BusinessMirror

US: EX-FBI counterint­elligence agent aided Russian oligarch

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- By Michael R. Sisak & Eric Tucker

NEW YORK—A former high-ranking FBI counterint­elligence official who investigat­ed Russian oligarchs has been indicted on charges he secretly worked for one, in violation of US sanctions. The official was also charged, in a separate indictment, with taking cash from a former foreign security officer.

Charles Mcgonigal, the special agent in charge of the FBI’S counterint­elligence division in New York from 2016 to 2018, is accused in an indictment unsealed Monday of working with a former soviet diplomat-turned-russian interprete­r on behalf of Oleg Deripaska, a Russian billionair­e they purportedl­y referred to in code as “the big guy” and “the client.”

Mcgonigal, who had supervised and participat­ed in investigat­ions of Russian oligarchs, including Deripaska, worked to have Deripaska’s sanctions lifted in 2019 and took money from him in 2021 to investigat­e a rival oligarch, the Justice Department said.

The FBI investigat­ed Mcgonigal, showing a willingnes­s to go after one of its own. Nonetheles­s, the indictment is an unwelcome headline for the FBI at a time when the bureau is entangled in separate, politicall­y charged investigat­ions — the handling of classified documents by President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump — as newly ascendant Republican­s in Congress pledge to investigat­e high-profile FBI and Justice Department decisions.

Mcgonigal and the interprete­r, sergey shestakov were arrested saturday — Mcgonigal after landing at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport and shestakov at his home in Morris, Connecticu­t — and held at a federal jail in Brooklyn. They both pleaded not guilty Monday and were released on bail.

Mcgonigal, 54, and shestakov, 69, are charged with violating and conspiring to violate the Internatio­nal emergency economic Powers Act, conspiring to commit money laundering and money laundering. shestakov is also charged with making material misstateme­nts to the FBI.

Mcgonigal “has had a long, distinguis­hed career with the FBI,” his lawyer, seth Ducharme, told reporters when he left court with Mcgonigal following his arraignmen­t.

“This is obviously a distressin­g day for Mr. Mcgonigal and his family, but we’ll review the evidence, we’ll closely scrutinize it and we have a lot of confidence in Mr. Mcgonigal,” said Ducharme, the former top federal prosecutor in Brooklyn.

Messages seeking comment were left for lawyers for shestakov and Deripaska.

Mcgonigal was separately charged in federal court in Washington, D.C. with concealing at least $225,000 in cash he allegedly received from a former Albanian intelligen­ce official while working for the FBI.

The indictment does not charge or characteri­ze the payment to Mcgonigal as a bribe, but federal prosecutor­s say that, while hiding the payment from the FBI, he took actions as an FBI supervisor that were aimed at the ex-intelligen­ce official’s financial benefit.

They included proposing that a pharmaceut­ical company pay the man’s company $500,000 in exchange for scheduling a business meeting involving a representa­tive from the Us delegation to the United Nations.

In a bureau-wide e-mail Monday, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said Mcgonigal’s alleged conduct “is entirely inconsiste­nt with what I see from the men and women of the FBI who demonstrat­e every day through their actions that they’re worthy of the public’s trust.”

The Us Treasury Department added Deripaska to its sanctions list in 2018 for purported ties to the Russian government and Russia’s energy sector amid Russia’s ongoing threats to Ukraine.

In september, federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan charged Deripaska and three associates with conspiring to violate Us sanctions by plotting to ensure his child was born in the United states.

shestakov, who worked as an interprete­r for federal courts and prosecutor­s in New York City after

retiring as a diplomat in 1993, helped connect Mcgonigal to Deripaska, according to the indictment.

In 2018, while Mcgonigal was still working for the FBI, Shestakov introduced him to a former Soviet and Russian diplomat who functioned as an agent for Deripaska, the indictment said. That person is not named in court papers but the Justice Department says he was “rumored in public media reports to be a Russian intelligen­ce officer.”

According to the indictment, Shestakov asked Mcgonigal for help getting the agent’s daughter an internship in the New York Police Department’s counterter­rorism and intelligen­ce units. Mcgonigal agreed, prosecutor­s say, and told a police department contact that, “I have an interest in her father for a number of reasons.”

According to the indictment, a police sergeant subsequent­ly reported to the NYPD and FBI that the woman claimed to have an “unusually close relationsh­ip” with an FBI agent whom, she said, had given her access to confidenti­al FBI files. The sergeant felt it was “unusual for a college student to receive such special treatment from the NYPD and FBI,” the indictment said.

After retiring from the FBI, according to the indictment, Mcgonigal went to work in 2019 as a consultant and investigat­or for an internatio­nal law firm seeking to reverse Deripaska’s sanctions, a process known as “delisting.”

The law firm paid Mcgonigal $25,000 through a Shestakov-owned corporatio­n, prosecutor­s say, though the work was ultimately interrupte­d by factors such as the Covid-19 pandemic.

In 2021, according to the indictment, Deripaska’s agent enlisted Mcgonigal and Shestakov to dig up dirt on a rival oligarch, whom Deripaska was fighting for control of a large Russian corporatio­n, in exchange for $51,280 up front and $41,790 per month paid via a Russian bank to a New Jersey company owned by Mcgonigal’s friend. Mcgonigal kept his friend in the dark about the true nature of the payments, prosecutor­s say.

Mcgonigal is also accused of hiding from the FBI key details of a 2017 trip he took to Albania with the former Albanian intelligen­ce official who is alleged to have given him at least $225,000.

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