Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Russian who met Trump Jr. charged in an unrelated case

- By Larry Neumeister, Chad Day and Stephen Braun

NEW YORK — The Russian lawyer who attended the Trump Tower meeting that is a focus of the special counsel’s investigat­ion into possible collusion was charged with obstructin­g an unrelated tax-fraud case, federal prosecutor­s in New York said Tuesday.

Natalya Veselnitsk­aya was indicted on one count of obstructio­n of justice after prosecutor­s said she teamed up with a senior Russian prosecutor and submitted deceptive declaratio­ns in a civil proceeding involving a Russian tax refund fraud scheme.

The indictment, which is unrelated to Russian election interferen­ce and brought by the Manhattan U.S. attorney, illustrate­s Veselnitsk­aya’s ties to the Russian government, which she has denied. And it renews questions about the circumstan­ces of the 2016 Trump Tower meeting, which also was attended by Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner and former campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

Trump Jr. has acknowledg­ed that he met with Veselnitsk­aya because he had been told she could offer damaging informatio­n about Democrat Hillary Clinton. But Trump Jr. and Kushner said the meeting mostly involved Russia’s ban on American adoptions in response to U.S. sanctions.

Veselnitsk­aya has previously denied acting on behalf of Russian officials when she met with the Trump team, telling Congress she operates “independen­tly of any government bodies.”

Special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigat­ing whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with Russia during the presidenti­al campaign, has focused on the Trump Tower meeting and called some participan­ts before a federal grand jury. He also has scrutinize­d Trump’s role in drafting a misleading public statement about the meeting’s content.

The indictment unsealed Tuesday will curtail Veselnitsk­aya’s internatio­nal travel and expose her to arrest if she comes to the United States. But Russia does not have an extraditio­n treaty with the U.S. and she will likely never appear in a U.S. court if she remains there.

The indictment was filed under seal in December and publicly announced Tuesday.

The criminal case relates to real estate firm Prevezon Holdings Ltd. and its role in an alleged $230 million tax-fraud scheme that federal officials say was “perpetrate­d by a criminal organizati­on that included in its ranks corrupt Russian officials.”

In 2013, U.S. prosecutor­s brought a civil lawsuit against the company that sought to recover millions of dollars worth of New York real estate and other property on the grounds that it was tainted by money laundering. The fraud scheme involved using stolen corporate identities to obtain Russian tax refunds and funneling the illegal proceeds through a network of shell companies.

Veselnitsk­aya was retained to assist the defendants. As part of that representa­tion, the indictment accuses her of misreprese­nting a declaratio­n that she submitted to a federal judge.

The indictment says Veselnitsk­aya claimed that the material she submitted to the court was an independen­t finding when, in fact, the document was an “intentiona­lly misleading declaratio­n” that she had secretly drafted with a senior Russian government prosecutor, who is not named in court papers.

Prevezon settled the civil case in 2017 but balked at a negotiated payment. A federal judge ordered the firm last February to pay $6 million to the U.S.

The companies that claimed they had been defrauded by Prevezon were owned by Hermitage Capital Management, whose CEO William Browder aided the government’s case. Browder has championed sanctions against Russia, accusing its officials of collaborat­ing in the imprisonme­nt that led to the death of his Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

Magnitsky was arrested while investigat­ing the fraud case and died in a Russian prison in 2009. Congress passed the Magnitsky Act in 2012 to target those allegedly involved in his arrest and death with financial sanctions.

Veselnitsk­aya’s work for Prevezon is also connected to another Trump Tower meeting participan­t, Rinat Akhmetshin.

Prevezon owner Denis Katsyv helped fund a lobbying effort carried out by Akhmetshin that sought to poke holes in Magnitsky’s story. Akhmetshin, a former Russian military officer and Washington lobbyist, accompanie­d Veselnitsk­aya to the Trump Tower meeting.

 ?? YURY MARTYANOV/GETTY-AFP ?? Natalya Veselnitsk­aya was indicted on one count of obstructio­n of justice.
YURY MARTYANOV/GETTY-AFP Natalya Veselnitsk­aya was indicted on one count of obstructio­n of justice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States