Early Thursday evening, as he left the federal court in Washington, Greg Craig ran into a former colleague who used to work with him at the law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.

Shaking the hand of Skadden partner Michael Loucks, Craig said, “I know I’m not supposed to do this, but I just wanted to say hello.”

Loucks was not just any past colleague. That afternoon, he’d been called as the first witness as prosecutors began making their case against Craig, who is charged with misleading the Justice Department about his work for Ukraine in 2012. Loucks had left the courthouse with instructions to return Friday morning for cross-examination.

The encounter underscored an awkward dynamic of Craig’s case: Friends and former colleagues are being called to testify against him. As rare as trials are in the federal courts, Craig, a prominent Washington attorney and former Obama White House counsel, is surrounded by lawyers he has long known—a reunion of sorts, considering Craig resigned from the firm more than a year ago.

Craig’s lead defense lawyer, Zuckerman & Spaeder partner William Taylor, disclosed and recounted the interaction as the trial resumed Friday. Taylor said he wanted to inform the judge, U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson of the District of Columbia, of the interaction out of an “abundance of caution” but said he didn’t believe it created complications for the trial.

Jackson appeared to agree. Still, she scolded Craig.

“Mr. Craig, this witness was in the middle of his testimony. He’s still on the witness stand. He’s not to be interacted with, nor are other witnesses in the case to be interacted with,” Jackson said.

“I would encourage you to resist the temptation to reconnect with colleagues during the pendency of the trial and particularly during their testimony in the future,” she added.

“Yes, ma’am,” Craig replied. He said the move was impulsive and would not be repeated.

After his scolding, Craig drew further attention from Jackson as Douglas Schoen, a political consultant who helped arrange Skadden’s work for Ukraine, took the stand. As prosecutor Fernando Campoamor-Sanchez asked Schoen to identify Craig in the courtroom, Craig rose from his chair.

“I don’t think it’s necessary for you to stand up,” Jackson said. “I think they can see you from there.”

Schoen, who worked with Craig in the Clinton White House, recalled turning to Craig in 2012 on behalf of the Ukrainian steel magnate Victor Pinchuk, who at the time was the secret funder of Skadden’s work for Ukraine. Pinchuk, Schoen said, wanted a highly qualified lawyer to prepare an independent report on the Russia-backed Ukrainian government’s prosecution of Yulia Tymoshenko, a former prime minister and political rival of the country’s president at the time, Viktor Yanukovych.

Prosecutors have alleged Craig misled the Justice Department about his role in the public release of the report to avoid registering as a foreign agent. In skirting the disclosure requirements of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, or FARA, prosecutors have said that Craig was able to conceal Pinchuk’s financing of the project.

Only a few hours after Loucks stepped off the stand, prosecutors on Friday called a second lawyer with Skadden ties: Alex Haskell, a former associate at the firm who helped prepare the Tymoshenko report.

Haskell, now a counsel for Democrats on the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, recalled researching FARA in 2012 and concluding that the firm’s Ukraine work—as it had been outlined to him—would not require registration. With prosecutor Jason McCullough guiding him through emails, Haskell also addressed Skadden’s engagement with FTI Consulting, a public relations firm that had been hired by Ukraine, and he recalled a breakfast meeting at Pinchuk’s home in Ukraine. Haskell remembered being struck by “how bad the eggs we were served were.”

“That’s the only specific I can recall,” Haskell said.

“It’s tough to get a good omelette in Ukraine,” McCullough added.

Skadden offices in Washington, D.C. Photo: ALM

Prosecutor Molly Gaston advised jurors in her opening remarks that many of the witnesses are “friends with the defendant.” She name-dropped two of Craig’s former Skadden colleagues—Lawrence Spiegel, the firm’s general counsel, and Kenneth Gross, a partner with FARA expertise—who are among the possible witnesses for the government.

Gaston also highlighted Craig’s contacts with reporters during the rollout of the Tymoshenko report, stressing that the former White House counsel hand-delivered a copy to the home of a New York Times reporter.

Taylor, in his opening statement Thursday, said Craig was truthful about his work for Ukraine. For months, the longtime defense lawyer has argued that Craig contacted reporters not to advance Ukraine’s interests but to counteract the country’s spin of the Tymoshenko report and protect his reputation.

Taylor stressed that the government’s claims concerned the truthfulness of Craig’s statements to the Justice Department—the case, he said, was about “words,” not stealing, assault or bribery.

After the jury left the courtroom, Jackson admonished Taylor over language that she said seemed to suggest that the case with “not worth” the jurors’ attention.

“I thought that was a little inconsistent with your promise to the court that you weren’t going anywhere near that argument,” Jackson said.

“I think that really is an invitation to discount the offense.”

Taylor said he did not intend to trivialize the case and, as Craig did Friday, apologized to the judge on the spot.