The Denver Post

Alleged Russian agent is poised to plead guilty

- By Rosalind S. Helderman and Spencer S. Hsu

Maria Butina, a Russian gun rights activist, is poised to plead guilty in a case involving accusation­s that she was working as an agent for the Kremlin in the United States, according to a new court filing.

Federal prosecutor­s and attorneys for Butina jointly requested in court documents Monday that U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan set a time for Butina to withdraw her previous plea of “not guilty.”

“The parties have resolved this matter,” Butina’s attorneys and D.C.-based prosecu- tors wrote in their joint filing.

Chutkan said she would hear the matter Wednesday.

A plea is not final until it is entered in court and accepted by a judge. Monday’s filing did not indicate to what charge Butina would plead.

Butina was accused of working to push the Kremlin’s agenda by forming bonds with National Rifle Associatio­n officials and other conservati­ve leaders and making outreach to 2016 presidenti­al candidates.

A native of Siberia, she founded a group to expand gun rights in Russia, a profile that allowed her to develop relationsh­ips with U.S. conservati­ves intrigued with her work. Prosecutor­s said Butina, 30, stepped up her activities after moving to Washington in September 2016 to attend graduate school at American University.

Her attorneys had said her interactio­ns with the NRA and others were typical of an ambitious student anxious to network and eager to build better relations between the U.S. and her country.

Prosecutor­s said her goal was to advance the foreign policy aims of the Kremlin and that she was acting at the direction of a Russian government official, Alexander Torshin, a former senator who until last month served as deputy director of the Russian central bank.

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