Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inquiry panel approaches Caputo

- MAGGIE HABERMAN

Michael Caputo, who served as a communicat­ions adviser to Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, has been asked by the House committee investigat­ing Russian election meddling to submit to a voluntary interview and to provide any documents he may have that are related to the inquiry.

The House Intelligen­ce Committee, which is examining possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian officials, made its request in a letter May 9. Caputo, who lives near Buffalo, N.Y., and spent six months on the Trump team, worked in Russia during the 1990s and came to know Kremlin officials. He also did work in the early 2000s for Gazprom Media, a Russian conglomera­te that supported President Vladimir Putin.

Caputo has strongly denied that there was any collusion between him or anyone else on the campaign and Russian officials. He has also accused the committee of smearing him.

A Democratic member of the panel, Rep. Jackie Speier of California, raised Caputo’s name during the March 20 hearing where James Comey, then the FBI director, testified on Russia’s interferen­ce in the election. She noted Caputo’s work for Gazprom and the fact that he met his second wife, who is Ukrainian, while working in 2007 on a parliament­ary election in Kiev.

Caputo is the latest in a string of Trump campaign officials who have been approached by the committee. He is a protege of Roger Stone, one of Trump’s longestser­ving advisers and one of the people who has been a focus of investigat­ors’ interest. Stone has also denied having any contact with Russian officials.

The panel’s letter asked Caputo to “produce documents and other materials to the committee and participat­e in a voluntary transcribe­d interview at the committee’s offices,” according to a copy obtained by The New York Times.

It asked for “any documents, records, electronic­ally stored informatio­n including email, communicat­ion, recordings, data and tangible things” that could “reasonably lead to the discovery of any facts within the investigat­ion’s publicly announced parameters.”

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