New York Daily News

Rudy pals’ web included talk of Andy gift

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

A pair of Rudy Giuliani associates told a Russian millionair­e in 2018 they’d made a $125,000 straw donation to then-Gov. Cuomo as part of a seedy effort to launch a weed business in New York, federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan say.

The murky plan for a Cuomo contributi­on was revealed in Manhattan Federal Court papers filed late Tuesday in the criminal case against Lev Parnas, a former Giuliani crony who helped the ex-mayor in his bid to find political dirt on President Biden in Ukraine. The feds said they could find no record of the payout and suspect Parnas instead spent the Russian’s money on himself.

Parnas will face trial next month on charges that he and several business partners funneled cash from Russian investor Andrey Muraviev to U.S. politician­s across the country, in violation of campaign finance laws barring donations from foreigners.

Parnas and his co-conspirato­rs are accused of making the political contributi­ons without revealing that Muraviev was the source. The money was intended to curry favor with politician­s in states where the Russian hoped to legally sell recreation­al marijuana, prosecutor­s say.

Prosecutor­s said in the new court filing that Parnas and Giuliani associate Igor Fruman sent Muraviev a list of which politician­s had received the Russian’s money.

“The list includes $125,000 ‘Paid’ to then-New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo,” the feds wrote.

However, prosecutor­s said there’s no evidence that Parnas, Fruman “or anyone acting at their behest actually made this payment” to Cuomo.

Rich Azzopardi, a spokesman for Cuomo, who resigned last month amid accusation­s of sexual misconduct, said the ex-governor’s team had never heard of the purported donation until asked about it by the Daily News.

“We have no knowledge and, as the government said, no record of any contributi­ons connected to this,” Azzopardi said.

Fruman wrote in a text message obtained by prosecutor­s that it was especially important to give cash to Cuomo, who was at the time vowing to pass legislatio­n legalizing recreation­al reefer.

“In NY we have to mention Andrew Cuomo,” Fruman wrote in the text to Parnas and Andrey Kukushkin, an intermedia­ry for Muraviev, who’s also standing trial next month for the cannabis plot.

Fruman pleaded guilty earlier this month to soliciting illegal campaign donations from Muraviev in the pot business plan.

Prosecutor­s wrote Fruman and Parnas may have tried to trick the Russian investor.

“Although [they] agreed to use Muraviev’s money to fund their joint cannabis business — primarily by donating to U.S. politician­s they believed would help the business — they did not in fact use all the money for that purpose,” the feds wrote. “Among other things, Parnas and Fruman used a portion of the money to cover expenses for luxurious hotel accommodat­ions and airfare, and other personal expenses.”

Joseph Bondy, an attorney for Parnas, who has pleaded not guilty, declined to discuss specifics about the Cuomo cash, but claimed the feds are misinforme­d.

“They have it wrong. I will leave it at that,” Bondy said.

The Parnas and Kukushkin trial, set to start Oct. 12, is expected to feature plenty of politicall­y charged testimony. Aspects of the case against Parnas overlap with Giuliani’s hunt for Ukrainian dirt on Biden, which triggered former President Donald Trump’s first impeachmen­t.

Giuliani has not been charged with any crimes, but the FBI raided his Upper East Side apartment and office in May as part of a separate investigat­ion into whether his Ukraine dealings violated foreign lobbying laws.

Since his indictment, Parnas has publicly broken with Giuliani and Trump, saying he regrets helping smear Biden.

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