Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Russian who bought Trump mansion mired in big scandal

- By Kevin G. Hall

WASHINGTON — A widening scandal surroundin­g the Russian billionair­e who bought Donald Trump’s Palm Beach mansion for an eye-popping sum has brought the oligarch renewed scrutiny.

Fertilizer magnate Dmitry Rybolovlev was detained by police in Monaco last week and questioned in an influence-peddling probe that involves the sale of famous paintings, allegation­s of public corruption and some of the biggest names in the wealthy principali­ty of Monaco.

A resident and owner of the AS Monaco soccer team, Rybolovlev is also believed to have attracted attention in special counsel Robert Mueller III’s investigat­ion into potential Russian collusion with the Trump campaign.

The Russian, reportedly worth more than $6 billion, attracted attention amid reports of Kremlin meddling in the 2016 election because the Russian’s plane had been parked near Trump’s personal jet during a campaign stop in Charlotte, N.C., and later landed at the Las Vegas airport just as Trump’s aircraft was departing.

Rybolovlev and Trump have denied knowing each other and said their only transactio­n involved the sale of his Palm Beach mansion, described as a gaudy 6.3 acre estate with an indoor pizza kitchen. The estate was eventually torn down and the property put for sale as three lots.

Reporting by McClatchy and the Charlotte Observer showed that Rybolovlev had actually been in Charlotte because he secretly owned a manufactur­ing plant that was to make huge batteries capa-

ble of supplying backup power to the electrical grid. Soon after the reports, the company called Alevo filed for bankruptcy and shut down.

What proved most intriguing about Rybolovlev, however, was his 2008 purchase for nearly $100 million of Trump’s mansion, bought a few years earlier for $41 million. The huge profit for Trump, in a sale to a wealthy Russian with Kremlin ties, later attracted enormous media attention and fueled conspiracy theories.

The details of the sale are among the reason Democrats want a look at Trump’s taxes, in part because Rybolovlev aggressive­ly uses offshore shell companies, which are legal, to keep details of his assets private. Trump has in the past denied using shell companies, favoring incorporat­ion of hundreds of companies in Delaware, whose laws allow similar secrecy.

The Palm Beach mansion transactio­n does not appear to be under scrutiny in the European cases, where authoritie­s in Monaco are probing Rybolovlev’s relations with former Justice Minister Philippe Narmino.

Narmino has been charged with corruption and influence peddling, allegedly for accepting payments from Rybolovlev, whose lawyer Tetiana Bersheda has also been charged in the case.

The French daily Le Monde last year published a bombshell story, citing text messages, that accused Narmino of accepting presents to favor Rybolovlev in a legal dispute with a Swiss art dealer named Yves Bouvier.

The wealthy Russian claims Bouvier misreprese­nted and overcharge­d in the sale of famous works of art, and among other things had sold Rybolovlev two paintings by Pablo Picasso that had been stolen.

On Tuesday, Rybolovlev was detained and questioned, his luxury property overlookin­g the Monte Carlo harbor searched. He was not arrested or jailed, but under Monaco law remains in a status where he must return to the court if and when summoned.

“This does not mean, however, that sufficient grounds exist for the suspect to be brought before the trial, and even lesser grounds to find him guilty of any offense,” his lawyers said in a statement provided to the Miami Herald. “We do insist on the fact that at this stage Mr. Rybolovlev is presumed innocent, and that this presumptio­n and the rights attached to it should be strictly respected.”

A spokesman for Rybolovlev’s family office, which oversees his numerous businesses, declined to comment on whether there has been contact with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel or next steps in the European court proceeding­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States