The Bakersfield Californian

Analyst who aided Trump-Russia dossier charged with lying to FBI

- BY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — A Russian analyst who contribute­d to a dossier of Democratic-funded research into ties between Russia and Donald Trump was arrested Thursday on charges of lying to the FBI about his sources of informatio­n, among them a longtime supporter of Hillary Clinton.

The case against Igor Danchenko is part of special counsel John Durham’s ongoing investigat­ion into the origins of the FBI’s probe into whether Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia had conspired to tip the outcome of that year’s presidenti­al campaign.

The indictment, the third criminal case brought by Durham and the second in a two-month span, is likely to boost complaints from Trump allies that well-connected Democrats worked behind the scenes to advance suspicions about Trump and Russia that contribute­d to the FBI’s election-year investigat­ion.

The case does not undercut investigat­ors’ findings that the Kremlin aided the Trump campaign — conclusion­s that were not based on the dossier, which was barely mentioned in special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. But the indictment does endorse a longstandi­ng concern about the Russia probe: that opposition research the FBI relied on as it surveilled a Trump campaign adviser was marred by unsupporte­d, uncorrobor­ated claims.

The five-count indictment accuses Danchenko of making multiple false statements to the FBI when interviewe­d in 2017 about his role in collecting informatio­n for Christophe­r Steele, a former British spy whose research into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia was financed by Democrats.

Danchenko, a U.S.-based Russian who’d specialize­d in Russian and Eurasian matters as an analyst at Brookings Institutio­n, was a significan­t source for Steele as Steele compiled his dossier of research. That dossier, the target of intense derision from Trump, was ultimately provided to the FBI and used by federal authoritie­s as they applied for and received surveillan­ce warrants targeting former Trump campaign aide Carter Page.

According to the indictment, Danchenko repeatedly lied to the FBI about his sources of informatio­n. Prosecutor­s say that deception mattered because the FBI “devoted substantia­l resources attempting to investigat­e and corroborat­e” the dossier’s allegation­s and had “relied in large part” on that research in obtaining the surveillan­ce warrants.

A lawyer for Danchenko had no immediate comment.

The indictment says Danchenko misled the FBI by denying that he had discussed any allegation­s in the dossier with a contact of his who was a public relations executive and longtime Democratic operative who volunteere­d for the campaign of Clinton, Trump’s 2016 opponent.

In fact, the indictment says, Danchenko had sourced one or more allegation­s in the dossier anonymousl­y to that Clinton associate. As the FBI worked to corroborat­e the dossier’s allegation­s, it would have been important to know the Democrat’s role in feeding informatio­n for it because it bore upon his “reliabilit­y, motivation­s, and potential bias as a source,” according to the indictment.

The individual is not named in court papers, but his lawyer confirmed his identity as Charles Dolan Jr., a former executive director of the Democratic Governors Associatio­n who advised Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign and volunteere­d for her 2016 campaign. The lawyer, Ralph Drury Martin, declined to comment further on the ongoing investigat­ion.

The charging documents also refer to salacious and unsupporte­d sexual allegation­s involving Trump’s behavior at a Moscow hotel that were included in the dossier but that Trump has vigorously disputed.

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