The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

New York prosecutor­s eye illicit foreign lobbying

- By Tom Hays and Jeff Horwitz

NEW YORK » The special counsel in the Russia probe has referred investigat­ions into possible unlawful foreign lobbying to federal prosecutor­s in New York, two people familiar with the inquiry said Wednesday.

Three veteran Washington insiders — Tony Podesta, Gregory Craig and Vin Weber — are under scrutiny for allegedly fail- ing to register as foreign agents with the Justice Department, the people said. None of the three has been charged with any crimes.

Special counsel Robert Mueller turned over the investigat­ions to the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan earlier this year, according to the people, who weren’t authorized to discuss the case and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The same prosecutor­s’ office is conducting a separate investigat­ion of Michael Cohen, the former personal lawyer for President Donald Trump, at the behest of the special counsel. Like the Cohen case, the lobbying inquiries appeared to fall outside the scope of Mueller’s probe of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Prosecutor­s and a lawyer for Podesta declined comment Wednesday about the referrals, which were first reported by CNN on Tuesday. Attempts to contact Craig and Weber weren’t immediatel­y successful.

The three men in question cover the political spectrum in Washington: Podesta is a longtime Democratic operative whose brother, John Podesta, ran Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign; Weber is a former Republican congressma­n from Minnesota; and Craig was a White House counsel for President Barack Obama.

They also all have ties to Paul Manafort, the one- time Trump campaign chairman currently on trial on charges he or- chestrated a multimilli­ondollar conspiracy to evade U.S. tax and banking laws.

The three did work related to a lobbying effort on behalf of Ukraine’s government directed by Manafort and longtime associate Rick Gates, who has pleaded guilty and is expected to testify at Manafort’s trial.

Two firms at which Podesta and Weber have held executive positions — the Podesta Group and Mercury Public Affairs — were retained through a nonprofit group in Brussels that was directed by Manafort, according to prosecutor­s’ court filings. Craig oversaw his law firm’s report on behalf of Ukraine’s government that defended the legitimacy of its prosecutio­n of a former prime minister.

Reports first surfaced in 2016 that Mueller was investigat­ing whether Manafort secretly routed at least $2.2 million in payments to the Podesta Group and Mercury. At the time, the firms claimed they were under no obligation to disclose their activities to federal authoritie­s.

As the scrutiny intensifie­d, Podesta stepped down last year as chairman of his firm; it shut down two weeks later. Craig left his law firm in April.

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