Trump ally Tom Barrack acquitted of working as UAE agent

Tom Barrack, a supporter and advisor of former president Donald Trump, was cleared of a nine-count allegation that claimed he worked as an agent for the United Arab Emirates.
Mr Barrack, charged with conspiracy, obstruction of justice, acting as agent of a foreign government and making false statements to the FBI, was acquitted of all charges on Friday after prosecutors failed to back up the allegations with substantial evidence.
The verdict, which was delivered after seven weeks of legal back-and-forth and two days of jury deliberations, left Mr Barrack’s family members in the courtroom in tears and the acquitted man bowing his head in exasperated victory.
Mr Barrack, 75, a businessman based in Los Angeles, was accused of exploiting his relationship with Mr Trump to advance UAE interests while sidelining the U.S. attorney-general.
Prosecutors presented hundreds of texts messages and emails shared between Mr Barrack and the UAE and claimed he shared confidential information with them.
In his defence, Mr Barrack’s lawyer argued their client was acting as “his own man,” and never presented himself as an agent of foreign authority.
Randall Jackson, one of Mr Barrack’s lawyers, further asserted the correspondence examined bore no proof of classified intelligence.
Mr Barrack of Lebanese descent, stood trial alongside his former assistant, Matthew Grimes, a 29-year-old man, who pleaded not guilty to being a foreign agent. He was also acquitted by the jury.
“This whole prosecution has been an act of misdirection,” Mr Jackson was quoted as saying in his closing argument on Tuesday by The New York Times.
“What exactly did Tom and Matthew influence? What exactly did they say that wasn’t true?”
Standing in the dock, Mr Barrack told the jury his actions aligned with his work as a businessman, building a “cultural sixth sense” from several years of dealings with the Middle East, with whom he hoped to to weave “a web of tolerance.”
Prosecutors had used his words against him, saying he wrote an email to Jared Kushner, seeking millions of dollars in investment with the UAE, while advancing their interests in Washington.
“The defendants unlocked the back door of the American political system — its campaigns, its media, its government — to the U.A.E.,” Ryan Harris, one of the prosecutors, was quoted as saying in his closing argument on Tuesday by the New York Times
Meanwhile, Mr Grimes’ lawyer, Abbe Lowell, argued the correspondence was taken “completely out of context, to play gotcha.” He said the question “is not whether Matthew is guilty of any crime, but why did the prosecutors ever charge him in the first place?”
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Jos
Artisanal miners in Plateau link surge in crime to illegal tin mining
Artisanal miners in Zawan and Bukuru, in the Jos South council area of Plateau, have attributed the recent surge in crime to increased illegal tin mining.

Politics
Kano: Gov Yusuf names Garo as running mate for 2027 governorship election
Governor Abba Yusuf has nominated Murtala Garo as his running mate for the 2027 governorship election in Kano.

Hot news Home top
2,700 deaths in UK linked to heatwave
An estimated 2,700 people might have died in England and Wales following heatwaves that struck in May and June, a study released on Monday showed.

Education
Education summit to review Tinubu’s reforms, honour sector leaders
The education minister will chair discussions on the sector’s achievements, reforms, and challenges under President Bola Tinubu at the 2026 Education Summit.

Economy
FG suspends controversial review of WAEC, NECO registration fees amid backlash
The government claimed the proposed review was informed by prevailing economic realities and the rising cost of conducting credible national examinations.

Hot news Home top
27 people killed in beer parlour fire
At least 27 people have been killed and 63 hospitalised as a blaze gutted a pub in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district in Thailand.





