Weekend Herald

Ukrainians’ role in US election meddling probed

Giuliani investigat­ed as conduit for misinforma­tion

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United States Federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn have been investigat­ing whether several Ukrainian officials helped orchestrat­e a wide-ranging plan to meddle in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, including using Rudy Giuliani to spread their misleading claims about President Joe Biden and tilt the election in Donald Trump’s favour, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The criminal investigat­ion, which began during the final months of the Trump administra­tion and has not been previously reported, underscore­s the federal government’s increasing­ly aggressive approach toward rooting out foreign interferen­ce in American electoral politics. Much of that effort is focused on Russian intelligen­ce, which has suspected ties to at least one of the Ukrainians now under investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion is unfolding separately from a long-running federal inquiry in Manhattan that is aimed at Giuliani. While the two investigat­ions have a similar cast of characters and overlap in some ways, Giuliani is not a subject of the Brooklyn investigat­ion, the people said.

Instead, the Brooklyn prosecutor­s, along with the FBI, are focused on current and former Ukrainian officials suspected of trying to influence the election by spreading unsubstant­iated claims of corruption about Biden through a number of channels, including Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer at the time.

At one point in the investigat­ion, the authoritie­s examined a trip Giuliani took to Europe in December 2019, when he met with several Ukrainians, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing inquiry.

At least one of the current and former officials Giuliani met, a Ukrainian member of parliament named Andriy Derkach, is now a focus of the Brooklyn investigat­ion, the people said.

The trip was the culminatio­n of a year-long effort by Giuliani, with support from Trump, to undermine Biden’s presidenti­al campaign. The effort proceeded primarily on two parallel tracks: collecting informatio­n from Ukraine to attack Biden’s diplomatic efforts there as vice president, and pressing Ukraine to announce investigat­ions into Biden and other Trump critics.

The effort ultimately backfired, leading to Trump’s first impeachmen­t.

Amid the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, US intelligen­ce officials warned Trump that Derkach was seeking to use Giuliani to spread disinforma­tion. Giuliani, who has said he did not receive a similar warning at the time, continued to vouch for the authentici­ty of informatio­n he received, even after Trump’s Treasury Department imposed sanctions against Derkach for election interferen­ce, and said he was “an active Russian agent”.

Yesterday, Giuliani’s lawyer defended the search for informatio­n about Biden, disputing that he relied on misleading informatio­n. “When you investigat­e allegation­s of corruption, you talk to all sorts of people; some are credible, and some are not,” the lawyer, Robert Costello, said.

Together, the Manhattan Brooklyn investigat­ions present a challenge for the Biden Justice Department, which has pledged to remain above the political fray even as it inherited a number of sensitive investigat­ions linked to Ukraine and Russia.

The president’s son, Hunter Biden, for example, is facing a federal criminal tax investigat­ion that appears to be partly related to work he did in Ukraine, and a Justice Department special counsel is investigat­ing the origins of Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russia and Trump’s 2016 campaign.

The investigat­ion into Giuliani in Manhattan centres on whether he lobbied the Trump administra­tion to remove the US ambassador to Kyiv on behalf of Ukrainian officials who wanted her gone.

Giuliani, who has not been accused of wrongdoing, denies that worked for any Ukrainians. He has cast his interactio­ns with them as part of his effort to help Trump, and he denounced the FBI searches as a “corrupt double standard” by the Justice Department, which he said had ignored “blatant crimes” by Biden and other Democrats.

It might prove difficult to arrest and extradite Ukrainians who face charges to the United States. Still, charges would most likely prevent them from travelling to most parts of the world, where they could be held for possible extraditio­n.

The Treasury Department has already levelled economic sanctions for election interferen­ce against some of the Ukrainians, essentiall­y preventing them from doing business in the United States, or through American financial institutio­ns.

An initial round of sanctions in September took aim at Derkach, who the Treasury Department said has been “an active Russian agent for over a decade”.

Then, in January, the department levied sanctions against seven Ukrainians who it asserted were part of Derkach’s inner circle, including Andrii Telizhenko, a former Ukrainian government official who worked closely with Giuliani and Senate Republican­s to provide damaging informatio­n about Biden and other Trump critics.

Between late 2019 and mid-2020, Derkach directed his efforts at a number of Americans, not just Giuliani. He “leveraged US media, US-based social media platforms, and influentia­l US persons to spread misleading and unsubstant­iated allegation­s”, the Treasury Department said.

Giuliani began collecting informatio­n from Ukrainian officials in late 2018 to help Trump undermine Mueller’s investigat­ion and impugn Biden over his son’s work for an energy company owned by a Ukrainian oligarch widely viewed as corrupt.

After the arrest on unrelated campaign finance charges of two Sovietborn businessme­n who had helped Giuliani connect with Ukrainian officials, Giuliani increasing­ly turned for assistance to Telizhenko and Andrii Artemenko, a former member of the Ukrainian parliament who now lives in the Washington area and works as a lobbyist, according to people with direct knowledge of Giuliani’s efforts.

Federal investigat­ors have interviewe­d Artemenko as part of the Brooklyn investigat­ion into the Ukrainian officials, several people with knowledge of the matter said. He was not sanctioned and does not appear to be a target of the investigat­ion, they added.

Telizhenko and Artemenko joined Giuliani in Washington in late November 2019 at the Washington studios of the conservati­ve cable network One America News to record a series that the network claimed exposed corruption by the Biden family, and attacked “the impeachmen­t hoax” as well as Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Ahead of the December 2019 trip, Artemenko signed an agreement with Giuliani to help locate witnesses who would defend Trump, according to three people with knowledge of the contract, which Giuliani also signed. Artemenko was not paid for the work. Artemenko’s company later signed a lobbying contract to briefly represent Derkach in Washington.

In December 2019, Giuliani and a crew from the network travelled to Budapest and Kyiv to film interviews with current and former Ukrainian officials who claimed to have incriminat­ing informatio­n about the Bidens and other Democrats.

Those who were interviewe­d included Derkach and two other men — another member of parliament and a recently fired Ukrainian prosecutor — who also ended up facing sanctions in January by the Treasury Department.

The department described the two men, along with Telizhenko, as members of Derkach’s inner circle and accused them of advancing “disinforma­tion narratives” to influence the 2020 presidenti­al election.

It is unclear if Telizhenko is a focus of the Brooklyn criminal inquiry.

In an interview yesterday, Telizhenko rejected the accusation­s from the Treasury Department, saying that he had never met Derkach before Artemenko arranged the meeting over his objections.

“I said, ‘This is not a good meeting’,” Telizhenko said he told Giuliani, adding that Derkach “was already toxic in Ukraine,” because “everybody knew that he was proRussian”.

When you investigat­e allegation­s of corruption, you talk to all sorts of people; some are credible, and some are not.

Robert Costello, lawyer for Rudy Giuliani (pictured).

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