Chattanooga Times Free Press

Suit alleges 2016 Trump campaign conspiracy with Russia

- BY TOM LOBIANCO AND LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — The Democratic Party sued Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, Russia, WikiLeaks and Trump’s son and son-in-law Friday, accusing them of an intricate conspiracy to undercut Democrats in the 2016 election by stealing tens of thousands of emails and documents.

The lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court, seeks unspecifie­d damages and an order to prevent further interferen­ce with computer systems of the Democratic National Committee.

“During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Russia launched an all-out assault on our democracy, and it found a willing and active partner in Donald Trump’s campaign,” DNC Chairman Tom Perez said in a statement. He called it an “act of unpreceden­ted treachery.”

The Democrats accuse Trump and his associates of trading on pre-existing relationsh­ips with Russian oligarchs tied to President Vladimir Putin and of collaborat­ing with Russia as it worked to undermine Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

The president has said repeatedly there was no collusion between his campaign and Russia. On Friday, his campaign scorned the lawsuit as “frivolous” and predicted it would be quickly dismissed.

“This is a sham lawsuit about a bogus Russian collusion claim filed by a desperate, dysfunctio­nal and nearly insolvent Democratic Party,” Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale said in a statement.

He said the campaign would seek to turn the tables on the Democrats, using the legal discovery process to try to pry documents from the DNC including any related to a dossier detailing allegation­s of links between Trump and Russia.

The dossier — a collection of memos — was written by an ex-British spy whose work was funded by Clinton and the DNC.

Requests for comment from the Russian Embassy in Washington were not immediatel­y returned.

The Democrats’ lawsuit doesn’t reveal new details in the sprawling storyline of connection­s between the Trump campaign and Russian operatives working on behalf of the Kremlin.

Instead it knits many of the threads that have emerged in public over the past two years to paint a picture of an alleged conspiracy between the Trump campaign, the Kremlin and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The DNC says the “brazen attack on American democracy” began with a cyberattac­k on DNC computers and phone systems in 2015, allowing the extraction of tens of thousands of documents and emails. WikiLeaks then blasted out many of the documents on July 22, 2016, shortly before Clinton was to be nominated — upsetting the Democrats’ national convention.

That added up to a “campaign of the presidenti­al nominee of a major party in league with a hostile foreign power to bolster its own chance to win the presidency,” the DNC lawyers write in the lawsuit.

That conspiracy violated the laws of the U.S., Virginia and the District of Columbia, the lawsuit says, and “under the laws of this nation, Russia and its co-conspirato­rs must answer for these actions.”

The DNC accuses Donald Trump Jr. of secretly communicat­ing with WikiLeaks, and blames the president, too, saying he praised the illegal disseminat­ion of DNC documents throughout fall 2016, making it a central theme of his speeches and rallies.

The DNC also fingers Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner as a co-conspirato­r for his role overseeing the Trump campaign’s digital operation.

WikiLeaks responded to the lawsuit causticall­y.

“DNC already has a moribund publicity lawsuit which the press has become bored of — hence the need to refile it as a ‘new’ suit before midterms,” the group said in a tweet. “As an accurate publisher of newsworthy informatio­n WikiLeaks is constituti­onally protected from such suits.”

Assange, avoiding detention, remains in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London.

Special counsel Robert Mueller has filed charges against multiple former Trump campaign aides stemming from his federal Russia probe. But Mueller has directly accused only former Trump campaign foreign policy aide George Papadopoul­os of trying to work with Russian operatives to support the Trump campaign.

Mueller also has indicted 13 Russian individual­s working for the Internet Research Agency accused of running an elaborate scheme to meddle in the U.S. elections. The indictment alleges one of Putin’s close allies, Yevgeny Prigozhin, oversaw the effort.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Then-President-elect Donald Trump, right, and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani pose for photos Nov. 20, 2016, at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster clubhouse in Bedminster, N.J.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Then-President-elect Donald Trump, right, and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani pose for photos Nov. 20, 2016, at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster clubhouse in Bedminster, N.J.

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