Why the Manafort verdict should worry Trump

Perhaps President Trump is right, and it’s not about collusion at all.

But that doesn’t mean he has nothing to worry about.

Special prosecutor Robert Mueller notched a prominent win on Tuesday with a guilty verdict on eight of 18 charges in the trial of Paul Manafort, who spent five months with Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, including two months as chairman. While the jury deadlocked on 10 counts, it found Manafort guilty of five tax-evasion charges, two bank-fraud charges, and one charge of failing to register a foreign bank account. Jail time could total as much as 80 years.

Trump must wonder whether his business dealings could survive the type of forensic analysis Mueller’s team was able to perform on Manafort’s operation.

A lone protester holds up a sign and American flag outside the Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse after former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was found guilty on eight counts of fraud August 21, 2018 in Alexandria, Virginia.
A lone protester holds up a sign and American flag outside the Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse after former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was found guilty on eight counts of fraud August 21, 2018 in Alexandria, Virginia.

Follow the money

Prosecutors in the Manafort trial didn’t focus at all on Russia, even though it is Mueller’s mandate to explore all links between Russia and the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Instead, Mueller focused on crimes unearthed while investigating Russian interference, which the special prosecutor is entitled to do.

Manafort earned as much as $65 million as a consultant for foreign politicians from 2006 to 2015, parking most of the money in overseas accounts to avoid paying U.S. taxes on it. He never registered as a foreign lobbyist even though he represented foreign interests in Washington. And when Manafort’s foreign income began to run dry in 2014, he obtained millions of dollars in loans by misleading banks about his assets and finances while also holding out the prospect of plum jobs in the Trump administration in exchange for favorable treatment from lenders.

Trump never operated as a foreign consultant, and there’s no reason to think he shielded foreign income in offshore accounts the way Manafort did. But other aspects of the Manafort investigation get closer to the type of business Trump did as chairman of the Trump Organization. As a real-estate developer with projects in at least a dozen countries, Trump had business relationships with a variety of Russians — involving millions of dollars’ worth of deals — at a minimum.

And now that Mueller is cracking open private business arrangements that were once hidden from public view, Trump may fear that his own business secrets are vulnerable, too.

Recall that in July 2017, the New York Times asked President Trump: If “Mueller was looking at your finances and your family finances, unrelated to Russia — is that a red line?”

Trump responded: “I would say yeah. I would say yes. By the way, … I sell a lot of condo units, and somebody from Russia buys a condo, who knows? I don’t make money from Russia.”