Special counsel Robert Mueller released an itemized list Wednesday night detailing well over 500 pieces of evidence that his prosecutors are considering presenting during their upcoming criminal trial of former Donald Trump campaign Chairman Paul Manafort.

To make its case that Manafort committed bank and tax fraud, the lead Russia investigator signaled his intention to share with a Northern Virginia jury photographs of a putting green at the longtime GOP operative’s Long Island home, New York Yankees season-ticket licensing agreements and reams of material related to Manafort’s lobbying work on behalf of the pro-Kremlin Ukrainian government.


Manafort has pleaded not guilty to Mueller’s charges that he dramatically understated his income on federal tax returns from 2010 through 2014. He’s also fighting allegations of bank fraud totaling more than $20 million tied to loans he applied for in connection with various homes he owns.

As the July 25 trial start date approaches, Mueller’s prosecutors’ list of exhibits also includes photographs of all the Manafort properties at the center of his alleged crimes, including in Arlington, Virginia, and in New York City, Brooklyn and Bridgehampton, New York. The special counsel’s prosecutors also have photographs and documents detailing Manafort’s purchase of high-end clothing, oriental rugs and both a Mercedes-Benz and Land Rover.

Mueller’s case against Manafort does not deal directly with the core of his investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign. But the special counsel has jurisdiction to pursue crimes that he finds in the course of his probe, and that has included Manafort’s extensive lobbying work on behalf of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.

Among the documents Mueller’s prosecutors say they may use at the trial: a series of memos Manafort wrote for Yanukovych, as well as emails Manafort exchanged with one of his partners, longtime Democratic consultant Tad Devine, during the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election.

Mueller also plans to present during the trial more than a dozen documents involving Rick Gates, the former Trump campaign deputy who was originally charged in the Manafort indictment but who went on to plead guilty in exchange for his cooperation against his longtime business partner. Items listed involving Gates include emails with Manafort and Devine about their Ukrainian lobbying efforts, copies of his 2009, 2011 and 2013 U.S. passport, and a January 2016 email from Manafort marked “re VIP TIME SENSITIVE.”

Potential jurors for the Manafort trial are expected to arrive at the Alexandria courthouse next Tuesday, with jury selection set to begin Wednesday. However, the start date of the trial remains uncertain because a defense motion to delay the trial by several months remains unresolved.

Amid the uncertainty, Mueller’s team is gearing up for the case to proceed — and it’s not foreclosing presenting even more evidence. Mueller’s prosecutors concluded at the end of its latest submission that “the government further respectfully requests leave of the Court to file additional exhibits if necessary.”

Manafort is also facing a September trial in a federal district court in Washington, D.C., involving charges of money laundering and failing to register as a foreign agent for his work in Ukraine.

The former Trump campaign chief, who was moved last week to an Alexandria detention center pending his trial, has been in jail since June 15, after the judge in the Washington case revoked his release under house arrest, citing witness-tampering charges filed by Mueller.