Montreal Gazette

Another Ukraine whistleblo­wer emerges

Intel agent has first-hand info on Ukraine: lawyer

- DOINA CHIACU AND MARK HOSENBALL

WASHINGTON • A second whistleblo­wer has come forward with first-hand knowledge of President Donald Trump’s attempts to get the Ukrainian president to investigat­e a political rival, lawyers for the official said on Sunday.

Lawyer Mark Zaid said the person, also an intelligen­ce official, has direct knowledge of some of the allegation­s involving the initial whistleblo­wer complaint, which triggered impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the Republican president.

The emergence of a second protected witness complicate­s efforts by Trump and his Republican supporters to dismiss the complaint as politicall­y motivated hearsay and may strengthen the Democrats’ case against him.

The complaint, filed with the inspector general on Aug. 12, cited informatio­n received from half a dozen U.S. officials expressing concern that Trump was using the power of his office to solicit interferen­ce from a foreign country as he seeks re-election to a second term in 2020.

It also alleged that Trump leveraged US$400 million in aid to secure a promise from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e a Democratic rival, former vice-president Joe Biden, and his son Hunter Biden, who sat on the board of a Ukrainian energy company.

“I can confirm that my firm and my team represent multiple whistleblo­wers in connection to the underlying August 12, 2019, disclosure to the Intelligen­ce Community Inspector General,” Andrew Bakaj, a second lawyer, said on Twitter. Bakaj declined further comment.

Zaid said the whistleblo­wer had spoken with the inspector general as part of an initial examinatio­n of the whistleblo­wer complaint.

An interview with the inspector general affords protection against reprisal.

Confirmati­on of another whistleblo­wer followed stirrings of discontent within Trump’s own Republican Party after he called on Beijing on Friday to investigat­e Biden’s son, who had business dealings in China.

Republican senators Mitt Romney, Ben Sasse and Susan Collins have expressed concerns about Trump reaching out to foreign countries to help him in his 2020 re-election bid.

However, other Republican­s stood firmly in support of Trump on news shows on Sunday.

“I doubt if the China comment was serious to tell you the truth,” Sen. Roy Blunt, a Republican member of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said on CBS’ Face the Nation. “I don’t imagine that’s what he was doing. Certainly we shouldn’t expect the Chinese, the Russians or any of our national security adversarie­s to be helpful.”

Trump has alleged that Hunter Biden profited in his business dealings in both Ukraine and China from his father’s position, and that Joe Biden, as vice president, pushed Ukraine to fire a prosecutor to impede a probe of a firm tied to his son.

There has been no evidence of any wrongdoing.

Biden spokesman Andrew Bates said Trump had “sent his administra­tion into a tailspin by trying to bully a foreign country into spreading a comprehens­ively debunked conspiracy theory about the vice president” and he predicted Trump would lose “the old-fashioned way: an interventi­on by his own country — courtesy of the American people — in 2020.”

The telephone call with Zelenskiy, a summary of which was released by the White House, and the whistleblo­wer complaint prompted House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi to launch the impeachmen­t inquiry on Sept. 24. Trump’s attempts to solicit foreign interferen­ce jeopardize­d U.S. election integrity and threatened national security, she said.

The investigat­ion could lead to the approval of articles of impeachmen­t — or formal charges — against Trump in the House. A trial on whether to remove him from office would then be held in the U.S. Senate. Republican­s who control the Senate have shown little appetite for ousting Trump.

Democrats said any finding that Trump withheld taxpayer money, approved by Congress to help Ukraine fight Russian aggression, in exchange for a favour from Zelenskiy would strengthen the case against him.

The committees this week expect to hear from several other U.S. diplomats, including Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, a committee official confirmed on Sunday. Sondland worked closely with Volker and Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph Giuliani on the Ukraine effort.

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