The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Probe snags Republican, Democrat lobbying interests

Firms worked with Manafort, Gates in Ukrainian efforts.

- By Jeff Horwitz and Jake Pearson

WASHINGTON — The indictment that alleges covert foreign lobbying by two former Trump campaign officials is casting shadows on three powerful Washington lobbying and legal firms, with Democratic as well as Republican ties.

The focus on those firms is broadening the stakes of the Russia investigat­ion and drawing in the brother of Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman.

The Podesta Group, founded by Washington powerbroke­r Tony Podesta, was among the three firms cited by pseudonym or other references in the indictment. None is charged with a crime.

Prosecutor­s are implicatin­g all three in covert work for pro-Russian Ukrainian interests, the heart of the criminal case against former Trump campaign officials Paul Manafort and Rick Gates.

The indictment suggests the companies were more involved in the matter than previously acknowledg­ed, even as it stops short of leveling accusation­s of criminal wrongdoing against the three.

Manafort and Gates, meanwhile, face 12 felony counts, including money laundering, conspiracy and acting as unregister­ed foreign agents. As described in the indictment, they led the covert lobbying, paying the three firms for performing some of the work.

Podesta stepped down from his namesake group following the indictment. His former partners are scrambling to recreate the firm under a new name and preserve its client base. His brother, John Podesta, ran the Clinton campaign.

Altogether, the episode demonstrat­es how fiercely competing political interests — Trump officials, the brother of his presidenti­al rival’s campaign chief, a former Republican congressma­n, a former Obama administra­tion attorney and more foes in the public arena — will partner behind the scenes at the intersecti­on of money and lobbying in Washington. In his campaign, Trump called that intersecti­on the swamp and promised to drain it.

Trump seized on the developmen­t with the Podesta Group as a chance to divert attention from the alleged criminal culpabilit­y of his campaign associates as the investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller casts a wide net in its exploratio­n of Russia’s attempts to interfere with the 2016 election and of any collusion between the Trump campaign and Moscow.

“The biggest story yesterday, the one that has the Dems in a dither, is Podesta running from his firm,” the president tweeted.

The other firms involved in the criminal case against Manafort and Gates are Mercury Public Affairs, a venerable Republican lobbying firm whose Washington office is headed by former Republican Congressma­n Vin Weber; and prominent law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, known as Skadden Arps.

Mueller’s indictment focused in part on Manafort’s and Gates’ relationsh­ip with the firms and federal requiremen­ts requiring lobbyists for foreign government­s to register with the Justice Department and disclose their activities.

“This is a textbook example” of undisclose­d lobbying, said Joe Sandler, a Washington lawyer and expert on the U.S. Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, a Nazi-era law intended to reveal foreign influence in the U.S. “If there’s reason for you to think that the shots are being called by a foreign agent, there are disclosure rules.”

Mercury was cited in the indictment as “Company A,” and the Podesta Group was cited as “Company B.” Skadden Arps was cited in the indictment but not by name.

The indictment said the firms were paid from accounts controlled by Manafort and Gates in Cyprus, the Grenadines and elsewhere.

In August 2016, AP revealed details about the covert lobbying campaign by Manafort and Gates that were among the foundation­s of this week’s criminal indictment­s. The details included emails of Gates giving instructio­ns to Weber — Mercury’s managing partner — and an associate at the firm.

Mercury’s managing partner, Weber, flatly told AP in August 2016 that Gates and Manafort didn’t arrange for Mercury’s hiring for the lobbying effort and did not tell Mercury what to do. “I don’t remember any call in which either Gates or Manafort was on it,” Weber said then.

But according to the indictment, Manafort and Gates participat­ed in “weekly phone calls” with the lobbying firms — Podesta Group and Mercury — and routinely delivered orders to both.

Mercury partner Mike McKeon released a statement Monday denying the firm behaved improperly and said it was cooperatin­g with investigat­ors. He declined to address discrepanc­ies between Weber’s previous statements and what prosecutor­s said in the indictment.

Unlike Mercury, Podesta’s firm acknowledg­ed Gates’ substantiv­e involvemen­t in the work earlier.

The indictment also raises questions about payments made by Manafort to Skadden Arps related to a December 2012 report by Gregory Craig, a former White House counsel in the Obama administra­tion. The report played down the political motivation­s behind the Ukrainian government’s imprisonme­nt of Yulia Tymoshenko, an opposition leader. The official, initial payment by the Ukrainian government for the 2012 report was only $13,000. But in June, after the matter came under public scrutiny, the law firm returned $567,000 to the Ukrainian government, saying the money had been prepaid for work it never performed. Now, the indictment puts the cost for the report at $4 million and says the money came from Manafort and Gates.

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