New charges were filed yesterday against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and his business partner, ratcheting up the legal pressure on them as they prepare for a trial later this year.
A new indictment has long been expected in special counsel Robert Mueller's prosecution of Manafort and his right-hand man, Rick Gates, on fraud and money laundering charges. Manafort served as PUS resident Donald Trump's campaign chairman from June to August 2016. Gates also served as a top official on Trump's campaign. The new indictment contains 32 counts, including tax charges.
The filing comes at a time of significant uncertainty in the case about when a trial might happen, or even who the defense lawyers will be. Last week, US District Judge Amy Berman Jackson criticised both sides for what she called "unacceptable delays" in a case which still doesn't have a trial date set.
Manafort and Gates were hit with a 12-count indictment in October - the first criminal charges in Mueller's probe of Russian interference with the 2016 election. That indictment focused not on events in the 2016 race but financial transactions involving work by Manafort and Gates for a Ukrainian political party, and their failure to notify US authorities that they were allegedly acting as lobbyists for a foreign government.
The new charges come as Gates' legal strategy and defense team are still in question. His three lawyers have asked to leave the case, a request the judge is considering. The details of those discussions have not been described publicly, beyond a court filing that said they involve "highly sensitive matters" that would "potentially be prejudicial to (Gates) as well as embarrassing."