The Denver Post

Moscow meeting now under new scrutiny

- By Desmond Butler, Mary Clare Jalonick and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON» Earlier this year, a Russian-american lobbyist and another businessma­n discussed over coffee in Moscow an extraordin­ary meeting they had attended 12 months earlier: a gathering at Trump Tower with President Donald Trump’s son, his son-in-law and his then-campaign chairman.

The Moscow meeting in June, which has not been previously disclosed, is now under scrutiny by investigat­ors who want to know why the two men met in the first place and whether there was some effort to get their stories straight about the Trump Tower meeting just weeks before it would become public, The Associated Press has learned.

Congressio­nal investigat­ors have questioned both men — lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin and Ike Kaveladze, a business associate of a Moscow-based developer and former Trump business partner — and obtained their text message communicat­ions, people familiar with the investigat­ion told The AP.

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team also has been investigat­ing the 2016 Trump Tower meeting, which occurred weeks after Trump had clinched the Republican presidenti­al nomination and which his son attended with the expectatio­n of receiving damaging informatio­n about Democrat Hillary Clinton. A grand jury has already heard testimony about the meeting, which in addition to Donald Trump Jr., also included Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, and his then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

The focus of the congressio­nal investigat­ors was confirmed by three people familiar with their probe, including two who demanded anonymity to discuss the sensitive inquiry.

One of those people said Akhmetshin told congressio­nal investigat­ors that he asked for the Moscow meeting with Kaveladze to argue that they should go public with the details of the Trump Tower meeting before they were caught up in a media maelstrom. Akhmetshin also told the investigat­ors that Kaveladze said people in Trump’s orbit were asking about Akhmetshin’s background, the person said.

Scott Balber, a lawyer for Kaveladze, confirmed that his client and Akhmetshin met over coffee and that the Trump Tower meeting a year earlier was “obviously discussed.” But Balber denied his client had been contacted by associates of Trump before he took the meeting with Akhmetshin, or had been aware of plans to disclose the Trump Tower gathering to the U.S. government.

Balber said the men did not discuss strategy or how to line up their stories, and did not meet in anticipati­on of the Trump Tower meeting becoming public and attracting a barrage of news media attention.

He said Akhmetshin did convey during coffee the possibilit­y that his name could come out in connection with the Trump Tower meeting and cause additional, unwanted scrutiny given that he had been linked in earlier news reports to Russian military intelligen­ce, coverage that Akhmetshin considered unfair. Akhmetshin has denied ongoing ties with Russian intelligen­ce, but acknowledg­ed that he served in the Soviet military in the late 1980s as part of a counterint­elligence unit.

“That was the impetus,” Balber said of the men’s gettogethe­r. “It had absolutely nothing to do with anticipati­on of the meeting coming out in the press.”

The meeting in Moscow occurred during a tumultuous time. Mueller had been appointed as special counsel weeks earlier following the firing in May of FBI Director James Comey.

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