Brandi Buchman Profile picture
Aug 15, 2018 10 tweets 2 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
#ManafortTrial Thread -
On rebuttal, prosecutor Greg Andres used his remaining 15 minutes to argue the special counsel’s case by reminding jurors of a few facts.
The defense wants you to believe this is about Gates but they haven’t explained the dozens of documents Mr. Manafort authored or wrote himself,” Andres said.
Referring to an email from Philip Ayliff to Paul Manafort where Ayliff asked Manafort if he had any foreign bank accounts to disclose ahead of tax preparation, Andres reminded jurors Rick Gates was not anywhere on the “from line, the to line, or the subject line” of the email.
“When Mr. Manafort sent false profit and loss statements to Dennis Raico, there was no reference to Rick Gates. Not in the from line, not in the to line and not in the subject line,” he repeated.
In another email from a Banc of California rep to Manafort, the rep asked Manafort if Gates would be “the quarterback” in the coordination of providing requested financial documents.
“If Gates is the quarterback, then who is the coach? Who is the owner of the team?” Andres said.
Manafort also once asked for help converting a PDF to a Word document so he could alter records, Andres noted.
“How is it Manafort has nothing to do with these accounts but he is the one who provided the documents?” Andres said.
Gates “stole money” from Manafort, of that there is no question, Andres said, but for the simple fact that Gates took the money proves Manafort had accounts outside the United States in Cyprus and that he didn’t report the income for those accounts.
“And you don’t need to be an underwriter to know that false statements about mortgages are important and relevant to bankers… the defense is asking you to ignore your common sense,” he said.
A chart that defense attorney Richard Westling provided establishing standards around the requirements of reasonable doubt should also be ignored, Andres said, and instead jurors should only consider instruction about reasonable doubt from Judge Ellis himself.
The chart provided by defense, he said, was as “worth as much as those profit and loss sheets Mr. Manafort showed to the bank [to obtain his loans].”

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More from @Brandi_Buchman

Oct 4, 2018
THREAD - Some observations I recorded while at the protest this afternoon:
- There were several federal employees (recognized by their badges) who had some very, very nasty things to say about people exercising their 1A.
- Protestors were very calm, very respectful but emotional
- The crowd was incredibly diverse. Every color, creed, orientation, age, from infants to the elderly, + the heat stopped no one
- Every time a rape survivor or assault survivor would get on a mic or bullhorn, and share their story, the crowd replied: "I believe you."
- Each person I talked to, of which there were several, expressed their concern over the gravity of Kavanaugh's appointment and how it would impact future generations
- Above anger or outrage, there was a palpable sadness in ppl's voice when they considered my questions
Read 4 tweets
Oct 2, 2018
THREAD - It is time to head to @Scotus. On deck: Madison v. Alabama. Is it a violation of the Constitution to execute a man who can't remember his crime? Well into his 60s & w/dementia, Vernon Madison argues executing someone who doesn't understand why he is being punished...1/4
implicitly fails to serve the purposes of the death penalty. The execution would not deter future crimes nor would it punish him for his conduct. The state, Alabama, doubts his claims of incapacity, suggesting he knows when to decline certain meds etc. Also even if he doesn't...
recall killing the officer, a court appointed psychologist says he has a "rational" understanding as to why he'll be executed, state argues. Alabama hinges their position on 8A, which they say, does not prevent them from executing him because he claims he can't remember. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
Sep 28, 2018
THREAD I suppose I need to state my belief on this for the record because it will save me time. Folks, I want to believe Kavanaugh wont be confirmed because even if you dont #BelieveHer, the man is not fit for the bench. #sorrynotsorry (Evidenced by his own behavior yesterday)
But I have zero trust that the people in Congress who need to do the right thing, will.
I often see people shocked! at the injustice of it all. For me, I am just totally too close to the situation to be shocked. About any of it.
I operate from doubt most of the time tho I am...
optimistic. Because I believe in the power of good people and progress. But I also have a good idea of how power works & I have watched congresspeople throw away their own voters interests time and time and time again. It isnt specific to one party, either.
Read 6 tweets
Sep 27, 2018
THREAD - In October, I'll cover several arguments at @Scotus:
Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Fish and Wildlife Service, which challenges the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designation of 1,544 acres of land in Louisiana as critical habit for the dusky gopher frog.
1/4
@CourthouseNews
Weyerhauser operates a logging business on the land and maintains the frog cannot live there without "radical change in land use."
2/4
Then, I'll cover Madison v. Alabama, which is about a death penalty challenge brought by a man who has dementia and says he can no longer remember committing the crime.
3/4
Read 4 tweets
Sep 27, 2018
THREAD - Some reactions from Democratic Senators at a press conference this a.m. during the lunch break:
Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del. “It is striking how many survivors of sexual assault are watching and choosing this moment to come forward with their accounts."
1/4
@CourthouseNews
Coons cont.: "It speaks to what a public service is being done here by having a measured and respectful hearing of Dr. Ford’s allegations.”
2/4
Sen Patrick Leahy's, D-Vt., take on questioning from the Republican prosecutor:
“She’s very professional and you have to ask the question, why don’t they ask their own questions?”
Then told reporters: "Maybe someone should ask why they’re hiding their other witnesses."
3/4
Read 4 tweets
Sep 25, 2018
THREAD - A group of attorneys general filed a comment with Interior Department rejecting Secy Zinke's proposed rollback of protections in the #EndangeredSpeciesAct. You can read their letter here:
documentcloud.org/documents/4941…
@CourthouseNews
1/5
AGs from the Commonwealths of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania plus states of California, Maryland, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and the District of Columbia signed off.
2/5
I recently covered the proposed rollback here: courthousenews.com/public-comment…
3/5
Read 5 tweets

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