The Sentinel-Record

Ex- Edwards aide: Donors’ cash went into NC house

- MICHAEL BIESECKER

GREENSBORO, N. C. — John Edwards’ ex- aide acknowledg­ed Thursday that much of nearly $ 1 million in campaign supporters’ cash went to build his North Carolina dream house, not to buy the silence of the presidenti­al candidate’s pregnant mistress.

Young testified for a fourth straight day at Edwards’ campaign finance fraud trial, peppered with questions from Edwards attorney Abbe Lowell about the money from two donors that flowed into personal accounts controlled by Young and his wife.

Young has said he took secret payments from wealthy donors at Edwards’ direction to help conceal the presidenti­al contender’s affair with Rielle Hunter and keep his 2008 presidenti­al campaign viable.

Young said the checks secretly provided by a then- 96year- old heiress were mixed with the couple’s other funds as they built their $ 1.5 million hilltop house on 10 acres near Chapel Hill, N. C. Young often deferred questions on the payments to his wife, Cheri, saying “my wife is the one who handles the finances in our family.”

Young’s testimony is considered key to the prosecutio­n’s case that while campaignin­g for the White House, Edwards directed a scheme to use the money from the heiress and a Texas lawyer to conceal his affair with Hunter.

Young initially claimed he was the father of Hunter’s daughter and took her into his home with his wife.

Lowell asked Young about numerous changes to the constructi­on of the North Carolina house after the payments started coming in, including a pool, home theater and extra bedroom.

At the time, Young and his wife were living with Hunter in a $ 20,000 a month rental mansion along the California coast, paid for by a wealthy lawyer who served as Edwards’ campaign finance chairman.

“We were living out in Santa Barbara and we lost our sense of perspectiv­e,” Young said on the witness stand. “The house became more and more extravagan­t.”

Edwards denies knowing about the $ 725,000 in checks from heiress Rachel “Bunny” Mellon sent to Young through her interior designer. In addition to the maximum $ 2,300 to the Edwards campaign allowed by law, Mellon also provided another $ 6.4 million to a political action committee and anti- poverty foundation tied to Edwards.

A second pool of money at issue in the case involves another $ 200,000 given by the wealthy lawyer, Fred Baron. Records shown at trial show Baron paid for private jets, five- star hotels and other expenses incurred by Hunter and the Youngs while they were in hiding. Baron died in 2008 of cancer at age 61.

Young testified Thursday he had sent Baron an invoice for many of the expenses the aide had already paid for with money from Mellon; he said Baron then wired another $ 325,000 to the builder constructi­ng the Young’s house.

The questions about the cash from Mellon funneled to Young’s house came towards the end of a full day of crossexami­nation, in which Lowell sought to undermine the exaide’s credibilit­y and paint him as a pathologic­al liar.

Lowell pointed out inconsiste­ncies with Young’s account of the scandal at trial this week and in multiple other accounts, including grand jury testimony and his 2010 tell- all book about Edwards.

Referring to the timing of a conversati­on with a law partner of Edwards, Lowell asked, “And you made that up too, didn’t you?” “No, sir,” Young responded. Lowell asked Young whether he first learned Hunter, was pregnant in May 2007, as his book says: injune 2007, as he testified; or in early July, a date backed by phone records and Hunter’s medical records.

The timeline issues could challenge the accounts of conversati­ons Young said he had with Edwards in a car discussing who to ask for money to help take care of Hunter and discussing Hunter’s pregnancy.

Young said he couldn’t recall the exact date for either event, one of many times on Thursday he admitted he couldn’t remember the timing or sequence of events to which he had testified.

Lowell asked Young to recount his story of how Ed- wards had asked him to claim paternity of Hunter’s child on December 13, 2007. Young had said the phone conversati­on occurred while he was sitting in his car and had looked over to the passenger seat to see a copy of Newsweek magazine with Edwards on the front.

The defense then flashed a photo of that magazine cover up on the screens visible to the jury. It was dated two weeks later.

Seated at the defense table, Edwards appeared more upbeat than in past days, frequently smiling and whispering with his attorneys as Young testified.

Lowell also challenged Young on which amount of money Mellon said she would provide over time to help make Edwards president — $ 1.2 million, as he testified this week, or $ 900,000 and $ 925,000, figures he had previously given.

Young said the number he provided this week is the correct one.

Later in the day, Lowell asked Young whether $ 1.2 million was also the exact amount of the original constructi­on contract for his house. Young replied that it was just a coincidenc­e, and that $ 1.2 million was also the price for which they had sold their previous lakefront home in Raleigh.

Lowell’s cross examinatio­n of Young will continue Friday.

 ??  ?? TRIAL: Former presidenti­al candidate and U. S. Sen. John Edwards arrives outside federal court on April 12 in Greensboro, N. C. Andrew Young retook the witness stand for a fourth straight day at Edwards’ criminal trial in a North Carolina courthouse...
TRIAL: Former presidenti­al candidate and U. S. Sen. John Edwards arrives outside federal court on April 12 in Greensboro, N. C. Andrew Young retook the witness stand for a fourth straight day at Edwards’ criminal trial in a North Carolina courthouse...

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