https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1024821385946791937.html
Thread on Manafort's opening statement. Gates done it!
The FBI previously investigated Manafort starting circa 2014 when he was wiretapped. Manafort was previously interviewed by the FBI and provided documents. The investigation reputedly was ended in 2016 because of lack of evidence.BMX Bandit said:
Where is the evidence Rosenstein was involved in that?
You're right. My bad. Rosenstein didn't scuttle the previous investigation & associated FISA from 2014-early 2016. I was thinking he was in office in 2016. There apparently was a second FISA on Manafort beginning circa August 2016, and it probably continued on into Rosenstein's tenure and was passed on to Mueller's investigation.BMX Bandit said:
Thanks for the link. But that doesn't answer my question. Rosenstein was in Maryland in 2014. Aggiehawg & I want to know what the "Rosenstein shut down the Manafort investigation" line is based on
drcrinum said:You're right. My bad. Rosenstein didn't scuttle the previous investigation & associated FISA from 2014-early 2016. I was thinking he was in office in 2016. There apparently was a second FISA on Manafort beginning circa August 2016, and it probably continued on into Rosenstein's tenure and was passed on to Mueller's investigation.BMX Bandit said:
Thanks for the link. But that doesn't answer my question. Rosenstein was in Maryland in 2014. Aggiehawg & I want to know what the "Rosenstein shut down the Manafort investigation" line is based on
BMX, the only possible intersection for Manafort and Rosenstein was from 2001-2005 when Rosenstein was Principal Deputy Assistant for the Tax Division. By July, 2005 he was USA in Maryland. So there might have been a time when they crossed paths there but it sure as hell wasn't 8 years ago.BMX Bandit said:
Thanks for the link. But that doesn't answer my question. Rosenstein was in Maryland in 2014. Aggiehawg & I want to know what the "Rosenstein shut down the Manafort investigation" line is based on
Quote:
The government is "allowed to introduce amounts of money he had," Ellis said. "What I have not permitted is to gild the lily."
Have to agree. Team Mueller has presented this case bass-ackwards. Prove the income with bank records, prove they don't match his tax returns, end with what he spent the money on to piss off the jury and hammer it home in closing statements. That's a narrative a jury can follow easily, as it would imply motive for the acts they have previously seen presented. His lavish lifestyle. Greedy bastage.Quote:
The judge then jabbed at special counsel Robert S. Mueller III's team of prosecutors, saying "I might have started there had I been the government, but that's your choice."
Media outlets are saying he does, however to date there are only FIVE Use Immunity deals filed on the docket and Gates isn't one of themMouthBQ98 said:
Does Gates have a deal, or is he also subject to prosecution for involvement?
Have you seen any plea agreement on paper?BMX Bandit said:
Gates has a plea agreement. He wouldnt be on the use immunity list.
LOL. No s*** Sherlock. This ain't an episode of Perry Mason. If they are not admitted as evidence then you can't ask about them, other than establishing foundation for their admission.Quote:
Prosecutors wrote that asking witnesses about the documents, without showing them to jurors, "could expose the government to appellate risk."
i am not an attorney, but does this suggest that they indicted Manafort upon the appearance if tax fraud, since he was never audited?RoscoePColtrane said:
Mueller filed another amended Exhibits list again this morning
They also filed this
The jury pays attention to the judge, quite simply. There's also the matter of jury instructions and which counts the judge deems enough evidence has been adduced for them to be submitted to the jury for deliberation. The judge can enter a directed verdict on those counts, precluding the jury. Not that unusual.fasthorses05 said:
This question may sound a little odd, but why would it matter if the Prosection angers Ellis? I'm not talking about angry enough for contempt charges, which he isnt going to do, but it's a jury trial. They're the one who will decide guilt or innocence.
I heard several times in the last three months that it's unwise to piss off Ellis, which I thought made sense. This morning, I wondered, since it's a jury trial, and the judge is highly unlikely to throw out contempt.
Candidly, if one, or both, sets of counsel rolled their eyes at my comments as a judge, I'd probably go contempt right there. But, I know nothing of court room drama and protocol.
I haven't read the cases cited, but they seem to be about using civil remedies and penalties to muddy the waters about criminal penalties. Manafort's team is asking "why didn't they audit", not, "why file criminal charges instead of handling it as a civil matter".aggiehawg said:
Whiny little bastages, aren't they? Although the law is there to support the exclusion, there is a complicating factor. The star witness, Gates, was supposedly embezzling millions from Manafort that an IRS audit would have likely caught.
FTR: Not saying Gates did or did not embezzle, just saying there is another avenue that might be opened by Gates testimony. We'll see.
I here's the 93 page Opinion by Judge HowellQuote:
Judge Beryl A. Howell wrote that Mueller's power "falls well within the boundaries the Constitution permits," because he was supervised by an official who was himself accountable to the president. She wrote that "multiple statutes" authorized Mueller's appointment, and Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, who named him to the post, "had power to do so."
The opinion came in response to a legal challenge from witness Andrew Miller who was arguing he could not be compelled to testify before a grand jury. The witness argued that Mueller wielded too much power and was appointed unlawfully. In the witness's view, Mueller should have been nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate, and there was no statute giving Rosenstein the authority to appoint him.
The judge makes many small decisions during the course of the trial. He can make it more difficult, or easier, for you to prove your case. Life is easier if you don't piss off the judge.fasthorses05 said:
This question may sound a little odd, but why would it matter if the Prosection angers Ellis? I'm not talking about angry enough for contempt charges, which he isnt going to do, but it's a jury trial. They're the one who will decide guilt or innocence.
I heard several times in the last three months that it's unwise to piss off Ellis, which I thought made sense. This morning, I wondered, since it's a jury trial, and the judge is highly unlikely to throw out contempt.
Candidly, if one, or both, sets of counsel rolled their eyes at my comments as a judge, I'd probably go contempt right there. But, I know nothing of court room drama and protocol.