The Province

Lawyer admits he lied to FBI

Van der Zwaan’s case relates to interactio­ns with Trump campaign officials

- CHAD DAY AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON

— A lawyer linked to a former Trump campaign official admitted Tuesday he lied to federal investigat­ors working for special counsel Robert Mueller.

Alex van der Zwaan, who worked at the law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom until he was fired last year, appeared at the federal courthouse in Washington where he formally pleaded guilty to a single charge of making false statements.

The charge does not involve election meddling or relate to the Trump campaign’s operations.

It stems from a part of the special counsel’s investigat­ion into Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chair, and Rick Gates, a former campaign aide and longtime business associate of Manafort.

Manafort and Gates are accused of directing a covert Washington lobbying campaign on behalf of pro-Russian Ukrainian interests. The lobbying effort was part of political consulting work that Manafort and Gates carried out before they joined the Trump campaign.

Gates and Manafort were indicted last year and accused of conspiring to launder millions of dollars they earned from political consulting work in Ukraine.

Both have pleaded not guilty. Van der Zwaan is accused of lying to investigat­ors about his interactio­ns with Gates during an interview with the FBI late last year, according to court papers.

Van der Zwaan’s plea comes on the heels of an extraordin­ary indictment from Mueller last week that charged 13 Russian individual­s and three Russian companies in a hidden social media effort to meddle in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election by denigratin­g Democrat Hillary Clinton and boosting the chances of Trump.

Prosecutor­s say van der Zwaan lied about his role in the production of a report on the trial of former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko. She is a political foe of former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, whose political party was a client of Gates and Manafort.

Van der Zwaan is accused of lying during an interview with prosecutor­s and FBI agents on Nov. 3, 2017, about the timing of his last communicat­ion with Gates and an unidentifi­ed person described as “Person A.”

Van der Zwaan told investigat­ors that he last texted with Gates in mid-August 2016 and his last contact with Person A was in 2014 when he discussed the person’s family.

But prosecutor­s say he had discussed the Tymoshenko report with Gates and Person A in September 2016 during a phone call that he surreptiti­ously recorded. They also say Van der Zwaan deleted emails sought by the special counsel’s office, including one between him and Person A from September 2016.

The Tymoshenko report was cited in the 12-count indictment against Manafort and Gates.

It accuses the two men of acting as unregister­ed lobbyists in connection with the rollout of the report, which was commission­ed by the Ukrainian government.

According to the indictment, Manafort and Gates “used one of their offshore accounts to funnel $4 million to pay secretly for the report.”

The report was authored by the law firm, Skadden, Arps. Van der Zwaan’s now-defunct LinkedIn page lists him as an associate in the London office of the law firm.

On Tuesday, Skadden Arps released a statement saying it had fired van der Zwaan last year.

The firm said it “has been co-operating with authoritie­s in connection with this matter.”

It didn’t say what led to the firing. The charging document notes that the emails van der Zwaan is accused of deleting and withholdin­g from the special counsel’s office were also sought by the law firm, which is referred to as “Law Firm A.”

 ?? — WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Lawyer Alex van der Zwaan, left, pleaded guilty Tuesday in U.S District Court to making a false statement to investigat­ors working for special counsel Robert Mueller, who is probing Russian meddling in the last American presidenti­al election.
— WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES Lawyer Alex van der Zwaan, left, pleaded guilty Tuesday in U.S District Court to making a false statement to investigat­ors working for special counsel Robert Mueller, who is probing Russian meddling in the last American presidenti­al election.

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