Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawyer said to have dirt on Clinton closer to Kremlin than she let on

- BY ANDREW E. KRAMER AND SHARON LAFRANIERE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

MOSCOW — The Russian lawyer who met with Trump campaign officials in Trump Tower in June 2016 on the premise she would deliver damaging informatio­n about Hillary Clinton has long insisted she is a private attorney, not a Kremlin operative trying to meddle in the presidenti­al election.

But newly released emails show that in at least one instance two years earlier, the lawyer, Natalia V. Veselnitsk­aya, worked hand in glove with Russia’s chief legal office to thwart a Justice Department civil fraud case against a well-connected Russian firm.

Veselnitsk­aya also appears to have recanted her earlier denials of Russian government ties. During an interview to be broadcast Friday by NBC News, she acknowledg­ed she was not merely a private lawyer but a source of informatio­n for a top Kremlin official, Yuri Y. Chaika, the prosecutor general.

“I am a lawyer, and I am an informant,” she said. “Since 2013, I have been actively communicat­ing with the office of the Russian prosecutor general.”

The previously undisclose­d details about Veselnitsk­aya rekindle questions about who she was representi­ng when she met with Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort and others at Trump Tower in Manhattan during the campaign. The meeting, one focus of the special counsel investigat­ion into Russia’s election interferen­ce, was organized after an intermedia­ry promised that Veselnitsk­aya would deliver documents that would incriminat­e Clinton.

Veselnitsk­aya had long insisted she met the president’s

son, son-in-law and campaign chairman in a private capacity, not as a representa­tive of the Russian government. “I operate independen­tly of any government­al bodies,” she wrote in a November statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee. “I have no relationsh­ip with Mr. Chaika, his representa­tives and his institutio­ns other than those related to my profession­al functions as a lawyer.”

But that claim already had been undercut last fall by revelation­s that her talking points for the Trump Tower meeting — detailing tax and financial fraud accusation­s against two Democratic Party donors tied to a Kremlin opponent — matched those in a confidenti­al memorandum circulated by Chaika’s office.

And a sheaf of Veselnitsk­aya’s email correspond­ence released Friday appeared to show that her relationsh­ip with Chaika’s office is far closer than she has described.

The emails were obtained by Dossier, an organizati­on set up by Mikhail B. Khodorkovs­ky, a former tycoon who was stripped of his oil holdings, imprisoned and then exiled from his native Russia. He has emerged as a leading opponent of President Vladimir

Putin of Russia.

Shown copies of the emails by Richard Engel of NBC News, Veselnitsk­aya acknowledg­ed that “many things included here are from my documents, my personal documents.” She told the Russian news agency Interfax on Wednesday that her email accounts were hacked this year by people determined to discredit her, and that she would report the hack to Russian authoritie­s.

The Russian prosecutor general’s office did not respond to requests for comment. In an email, Veselnitsk­aya said she would respond in two weeks.

The exchanges document Chaika’s response to a Justice Department request in 2014 for help with its civil fraud case against a real estate firm, Prevezon Holdings Ltd., and its owner, Denis P. Katsyv, a well-connected Russian businessma­n. Federal prosecutor­s say Veselnitsk­aya was the driving force on Katsyv’s defense team, a descriptio­n she has echoed in court filings. In a declaratio­n to the court, she identified herself as a lawyer in private practice, representi­ng Katsyv and his firm.

The Justice Department prosecutor­s charged Katsyv’s firm in 2013 with using real estate purchases in New York to launder a portion of the profits from a tax scheme in Russia. They were seeking Russian bank, tax and court records, the type of documents that typically form the crux of civil money-laundering cases. The Justice Department asked the Russian government to keep the matter confidenti­al, “except as is necessary to execute this request,” according to court documents. Russia and the United States have a mutual legal assistance treaty governing law-enforcemen­t requests.

The emails indicate that a senior prosecutor on Chaika’s staff, Sergei A. Bochkaryov, worked closely with Veselnitsk­aya to craft the Russian government response. She knew him well enough to address him in friendly terms.

“Dear Sergei Aleksandro­vich!” Veselnitsk­aya wrote on Aug. 2, 2014, in one of at least 11 emails exchanged. “I am sending you the edits in the draft response, as per instructio­ns. I am ready to answer any questions that arise, at any time convenient for you.”

The language in their final email exchange matches that of the prosecutor general’s official response to the Justice Department.

The judge in the case later wrote that the Russian government had “spurned” the Justice Department’s request for evidence, instead sending a lengthy treatise on why Veselnitsk­aya’s client was innocent.

Veselnitsk­aya’s involvemen­t in the official communicat­ions with the Russian government “raises serious questions about obstructio­n of justice and false statements,” said Jaimie Nawaday, a former assistant U.S. attorney in Manhattan who was a prosecutor on the case.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Russian lawyer Natalia V. Veselnitsk­aya
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Russian lawyer Natalia V. Veselnitsk­aya

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