Austin American-Statesman

Cohen talked Russia relations with oligarch at Trump Tower

Trump lawyer got $1M consulting deal after inaugurati­on.

- William K. Rashbaum, Ben Protess and Mike Mcintire ©2018 The New York Times

Eleven days before the presidenti­al inaugurati­on last year, a billionair­e Russian businessma­n with ties to the Kremlin visited Trump Tower in Manhattan to meet with Donald J. Trump’s personal lawyer and fixer, Michael D. Cohen, according to video footage and another person who attended the meeting.

In Cohen’s office on the 26th floor, he and the oligarch, Viktor Vekselberg, discussed a mutual desire to strengthen Russia’s relations with the United States under President Donald Trump, according to Andrew Intrater, a U.S. businessma­n who attended the meeting and invests money for Vekselberg. The men also arranged to see one another during the inaugurati­on festivitie­s, the second of their three meetings, Intrater said.

Days after the inaugurati­on, Intrater’s private equity firm, Columbus Nova, awarded Cohen a $1 million consulting contract, a deal that has drawn the attention of federal authoritie­s investigat­ing Cohen, according to people briefed on the inquiry.

Intrater said in an interview that Vekselberg, his cousin and biggest client, had no role in Columbus Nova’s decision to hire Cohen as a consultant. When asked about the meeting at Trump Tower during the presidenti­al transition, Intrater described it as a brief and impromptu discussion and said Vekselberg had not originally planned to attend.

“Obviously, if I’d known in January 2017 that I was about to hire this high-profile guy who’d wind up in this big mess, I wouldn’t have introduced him to my biggest client, and wouldn’t have hired him at all,” Intrater said. He agreed to be interviewe­d about his dealings with Cohen, he said, because he had done nothing wrong.

The disclosure sheds additional light on the intersecti­on between Trump’s inner circle and Russians with ties to the Kremlin. The meeting came months after Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. met at Trump Tower during the campaign with a Kremlin-linked lawyer claiming to have damaging informatio­n on the candidate’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, and a former campaign aide, George Papadopoul­os, met with Russian intermedia­ries in Europe. During the campaign, Cohen himself was pursuing a deal to build a Trump high-rise in Moscow, which did not come to fruition.

Although Cohen told some associates that he expected a high-level White House job, that role never materializ­ed, and he instead struck out on his own to drum up business from companies that wanted advice and access to the Trump administra­tion, including AT&T and Novartis.

Cohen’s goal for the meeting — and whether it may have been related to his consulting business — remains unclear. His lawyers, and lawyers for Vekselberg, did not respond to requests for comment when told about video footage from C-Span showing Vekselberg and Intrater arriving at Trump Tower on Jan. 9, 2017. Intrater said the meeting included only a brief discussion about relations between the United States and Russia.

The meetings and Columbus Nova’s payments to Cohen have attracted scrutiny from Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the election, as well as federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan examining Cohen’s business activities and finances, the people said.

Early this year, Mueller’s investigat­ors stopped Vekselberg at a New York-area airport after he arrived on a private plane, The New York Times reported in early May. Mueller’s investigat­ors have interviewe­d Intrater twice, focusing partly on his dealings with Cohen. Mueller’s office has since referred the investigat­ion of Cohen to the prosecutor­s in Manhattan. There is no indication that Vekselberg or Intrater is suspected of wrongdoing, and Intrater’s lawyer, Richard Owens, said that “Columbus Nova has cooperated with all requests for documents and informatio­n from federal authoritie­s.”

The meetings were an opportunit­y for the three men to discuss shared interests during the presidenti­al transition and early days of the administra­tion, according to interviews and records reviewed by The Times.

Cohen, who promoted his connection to Trump, was seeking moneymakin­g opportunit­ies. Vekselberg, who has long-standing business and philanthro­pic ties to the United States and controls a global conglomera­te, was interested in Trump’s Russia-friendly stance. And Intrater, looking for new investors, was drawn to Cohen’s Rolodex of rich donors — he is a deputy finance chairman of the Republican National Committee — and the lure of new deals to invest in, prompting Columbus Nova to hire him as a consultant.

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