Chicago Sun-Times

Drip, drip, drip: Your guide to Trump Jr.’ s Russian meeting

- Maureen Groppe and Kevin Johnson l USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Fredreka Schouten

The president’s oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., said Tuesday that he released email correspond­ence about his June 2016 meeting with a Russian lawyer to be “totally transparen­t.” Yet three days later, a series of bombshell news reports revealed there was actually much more to the story. Trump Jr.’ s emails show he actively sought damaging informatio­n about Hillary Clinton even after he was told it would come from the Russian government. As multiple congressio­nal committees and a special counsel are investigat­ing possible collusion between Trump associates and Russians who sought to influence the election by hacking Democrats close to Clinton, the president’s son is now expected to testify about his meeting with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitsk­aya in Trump Tower. Here are takeaways from Friday’s new revelation­s:

A RUSSIAN- AMERICAN LOBBYIST WAS AT MEETING

His name is Rinat Akhmetshin, and he confirmed his participat­ion in the meeting to multiple news outlets. Born in Russia, the lobbyist served in the Soviet military and emigrated to the U. S., where he became a citizen in 2009. He is still a Russian citizen, The Washington Post reported.

HE’S REPORTED TO HAVE TIES TO RUSSIAN INTELLIGEN­CE

He served in the Soviet military in a unit that handled some counterint­elligence matters.

Still, Akhmetshin told the Associated Press that any efforts to tie him to Russian intelligen­ce agencies are a “smear campaign.” The Kremlin says it doesn’t know anything about him.

But Hermitage Capital Management chief William Browder — the driving force behind a 2012 law that imposed U. S. sanctions on Russian officials involved in human rights abuses and corruption — described Akhmetshin as “a counterint­elligence asset who knows his way around Washington” in an interview with USA TODAY. Akhmetshin was also referred to as a “former Soviet military counterint­elligence officer” in a 2015 lawsuit by a Russian mining company that accused him of hacking its computer system.

HE MAY NOT HAVE FOLLOWED U. S. LOBBYING RULES

Akhmetshin was “the primary organizer’’ of Russia’s opposition to the Magnitsky Act, working with Veselnitsk­aya, according to Browder. The 2012 U. S. law, named for Russian attorney Sergei Magnitsky, who was beaten to death in a Russian prison three years earlier, barred Russians suspected of human rights abuses from entry to the U. S. In retaliatio­n, the Kremlin barred Americans from adopting Russian children.

But Akhmetshin did not register with the Justice Department as a foreign agent. People working on behalf of foreign interests must register and make periodic disclosure­s about their activities and how much they’re being paid. Browder filed a detailed complaint with the Justice Department last year and Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R- Iowa, followed up with a March letter asking what the agency had done in response.

Grassley called it “particular­ly disturbing’’ that Akhmetshin and the firm Fusion GPS “were working on this proRussia lobbying effort. In fact, it has been reported that he worked for the GRU ( Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency) and allegedly specialize­s in” disinforma­tion efforts.

Akhmetshin said he hasn’t been contacted by federal investigat­ors about the Trump Jr. meeting but is willing to talk with the Senate Judiciary Committee about whether he violated federal lobbying registrati­on requiremen­ts, according to the AP.

RUSSIAN LAWYER MAY HAVE PROVIDED DIRT ON CLINTON

Trump Jr. has insisted that no meaningful informatio­n about Clinton was provided in the meeting, which lasted 20 to 30 minutes, and that it was a waste of time.

But Akhmetshin, in a separate interview Friday with the Post, said that Veselnitsk­aya had learned that an American hedge fund, perhaps linked to the Democratic National Committee, was in violation of Russian tax law. Akhmetshin told the AP that Veselnitsk­aya brought documents she said would show the Democratic National Committee received illicit funds.

When Veselnitsk­aya told Trump Jr. the Trump campaign would need to do some of its own research, the president’s son lost interest, Akhmetshin told the AP.

THAT COULD BE A CAMPAIGN LAW VIOLATION

Paul Ryan, a top lawyer with the watchdog group Common Cause, argued Friday that any research Veselnitsk­aya left behind with Trump Jr. about the DNC would amount to an illegal contributi­on.

His group and two others have filed complaints with the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission, contending the younger Trump and campaign aides with him likely violated federal law that bars soliciting and accepting campaign contributi­ons from foreign interests.

THERE WERE OTHERS IN THAT MEETING

Trump Jr. had not disclosed Akhmetshin’s presence at the meeting, which now appears to have included at least eight people. We already knew that the president’s son invited other members of the campaign — chairman Paul Manafort and Trump son- in- law Jared Kushner — so that’s three people. Veselnitsk­aya makes four and entertainm­ent publicist Rob Goldstone, who helped arrange the meeting, makes five.

In addition to Akhmetshin, participan­ts also reportedly include a translator and, according to CNN, an as- yet- unnamed representa­tive of the Russian family who had asked Goldstone to set up the meeting.

 ?? RICHARD DREW, AP ?? Lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin, below, is at the center of a meeting the Russians held with Donald Trump Jr. and others at Trump Tower.
RICHARD DREW, AP Lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin, below, is at the center of a meeting the Russians held with Donald Trump Jr. and others at Trump Tower.
 ?? COURTESY OF WILLIAM BROWDER ??
COURTESY OF WILLIAM BROWDER

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