Santa Fe New Mexican

Plan to target Mueller unravels

FBI asked to probe plot offering women money to smear special counsel

- By Adam Goldman

WASHINGTON — The office of the special counsel, Robert Mueller, has asked the FBI to investigat­e what appears to be an effort to smear him, stemming from suspicious emails offering women money in exchange for fabricatin­g sexual misconduct claims against him.

“When we learned last week of allegation­s that women were offered money to make false claims about the special counsel, we immediatel­y referred the matter to the FBI for investigat­ion,” Peter Carr, a spokesman for the special counsel’s office, said in a statement Tuesday.

The plot appeared to be the latest, and one of the more bizarre, in a string of attempts by supporters of President Donald Trump to discredit Mueller’s investigat­ion as a hoax and a witch hunt. Mueller is investigat­ing whether any Trump associates conspired with Russia’s 2016 election interferen­ce and whether the president tried to obstruct the inquiry.

He has secured six guilty pleas and a trial conviction in the 17 months he has overseen the investigat­ion.

As the plan to target Mueller came to light Tuesday, it quickly unraveled as news organizati­ons unearthed gaps and inconsiste­ncies in the allegation­s.

The plot first came to light through one of the emails referred to the FBI, sent to journalist­s on Oct. 17 by a woman named Lorraine Parsons who said that a man had contacted her with questions about Mueller because she had worked as a paralegal with him at a law firm in 1974.

She said the man, whom she identified as Bill Christense­n and said had a British accent, contacted her a second time and offered her more than $50,000 to “make accusation­s of sexual misconduct and workplace harassment against Robert Mueller.”

To get the money, he said, she would need to sign an affidavit, and promised a $10,000 bonus if she did so quickly.

The man added that he was working for Jack Burkman, a Republican lawyer. Parsons said she declined the financial offer and hung up the phone.

She identified herself to at least two news media outlets who received her email as Lorraine D. Parsons of Fort Myers, Fla., but the New York Times could not find her.

Burkman is known for peddling right-wing conspiracy theories.

Burkman did not respond to a message seeking comment. “The allegation­s of paying a woman are false,” he wrote on Twitter. He also promised to reveal new accusation­s against Mueller at a news conference Thursday.

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