- Lawyers said former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort's upcoming
trial could take as little as two weeks in a recent court filing.
Prosecutors said its case in the second trial set for Sept. 17 will
"last approximately ten to 12 trial days," Special Counsel Robert
Mueller's team of attorneys, digging into Russian interference in the
2016 president election, wrote in a filing Friday evening in U.S.
District Court in the District of Columbia, obtained by Politico.
The defense said its case "will require between three to four trial days."
Manafort, 69, faces seven counts in the upcoming D.C. case, including
charges of conspiracy against the United States, money laundering, tax
fraud, failure to file reports of foreign financial assets, serving as
an unregistered foreign agent, making false and misleading statements
under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, and witness tampering. The
witness tampering charges were added a couple months ago along with
charges against Konstantin Kilimnik for allegedly being an accomplice.
The second trial will delve deeper into Manafort's political work from
2006 to 2017, during which he allegedly made $30 million as a consultant
for pro-Russian politicians in Ukraine, the Washington Post reported.
Manafort has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.
"Should the defendant testify in the upcoming trial, the government
intends to offer for purpose of impeachment the defendant's prior
convictions," prosecutors wrote in the filing, referring to his first
case in Virginia, where he was found guilty Tuesday on eight counts out
of 18 counts he faced.
The eight counts in Virginia included five tax fraud charges, one charge
of hiding foreign bank accounts and two counts of bank fraud. The
verdict came after four days of deliberations during which the panel of
six men and six women indicated it had difficulty reaching a consensus
on 10 other counts. District Court Judge T.S. Ellis III declared a
mistrial on those 10 other charges after jury became deadlocked.
The charges the jury were deadlocked on included three counts of not
filing a form to report a foreign bank account and seven counts of
committing bank fraud or conspiring to commit bank fraud.
The indictment -- filed in Virginia in February -- accused him and
business associate Rick Gates of lying to banks about their business
income in order to get more than $20 million in loans.
Manafort faces up to 80 years in federal prison on the eight criminal counts.
A verdict formed released Thursday showed that there was just one person
holding out from conviction on the 10 other counts, with 11-1 in favor
of conviction. A judge has ordered Mueller's team to notify the court by
next Wednesday if a retrial is planned on the 10 counts in Virginia.
Manafort resigned as Trump's campaign chairman in August 2016 after The
New York Times reported a Ukrainian government corruption probe found
Manafort received nearly $13 million off the books from a pro-Russian
Ukrainian political party.
Manafort has been in jail since June 15, when a federal judge in
Washington, D.C., revoked his $10 million bond in the first indictment
he faced, after accusations of witness tampering. U.S. District Judge
Amy Berman Jackson initially put him on house arrest after he pleaded
not guilty in October.
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