Appeals court says Manhattan DA can't prosecute former Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort due to double jeopardy rule
- A New York state court appeals division ruled that Paul Manafort, who for months ran President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign, cannot be prosecuted on state criminal charges related to the same conduct that led to his federal convictions.
- The ruling upheld a judge's decision, which said that the rule of double jeopardy barred Manafort from being prosecuted for those crimes by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.'s office.
- Manafort was released early from a prison sentence into home confinement due to coronavirus concerns.
A New York state court appeals division ruled Thursday that Paul Manafort, the disgraced former chief of President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign, cannot be prosecuted on state criminal charges related to the same conduct that led to his federal criminal convictions.
The ruling upheld a judge's decision from last December, which said that the rule of double jeopardy barred Manafort from being prosecuted for those crimes by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.'s office.
"It is undisputed that the federal charges of which defendant has already been convicted involve the same fraud, against the same victims, as is charged in his New York indictment," the ruling, issued by the Appellate Division, First Judicial Department, of Manhattan Supreme Court, said.
The ruling could put an end to efforts to put Manafort back behind bars. He was released from prison last May to serve the balance of his sentence in home confinement due to concerns about the coronavirus pandemic spreading in prisons.
Vance's spokesman Danny Frost said, "We will consider our appellate options."
Manafort, 71, had faced charges of mortgage fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records in the case, which Vance filed right after the longtime Republican operative was sentenced last year to 7½ years in prison on the federal charges.
Manafort's lawyer, Todd Blanche, had argued that the state charges were barred by double jeopardy — which prevents a defendant from being prosecuted twice for the same crime — because they related to mortgage applications that were the subject of Manafort's federal trial.
Blanche did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.
Manafort was convicted at that federal trial and in a subsequent guilty plea in another federal court in 2018 of multiple crimes related to money he earned from consulting work for a pro-Russia political party in Ukraine, a role that predated his service in Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.
The four-judge panel on the Appellate Division, in its ruling, noted that New York law "provides that a person may not be separately prosecuted for two offenses based upon the same act or criminal transaction."
There is an exception to that law, when the "statutory provisions defining such offenses are designed to prevent very different kinds of harm or evil," the ruling noted.
But Vance's office "failed to establish that the federal and state statutes, all of which were directed against fraudulent transactions, were designed to prevent very different kinds of harm or evil," the panel said.
Vance's effort to convict Manafort of state charges has been viewed as a way to ensure that he is punished for his actions even if Trump ultimately grants him a pardon, or commutes his federal sentence. Trump can only issue such clemency for people convicted of federal crimes, not state crimes.
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