Los Angeles Times

Foreign agents come out of dark

Fearful after Manafort indictment, well-paid lobbyists rush to disclose their ties to overseas clients.

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — No one knows how special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s sprawling investigat­ion into Russian political interferen­ce and potential White House obstructio­n will end, but Mueller is already changing how the nation’s capital does business.

His prosecutor­s have taken the rare step of pursuing some of President Trump’s former senior aides for failing to register as lobbyists for foreign government­s, rattling the rarefied world of highly paid profession­als who advocate in Washington for traditiona­l foreign allies, unsavory strongmen and other overseas clients.

Partly as a result, the number of people registerin­g as “foreign agents” for new clients — meaning they lobby for foreign interests — jumped from 68 in 2016 to 102 in 2017. A total of 422 such lobbyists are now registered, although some lawmakers believe many more are still in the shadows.

“Any firm that’s worth their salt is going to be doing some due diligence,” said Thomas Spulak, a partner at the King & Spalding law firm who helps clients comply with the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, known as FARA. “And if not, they have their head in the sand.”

Scrutiny from the small Justice Department unit that enforces the law has ebbed and flowed over the years, lawyers said, depending on what scandals are making headlines.

“Then it comes out with a vengeance,” said Grayson Yeargin, a partner at the Jones Day law firm. “And right now, it’s probably more active than it has been.”

Lawmakers are considerin­g new steps to beef up the 1938 law, and lobbyists are reading the fine print to make sure they aren’t in violation — a crime that could lead to five years in prison.

“There’s just no point in taking a chance on this stuff,” said one lobbyist who requested anonymity because he’s in the middle of updating disclosure forms to ensure compliance.

Lawyers said lobbyists generally had steered clear of brazenly flouting the law, which was originally enacted to flush out Nazi agents before World War II. In recent years, the law wasn’t a major source of concern on K Street, the traditiona­l home of the capital’s top lobbying shops — sort of like driving over the speed limit because no cops are in sight.

Then came the indictment last October of Paul Manafort and Richard Gates, two high-powered business partners and political consultant­s who had served as chairman and deputy chairman, respective­ly, of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Among the dozen charges they faced was one for failing to properly disclose their extensive — and highly lucrative — work for the Kremlin-backed government in Ukraine. In all, prosecutor­s said, they moved more than $75 million through offshore accounts.

Gates pleaded guilty to two separate crimes last month in return for cooperatin­g with the Mueller investigat­ion, and the other counts were dropped. But Manafort still faces the FARA charge plus nearly two dozen other criminal counts in Washington and Virginia. He has pleaded not guilty, and the first trial is scheduled for Sept. 17.

Manafort long was one of Washington’s most prominent foreign lobbyists, with expensive tastes and a high tolerance for shady characters. Among his clients were a string of U.S.-backed foreign dictators and military leaders, all now dead, including Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippine­s, Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire and Jonas Savimbi in Angola.

But Manafort’s work for Ukraine caused collateral casualties in Washington.

Mercury, a prominent public affairs firm, was enlisted by Gates to help with the lobbying. The firm has since said Gates lied about the client, something he admitted in his plea deal. Mercury said it believed it was working on behalf of a nonprofit, the Brussels-based European Center for a Modern Ukraine, and not the Russian-backed government in Ukraine.

Mercury subsequent­ly filed disclosure paperwork under the foreign lobbying law and has cooperated with prosecutor­s.

Democratic power broker Tony Podesta took a bigger hit. He resigned from the lobbying firm that bore his name after he was tied to the work Manafort and Gates did in Ukraine, and his company soon collapsed.

As in the Mercury case, the Podesta Group’s client was the government in Ukraine, not a nonprofit. The lobbying shop filed an extensive, retroactiv­e disclosure in April revealing dozens of meetings with lawmakers, administra­tion officials and reporters.

“Podesta Group filed public disclosure­s appropriat­ely and publicly based on the informatio­n that the firm had at the time,” a company representa­tive said.

Kimberley Fritts, a former Republican consultant who previously helped run the Podesta Group, then launched a new firm with some of the same lobbyists and clients. It quickly registered under the foreign lobbying law, disclosing work on behalf of Japan and the Democratic Party of Moldova.

Mueller also used the law to pressure Michael Flynn, President Trump’s former national security advisor.

In his plea agreement, Flynn admitted to lobbying for Turkey’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian government while working for Trump’s campaign, but without registerin­g as a foreign agent. He wasn’t charged with violating the lobbying law, however, and he pleaded guilty to one count of lying to investigat­ors about his conversati­ons with a Russian diplomat during the presidenti­al transition.

The push for tougher enforcemen­t of foreign lobbying rules began in September 2016 when the Justice Department’s inspector general reported that most lobbyists weren’t filing initial disclosure­s on time and half were lagging behind deadlines to submit supplement­al reports.

The government also “lacks a comprehens­ive FARA enforcemen­t strategy,” the report said.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, questions whether everyone who lobbies for foreign government­s has properly registered.

“Does anyone here seriously think that only 400 people take foreign money for PR and lobbying work?” he asked during a committee hearing on the topic last summer.

“Our authoritie­s don’t take the law seriously, and we need to change that,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the committee’s top Democrat, said at the hearing.

Grassley and Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) are pushing legislatio­n that would increase the Justice Department’s enforcemen­t powers.

Between 2007 and the Manafort case, only four people were charged with violating the law. One of the cases involved undisclose­d lobbying to lift sanctions on Zimbabwe’s dictator Robert Mugabe, who has since been forced to step down.

Adam Hickey, the deputy assistant attorney general who oversees the national security division responsibl­e for foreign agent registrati­ons, said cases against lobbyists can be difficult to pursue because investigat­ors need to show a clear intent to violate the law.

It’s more common for authoritie­s to send a letter urging lobbyists to file necessary paperwork than jumping straight to criminal charges.

“The high burden … make[s] criminal prosecutio­ns for FARA violations challengin­g,” Hickey said at the committee hearing.

 ?? James Berglie Zuma Press ?? SPECIAL counsel Robert Mueller has used an obscure law to go after some of President Trump’s aides.
James Berglie Zuma Press SPECIAL counsel Robert Mueller has used an obscure law to go after some of President Trump’s aides.

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