4:21 p.m.: Bank VP says he wouldn't have approved Manafort loans if bank CEO hadn't pushed for itDuring cross-examination of Federal Savings Bank vice president Jim Brennan, defense attorney Richard Westling raised the possibility that the bank may have been at fault for errors that affected Manafort's loans.
Westling pointed to an incorrect address Brennan had entered in one application and made mention of another error by another employee that "made Mr. Manafort's income look better."
Westling also asked Brennan about a review of one Manafort loan conducted by a regulatory body called the Office of the Comptroller of Currency. During a review of the bank's business, the bureau within the U.S. Department of Treasury had concerns about how the loan was analyzed, but didn't raise any flags about information provided by Manafort.
Brennan testified that one of the loans received a rating of 4 the lowest possible rating an application could get before it would be rejected. Brennan said he would not have approved the loan and it would have gone on the bank's "watch list," but he didn't have a choice to give the loan the bare minimum rating. When asked by the judge why he gave the loan a passing grade if it didn't deserve it, Brennan testified that Calk had pushed for it.
The two loans of $16 million combined represent the largest loans the bank had ever issued up to that point in time, Brennan testified.
Brennan testified that he told the FBI in June 2017 the loans were performing. But he said that by Dec. 31 of that year they had been written off and the bank had lost $11.8 million. As of now, none of the collateral Manafort provided has been seized by the bank, Brennan testified.
Westling pointed out that it wasn't a secret that Manafort wouldn't have any reported income in 2016. It was understood and "out in the open" that Manafort was working for free for then-candidate Donald Trump. Westling also pointed to a bank document that calculated Manafort's estimated net worth to be nearly $21.3 million when the loans were issued, which the defense could leverage to show that Manafort had the ability to pay back the loans.
Brennan concluded his testimony shortly before 4 p.m.
4:39 p.m.: Judge spars with prosecutors again, says 'You could have indicted the company, but you didn't'Whether or not Paul Manafort's prosecutors are done with the case depends on how Judge T.S. Ellis III rules about whether an agent from the Treasury Department can retake the stand.
Paula Liss already testified that Manafort did not report foreign bank accounts on his taxes. Prosecutors want her to come back and say his consulting firm didn't either.
Defense attorney Thomas Zehnle said that in closing arguments, they do plan to say Manafort had no obligation to report foreign bank accounts in the years he only owned 50 percent of his firm, Davis Manafort International.
"It's very clear that if you do not own more than 50 percent of the entity, you do not have a responsibility," Zehnle said.
Manafort's wife owns the other half of the company and they file joint tax returns.
He is accused of failing to report the foreign bank accounts from 2011 to 2014. For one year charged, 2011, Manafort was the firm's sole owner.
When Manafort filed as a foreign agent in 2017, prosecutor Uzo Asonye noted, he also described himself as owning 100 percent of the business.
Ellis pointed out that Davis Manafort Partners, later Davis Manafort International, was not accused. "You could have indicted the company, but you didn't," he said.
Asonye said that was true, but it was the defense that was now making the argument that this was a corporate responsibility.
Ellis took a short recess to decide the issue, predicting neither side would like his ruling.
5:01 p.m.: Special counsel's final witness is return of Treasury agentJudge T.S. Ellis III allowed prosecutors to call back Paula Liss, a special agent with the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. The special counsel confirmed that she would be their last witness.
Prosecutors intend to ask Liss if Paul Manafort's consulting firm ever reported foreign bank accounts. Ellis said he would instruct the jury that they cannot find Manafort guilty for his company's failures, but that they can use the evidence to decide his "willfulness" in not reporting 32 overseas accounts on his personal tax returns.
After Liss answers three questions from prosecutors and any cross-examination from the defense, Ellis said he will hear motions to acquit.
5:04 p.m.: The prosecution rests after recalling Treasury agent as final witness
The special counsel's office has called its final witness in its case in chief against Paul Manafort.
The special counsel's last witness was Paula Liss, a special agent with the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. Liss had testified early in the trial but was called back to be questioned about whether Manafort's companies had reported any foreign bank accounts between 2011 to 2014. Liss said the department had no record of any such "FBAR" reports.
Liss left the stand after five questions.
"Your honor, the government rests," prosecutor Greg Andres said.
Afterward, defense attorneys, in a procedural hearing, asked that the charges against Manafort be dismissed, saying the evidence lacks "materiality" and "a failure to show the necessary willfulness."
Judge T.S. Ellis III sealed the courtroom without ruling on the defendant's motion for acquittal or asking whether Manafort will present any evidence.
"What we do will not be permanently sealed," he told media and onlookers gathered in the courtroom. "When the case is over, the seal will be lifted."
Lead defense attorney Kevin Downing asked to have until tomorrow morning to put together his motion for acquittal, and Ellis agreed.
Never take a hostage you aren't willing to shoot,
Remember, America doesn’t negotiate with terrorists.
Code 7 10-42