KEY POINTS
  • The national security-related charges against Tom Barrack have all the hallmarks of a case where classified material could become relevant.
  • Prosecutors appear to have carefully tailored the timeline of the charges to avoid activities in late 2017-18.
  • For Barrack's defense attorneys, several potential strategies rely on private, high-level conversations and back-channel foreign policy.
Tom Barrack, chairman of Colony NorthStar Inc., speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., on Tuesday, May 1, 2018.

WASHINGTON — Tom Barrack's defense attorneys have their work cut out for them, given the breadth and specificity of the evidence in the 45-page federal indictment against him filed last week.

Prosecutors allege that Barrack secretly took direction from the government of the United Arab Emirates, and used his status as an informal advisor to the Trump White House on Middle East strategy to push for the policies that Emirati officials told him to.