Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump, Putin blur the facts

- Katie Akin

President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin made inaccurate statements to the media following their one-onone talks in Helsinki on Monday about election meddling, global terrorism and nuclear nonprolife­ration.

Here’s a rundown of our fact checks.

Trump: Missing DNC servers and the ‘Pakistani gentleman’

Asked if he believed Putin’s denials of election interferen­ce over his own intelligen­ce agencies, Trump brought up “missing” servers of the Democrats, including a server of “the Pakistani gentleman that worked on the DNC.”

The gentleman in question is likely Imran Awan, who worked in informatio­n technology for several Democrats in the House of Representa­tives. Awan was not affiliated with the Democratic National Committee.

Awan was arrested for bank fraud in July, prompting speculatio­n among conservati­ve groups that he had been involved with election hacking as well.

A government investigat­ion found no evidence that Awan was involved in wrongdoing in his IT job, or that he had any ties to election meddling.

As for the missing servers, the DNC gave the FBI a full copy of its server when they began working together to investigat­e the hack. In his June 2017 testimony to the House Intelligen­ce Committee, former FBI Director James Comey mentioned that the “best practice” is to inspect the affected machines directly, but that a copy could be used just as well.

Trump’s statement rates

False.

Putin: The Russian state has never interfered in American elections

Putin said that “the Russian state has never interfered … into internal American affairs including election process.”

This statement rates Pants on Fire.

The statement comes just days after Special Counsel Robert Mueller indicted 12 Russian intelligen­ce officials for meddling in the 2016 U.S. election.

And it contradict­s the findings of the U.S. intelligen­ce community, members of Trump’s administra­tion and the findings of Republican-led investigat­ions by the U.S. House and Senate.

Not only is there a mountain of evidence to show that Russia meddled in the 2016 election, there were also attempts by the Soviet Union to do so from as early as 1960.

Putin: Browder associates donated over $400 million to Clinton campaign

Putin said that associates of financier Bill Browder “sent a huge amount of money, over $400 million, as a contributi­on to the campaign of Hillary Clinton.”

That’s also Pants on Fire. Russians say that Browder and his partners at Ziff Brothers Investment­s, a New York venture capital firm, illegally siphoned billions of rubles out of the country.

Browder also led the charge to pass the 2012 Magnitsky Act, a U.S. law that penalizes Russian officials suspected of sanctionin­g the death of Browder’s lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, in a Russian prison.

We checked campaign contributi­on records and found that associates of Browder — the Ziff brothers — gave $315,000 to the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee. Putin’s estimate does not hold up when stretched to include their donations to the Clinton Foundation and its subsidiari­es.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump chats with Russia's President Vladimir Putin the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting last November.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump chats with Russia's President Vladimir Putin the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting last November.

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