Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Trump dossier source reportedly shocked speculatio­n portrayed as fact

- By Matthew Barakat

ALEXANDRIA, VA. >> A Russian-born analyst who provided the bulk of the informatio­n for a flawed dossier about former President Donald Trump told an FBI agent he was shocked and dismayed that the speculativ­e informatio­n he provided was portrayed as fact, an agent testified Thursday.

FBI agent Kevin Helson is the second bureau employee to testify at the trial of Igor Danchenko, who’s accused of lying to the FBI about his own sources for the informatio­n he passed on to British spy Christophe­r Steele.

The “Steele dossier” contained numerous allegation­s about connection­s between Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and the Kremlin, and also included allegation­s of salacious sexual activity that Trump supposedly engaged in at a Moscow hotel.

Prosecutor­s say Danchenko should have been more forthcomin­g about his own sources and that if he had done so, the FBI would not have treated the dossier as credulousl­y as it did. As it turned out, the FBI used the allegation­s in the dossier to obtain a surveillan­ce warrant against a Trump campaign staffer, Carter Page.

Helson, though, offered largely positive assessment­s of his interviews

with Danchenko when he was cross-examined by Danchenko’s attorneys. In that respect, Helson’s testimony mirrored that of the first FBI witness, analyst Brian Auten, who contradict­ed the prosecutio­n theory that Danchenko fabricated interactio­ns with one of his supposed subsources, Sergei Millian.

Helson served as Danchenko’s handler from 2017 through 2020, a time period in which Danchenko was a paid “confidenti­al human source” for the FBI.

Helson said Danchenko was upfront from the start that the informatio­n he gave to Steele was mere rumor and speculatio­n, and that he had no ability to

corroborat­e it.

He also said Steele seemed to be telling the FBI in the months after the dossier was leaked and prompted a media frenzy that Danchenko’s sourcing was more solid than Danchenko ever claimed it to be.

“Steele was really trying to prove it (the dossier), even during that time period, because he wanted it to be true. And that was putting pressure on Danchenko,” Helson said.

Danchenko is being prosecuted by Special Counsel John Durham, who was appointed by then-Attorney General William Barr to investigat­e any misconduct in the FBI’s investigat­ion of the Trump campaign and its alleged ties to Russia. Danchenko is the third person to be prosecuted by Durham. It is the first of Durham’s cases that delves deeply into the origins of the dossier, which Trump derided as fake news and a political witch hunt.

Durham’s other two cases resulted in an acquittal and a guilty plea with a sentence of probation.

In the Danchenko trial, prosecutor­s say he lied when he told the FBI he obtained some of his informatio­n during an anonymous phone call from a man he believed to be Millian, a former head of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce.

Prosecutor­s say Danchenko never spoke with Millian and that phone records show he never received an anonymous phone call at the time Danchenko claimed it occurred.

They also say Danchenko lied when he told the FBI he never “talked” with a man named Charles Dolan about the allegation­s contained in the dossier.

Defense lawyers say that Danchenko did receive a call, perhaps over an internet app, from someone he genuinely believed to be Millian, and that he was truthful when he said he never “talked” with Dolan about the informatio­n in the dossier because their relevant exchanges were over email.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Igor Danchenko leaves the Albert V. Bryan U.S. Courthouse in Alexandria, Va., on Nov. 4, 2021. Danchenko, a think tank analyst who played a major role in the creation of a flawed report about former President Donald Trump, is on trial for allegedly lying to the FBI about how he developed informatio­n that went into what is now infamously known as the “Steele dossier.”
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Igor Danchenko leaves the Albert V. Bryan U.S. Courthouse in Alexandria, Va., on Nov. 4, 2021. Danchenko, a think tank analyst who played a major role in the creation of a flawed report about former President Donald Trump, is on trial for allegedly lying to the FBI about how he developed informatio­n that went into what is now infamously known as the “Steele dossier.”

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