukraine.

Gates worked for Manafort for years and was indicted with him for multiple financial crimes in October as part of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and other crimes. It’s the first trial on charges brought by Mueller.

The financial charges against Gates were dropped after he agreed to cooperate with prosecutor­s in February, and pleaded guilty to conspiracy and making false statements. He is expected back on the witness stand on Wednesday.

Prosecutor­s are a little more than half through presenting their case against Manafort for tax evasion, bank fraud and conspiracy.

Although defense lawyers also grilled previous prosecutio­n witnesses, it was clear Tuesday that they had saved their fiercest attacks for Gates in hopes of convincing the jury that he could not be trusted.

“When did you first start providing false and misleading informatio­n to the office of special counsel?” Downing said as he began about two hours of cross-examinatio­n.

At another point, when Gates stumbled over a question about his statements to the special counsel’s office, Downing pounced. “Have they confronted you with so many lies that you can’t remember it?” he asked

Gates sought to maintain the same calm tone he had used with prosecutor­s, even when the crossexami­nation dipped into salacious territory. Gates barely glanced at Manafort, who stared in his direction most of the day.

“There was another Richard Gates, isn’t that right? A secret Richard Gates?” Downing asked. He added, “As part of your secret life, did you maintain a flat, is that what you call it in London?”

Gates admitted there was “a period of life when I had another relationsh­ip.”

Downing also suggested that Gates stole money from Trump’s inaugurati­on committee, where he served as deputy chairman, as well as from Manafort’s company.

Gates did not deny it.

“I don’t recall,” he said. “It’s possible.”

It was clear from the trial’s first day that Gates would be crucial to Manafort’s legal defense. In opening statements to the jury, his lawyers had talked about pinning the alleged crimes on Gates.

But Gates also has been key to the special counsel’s office, a co-conspirato­r who prosecutor­s say could give a first-hand account of Manafort’s alleged elaborate tax evasion and bank fraud scheme.

Gates has served as a decoder of documents for the jury, explaining which initials referred to which Ukrainian businessme­n who had funded Manafort’s lucrative consulting work there. And since Gates often had communicat­ed directly with Manafort, he could testify to his boss’ intentions.

“Did you provide false informatio­n to a bank?” asked Greg Andres, one of the prosecutor­s working for Mueller.

“Yes,” Gates replied. “Did Manafort know?” “Yes.”

“How did you know?” “Because he requested certain informatio­n to be changed.”

Gates’ testimony illustrate­d the vast machinery that he and Manafort allegedly used to evade taxes. They worked with a lawyer in Cyprus, Kypros Chrysostom­ides, nicknamed “Dr. K,” who arranged shell companies and other entities there. Later, Gates helped set up new accounts in the Caribbean.

These shell companies did nothing except funnel money, Gates said, and some of the cash was used to pay for Manafort’s lavish lifestyle, while avoiding taxes.

“Did they sell any products?” Andres asked. “No.”

“Did they have any employees?”

“No.”

 ?? DANA VERKOUTERE­N VIA AP ?? A sketch depicts Rick Gates, right, as he is cross-examined Tuesday by defense lawyer Kevin Downing during the trial of Paul Manafort on bank fraud and tax evasion.
DANA VERKOUTERE­N VIA AP A sketch depicts Rick Gates, right, as he is cross-examined Tuesday by defense lawyer Kevin Downing during the trial of Paul Manafort on bank fraud and tax evasion.

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