U.S. Senate panel reveals details from Trump Tower meeting probe
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - An intermediary of a Russian oligarch and associates of then-U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump coordinated responses to revelations of a meeting in which Trump’s eldest son expected to get “dirt” on Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, documents released by a U.S. Senate panel showed yesterday.
Many of the documents made public by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley focused on the June 9, 2016, meeting at the Trump Tower in New York between Donald Trump, Jr. and Nataliya Veselnitskaya, a Russian lawyer and acknowledged Kremlin informant.
The meeting is being investigated by Special Counsel Robert Mueller as part of his probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion with the Trump campaign.
The thousands of pages of emails, text messages, congressional testimony and other documents released by Grassley, a Republican, provide fresh evidence of coordination between associates of Trump and Russians with ties to President Vladimir Putin’s government.
Moreover, the documents suggest that the coordination continued after Trump’s inauguration. Days after he was named White House communications director, Anthony Scaramucci offered to work with Rob Goldstone, an intermediary for a Russian oligarch, to counter “pressure on all sides.”
“If we remain consistent and united I don’t envision any issues we can’t ride out,” Scaramucci wrote in a July 23, 2017, email to Goldstone, a publicist who represents singer Emin Agalarov, the son of Russian billionaire Aras Agalarov. Scaramucci, in a text message to Reuters, said the email “had nothing to do with Russia.”
Aras Agalarov, a billionaire real estate developer who joined Trump in staging the 2013 Miss Universe Pageant in Moscow, is on a list of Russian oligarchs close to Putin released by the White House in January.
Trump has denied any collusion with Russia on his campaign and calls Mueller’s investigation a “witch hunt.” Russia rejects findings by U.S. intelligence agencies that it sought to aid Trump using computer hacking, propaganda and other means.
Among the documents released on Wednesday were transcripts of closeddoor interviews with Goldstone, and other participants in the Trump Tower meeting, including Trump Jr., Rinat Akhmetshin, a RussianAmerican lobbyist, and Ike Kavaladze, a U.S.-based Agalarov representative.
Also present were Trump’s son-in-law and close aide Jared Kushner, and senior campaign aide, Paul Manafort, both of whom declined committee interviews. Veselnitskaya declined to be interviewed, but provided written answers to questions.
Emails and texts showed coordination - and a hint of panic – as Goldstone, Emin Agalarov, and Trump Organization lawyers sought to contain the fallout after the meeting was revealed by emails released by Trump Jr. and the New York Times
published an account on July 8, 2017.
The meeting was set up by Goldstone, who offered in a June 3, 2016, email to provide Trump Jr. material harmful to Clinton that Russia’s top prosecutor had given to Aras Agalarov and “would be very useful to your father.”
In an email two days after the meeting was disclosed, Goldstone sent Kavaladze and another recipient - whose name was redacted - a statement drafted in Goldstone’s name by lawyers representing the Trump Organization and Trump Jr.