Personally if I were trying this case I'd lead with the money records and bring up the lavish lifestyle at the end. Creates a better narrative and can be hammered in closing arguments, pointing to slide after slide of houses, cars, etc. If you want the jury to hate the defendant make them go into deliberations with that being the first thing on their minds.blindey said:Has to be some serious combination of weak and dry if you're calling his tailor right out of the gate.aggiehawg said:
Directed verdict is the term you are looking for. And I agree this strategy is odd, do a little about his lavish lifestyle but then move onto to the nuts and bolts of how he paid for it using his tax returns and bank records.
Laundering money through your tailer is much more clever than laundering money through say.....your dry cleaner.blindey said:
From the linked article:How on earth is this relevant to any crime being prosecuted?Quote:
The trial has recessed for lunch until 1:30 p.m., when prosecutors said they will return and call three more witnesses to the stand, including one of Manafort's suit makers Maximillian Katzman, The Washington Post reported.
Whens lunch said:Laundering money through your tailer is much more clever than laundering money through say.....your dry cleaner.blindey said:
From the linked article:How on earth is this relevant to any crime being prosecuted?Quote:
The trial has recessed for lunch until 1:30 p.m., when prosecutors said they will return and call three more witnesses to the stand, including one of Manafort's suit makers Maximillian Katzman, The Washington Post reported.
As the seizing agent, wouldn't you want to know if the key was obtained legally?Quote:
Mikuska said he did not know how the FBI obtained the key.
If I was sitting on a jury, and a law enforcement agent testified he did not know where the key came from that he was using to open the door to the defendant's home, then I would surmise that the agent was lying.akm91 said:As the seizing agent, wouldn't you want to know if the key was obtained legally?Quote:
Mikuska said he did not know how the FBI obtained the key.
I think that report is inaccurateakm91 said:As the seizing agent, wouldn't you want to know if the key was obtained legally?Quote:
Mikuska said he did not know how the FBI obtained the key.
Well, they have the warrant so they could kick the door in technically anyway. The origin of the key wasn't of paramount importance at the time. And it isn't enough to suppress the evidence garnered therefrom but hiding it from the Judge until now wasn't wise.akm91 said:As the seizing agent, wouldn't you want to know if the key was obtained legally?Quote:
Mikuska said he did not know how the FBI obtained the key.
Unlikely, in my view. I also doubt Ellis throws the case out.Rockdoc said:
Is it safe to assume if the judge did throw this case out the window, it would eventually be retried (and perhaps with an adversarial judge presiding)?
Quote:
But prosecutor Uso Asonye said jurors may not hear from Mr. Gates after all.
"He may testify, he may not," Mr. Asonye told Judge T.S. Ellis III.
The revelation sent journalists and others out of the courtroom to report the disclosure.
"That's news to me and about 25 others who scurried out of here like rats on a sinking ship," Judge Ellis shot back.
Mr. Asonye attempted to backtrack, telling Judge Ellis that the evidence presented will determine if Mr. Gates' testifies.
That drew a sharp rebuke from Judge Ellis.
"You know who you are going to call," He said. "If you are [not] going to call him then this is a waste of time."
Quote:
With degrees from Princeton, Harvard and Oxford and 31 years on the bench, Ellis is formidably sharp. And although he might scold prosecutors for not meeting his high standards, in trials Ellis often uses his intellect to their benefit.
"It's important for him that everyone in the courtroom knows he is the smartest person in that courtroom, and just be aware that he usually is," defense lawyer John Zwerling says he warns lawyers who are new to the District. "So you better be on your A game."
Ellis regularly interrupts trial testimony with his own questions and demands that certain lines of inquiry be cut short, clearing up ambiguity that defense attorneys hoped to create. More than one lawyer has tried to block him from doing so with pretrial motions or mid-case demands for a mistrial. Several have appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, arguing that Ellis's interventions made a fair trial impossible.
The appeals court has repeatedly struck down those claims, saying Ellis's questions were posed in the service of clarity.
...
Mikolashek recalled once appearing opposite one of the judge's former clerks. Ellis assured him he would not be biased.
Besides, the judge added, "I am confident that my former clerk did not play a substantial role in writing this brief. If he had, there would be no fewer than four split infinitives."
They'll have to subpoena him but yes they can if they want to.MadDog73 said:
So the prosecution doesn't trust Gates on the stand? Can Manafort's team call Gates as hostile witness?
That's some wit right there!Quote:
Besides, the judge added, "I am confident that my former clerk did not play a substantial role in writing this brief. If he had, there would be no fewer than four split infinitives."
aggiehawg said:Proving income? No it is about proving expenses in excess of his declared income.SpreadsheetAg said:
Maybe not a crook? (as to this) Could lend credence to his 'thought everything was being done properly' claim. Didn't feel he needed to hide that money, or his access to it.aggiehawg said:
They could also show that using bank records. If his testimony was short and used for the purpose of admitting his own company bank records showing the receipt of the wires, that's fine. Establishes a foreign bank account.
Who pays for clothes with wire transfers anyways? Write a damn check or whip out the credit card with no limit. So Manafort used wire transfers from overseas banks to buy consumer goods in the US? Not too smart of a crook, then.
Maybe. I would think the wire transfers would be going to his bank however. But then I'm not mega rich with bank accounts all over the world.VegasAg86 said:Maybe not a crook? (as to this) Could lend credence to his 'thought everything was being done properly' claim. Didn't feel he needed to hide that money, or his access to it.aggiehawg said:
They could also show that using bank records. If his testimony was short and used for the purpose of admitting his own company bank records showing the receipt of the wires, that's fine. Establishes a foreign bank account.
Who pays for clothes with wire transfers anyways? Write a damn check or whip out the credit card with no limit. So Manafort used wire transfers from overseas banks to buy consumer goods in the US? Not too smart of a crook, then.
If this was a woman, and she had 10k-15k pairs of shoes, would anyone really care.....?oneeyedag said:
So Manafort wore 10k-15k suits, so what! Doesn't appear to be a buy off the rack kinda of guy.