Manafort accused of foldering — but what is ‘foldering’?

MarketWatch

It’s not in the dictionary, so what is this “foldering” of which former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort stands accused by a federal prosecutor?

Essentially, it’s a manner of communicating, theoretically undetected, via messages entered into an email application but left unsent. Other parties with access to the account’s user name and password are then free to retrieve and read the messages and respond as wished, again leaving their messages in draft mode.

Further explanation from CNN’s Marshall Cohen:

And a contextualizing follow-up from former federal prosecutor, and recently a candidate for attorney general in Illinois, Renato Mariotti, who serves as a legal analyst for CNN:

Manafort was jailed Friday when a judge determined that his alleged efforts to influence prospective witnesses — he has been charged on numerous counts relating to money laundering and failure to register as a foreign lobbyist and other alleged illegal activities — necessitated a revocation of his bail.

A tweet from President Trump called it a “tough sentence,” despite Manafort’s not having been sentenced, nor tried:

Tim Rostan is a MarketWatch managing editor based in Chicago.

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