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Today is quite the day in federal court. Both Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen were either learning their fate or taking fate into their own hands, as Manafort’s jury returned with a verdict on 8 of 18 counts, and Cohen decided to plead guilty to eight violations of campaign finance law.
Manafort was up first, and learned the verdict was in on eight counts. But a mistrial was declared on the other ten.
A federal jury in Virginia convicted former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort on eight counts related to bank and tax fraud, making him the first campaign associate of President Trump found guilty by a jury as part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe.
But after four days of deliberations, the jury told Judge T.S. Ellis III on Tuesday afternoon that it could not come to a decision on the ten other counts. A mistrial was declared on those counts.
The jury began deliberating last Thursday after a three week trial where prosecutors said Manafort hid income earned from political work overseas from the IRS while fraudulently obtaining millions in bank loans. Manafort, 69, had pleaded not guilty.
Manafort was stone faced as the verdict was read. The government has until Aug. 29 to decide whether they will move to retry the 10 counts deadlocked on by the jury.
Counts 1-5. Tax evasion 2012-2016
Count 6 false statement to financial institution Feb 2015-April 2016
Count 7 willful cause of unlawful corporate contribution June 2016-Oct. 2016
Count 8 excessive campaign contribution on Oct. 27, 2016— Stephen Brown (@PPVSRB) August 21, 2018
Counts 7 and 8 implicate the Trump campaign, which did not include these contributions in their FEC filings. https://t.co/9Rc5IoRFqb
— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) August 21, 2018
At almost the same time, Michael Cohen was pleading guilty.
Michael Cohen, President Trump’s longtime personal attorney, admitted Tuesday to violating federal campaign finance laws by arranging hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal “at the direction” of then-candidate Trump.
As part of a plea deal, Cohen admitted that the payments were coordinated with Trump in an effort to influence the 2016 presidential election, in which Trump defeated Hillary Clinton.
In total, Cohen pleaded guilty to five counts of tax evasion, one count of making a false statement to a financial institution, one count of willfully causing an unlawful corporate contribution, and one count of making an excessive campaign contribution.
Cohen could have received up to 65 years in prison if convicted of all charges. However, as part of his agreement, Cohen agreed not to challenge any sentence between 46 and 63 months. The deal does not involve a cooperation agreement with federal prosecutors.
Federal prosecutors make remarks outside of the courthouse where @POTUS' former attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty. https://t.co/B8Hu9gOWuj
— Fox News (@FoxNews) August 21, 2018
Cohen admits to working “at direction of the candidate” Trump and national enquirer to silence Karen McDougal. He also admits to Stormy Daniels payment that he made “with and at direction of the same candidate.”
— Stephen Brown (@PPVSRB) August 21, 2018
Here's the crux of the first campaign finance charge Cohen pleaded guilty to: pic.twitter.com/2ywTXDkz8L
— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) August 21, 2018
And here's the second campaign finance charge Cohen pleaded guilty to.
Note: in Court, Cohen said the campaign individual who requested it was President Trump. pic.twitter.com/KmBkZMN5QB
— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) August 21, 2018
Remember all of MAGA world going on about Cohen simply being paid as part of a retainer agreement?
"In truth and in fact, there was no retainer agreement." pic.twitter.com/dSqSu4ef1i
— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) August 21, 2018
— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) August 21, 2018
We are living in the worst-written reality show ever.
In a scene you couldn't script, Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort is found guilty on eight counts and Trump lawyer Michael Cohen pleads guilty to eight counts within minutes of each other. Trump is on Air Force One flying to a rally in West Virginia.
— Josh Dawsey (@jdawsey1) August 21, 2018
I cannot believe we’re gonna get a Cohen plea and a Manafort verdict on the same day.
These writers are total hacks. https://t.co/PHRxeOwx62
— Allahpundit (@allahpundit) August 21, 2018
Manafort and Cohen judges should have had a synced-up soundtrack playing in the two courtrooms to give it more of a montage feel
— Allahpundit (@allahpundit) August 21, 2018
So far, President Trump has only reacted to the Manafort verdict.
BREAKING: Trump says Manafort conviction `has nothing to do with Russian collusion,' calls it `a disgrace'
— The Associated Press (@AP) August 21, 2018
But he will apparently be in West Virginia at a rally tonight, so hold onto your hats, everyone.
Trump rally tonight could be…..scary.
— TruthIsNotTruthHat (@Popehat) August 21, 2018
So, what does this mean for the president?
1) Trump's personal lawyer testified under oath that Trump coordinated to commit a federal crime.
2) Trump will be subpoenaed. That is his worst legal nightmare.
So yeah, Michael Cohen. All the best people.— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) August 21, 2018
Pardoning Michael Cohen won't help Trump here. That merely ensures that Cohen would have to testify since he could no longer plead the Fifth.
— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) August 21, 2018
Yes, this is doubleplusungood for Trump politically. But then there’s this…
So the Senate is just gonna rush ahead to confirm the president's nominee to the Supreme Court amidst all this? Really?
— Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) August 21, 2018
One of these things is not like the other, and has nothing to do with the other.
Sure is! https://t.co/HteiKVjw3l
— Jeff B. (@EsotericCD) August 21, 2018
(as if there is any rational connection whatsoever btw Cohen and the President–even if he is a sleazebag like Trump–nominating an eminently qualified jurist to SCOTUS. obviously, the take here is "any excuse, however pretextual, to stop the Court from moving right.")
— Jeff B. (@EsotericCD) August 21, 2018
(I mean, *what is the proposed alternative here?* Insist that Hillary Clinton gets to nominate a Supreme Court justice instead of Trump? Maybe you could make that fly…if the Democrats controlled the Senate, which they do not. Oh well.)
— Jeff B. (@EsotericCD) August 21, 2018
The Manafort verdict is embarrassing to Trump, in the sense that this is his former campaign manager who has just been convicted of tax fraud. Cohen, on the other hand, sounds like he just implicated the president in a federal crime. What happens now? I’m not a lawyer, so I don’t know what the legal implications are of Cohen’s plea deal. But here’s what I do know:
1) Democrats now are going to redouble their efforts for the midterms, because if they get the House, they will push impeachment.
2) Trump is going to undoubtedly say something at the rally in West Virginia – and every single media outlet in existence will cover it.
3) I am totally fine with a President Pence.
What say you?
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