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Accused Russian agent Butina met with US Treasury and Federal Reserve officials in April 2015 — report

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WASHINGTON — Accused Russian agent Maria Butina had wider high-level contacts in Washington than previously known, taking part in 2015 meetings between a visiting Russian official and two senior officials at the US Federal Reserve and Treasury Department.

The meetings, revealed by several people familiar with the sessions and a report from a Washington think tank that arranged them, involved Stanley Fischer, Fed vice-chairman at the time, and Nathan Sheets, then Treasury undersecre­tary for internatio­nal affairs.

Ms. Butina traveled to the United States in April 2015 with Alexander Torshin, then the Russian Central Bank deputy governor, and they took part in separate meetings with Messrs. Fischer and Sheets to discuss USRussian economic relations during Democratic former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

The two meetings, which have not been previously reported, reveal a wider circle of high-powered connection­s that Ms. Butina sought to cultivate with American political leaders and special interest groups.

Ms. Butina’s lawyer, Robert Driscoll, did not have any details about her participat­ion in meetings with Treasury and Federal Reserve officials when asked about them on Friday.

The meetings with Messrs. Fischer and Sheets were arranged by the Center for the National Interest, a Washington foreign policy think tank that often advocates pro-Russia views.

The meetings were documented in a Center for the National Interest report seen by Reuters that outlined its Russia-related activities from 2013 to 2015.

The report described the meetings as helping bring together “leading figures from the fience

nancial institutio­ns of the United States and Russia.”

A judge on Wednesday ordered Ms. Butina, 29, jailed until her trial after US prosecutor­s argued she has ties to Russian intelligen­ce and could flee the United States. Ms. Butina has pleaded not guilty to charges she acted as a foreign agent for Russia. She is scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday for a status conference in her case.

Ms. Butina worked for Mr. Torshin, who has close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, and served as his interprete­r at various Washington events.

Mr. Fischer, in an e-mail to Reuters, confirmed he met with Mr. Torshin and his interprete­r.

While he could not recall details, Mr. Fischer said the conversati­on involved “the state of the Russian economy” and Mr. Torshin’s new role as deputy central bank governor.

Another person familiar with the meeting, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it occurred on April 7, 2015, and confirmed Ms. Butina attended.

Federal prosecutor­s have accused Ms. Butina of conspiring with two American citizens and a top Russian official to influ-

US policy toward Russia and infiltrate a gun rights group believed to be the National Rifle Associatio­n (NRA). The NRA is an influentia­l pro-gun lobby with close ties to Republican politician­s including President Donald Trump.

Questions relating to Russia have cast a cloud over Mr. Trump’s presidency.

The descriptio­n of the top Russian official mentioned in the indictment matches Mr. Torshin. The indictment said that beginning in about 2015 Ms. Butina and the official conspired to “advance the interests of the Russian Federation.”

“I recall Mr. Torshin mentioning, as an aside, that he planned to attend a meeting of the National Rifle Associatio­n, a fact that I considered irrelevant to our conversati­on,” Mr. Fischer wrote to Reuters.

Mr. Sheets declined to comment through Ted Smith, a spokesman for asset management firm PGIM, where Mr. Sheets currently works.

Messrs. Fischer and Sheets met with many internatio­nal banking officials as part of their official duties.

The Treasury department in April imposed sanctions on Mr. Torshin and a number of other Russian businessme­n and government officials in Putin’s inner circle.

The think tank hosted Mr. Trump at an event at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington in April 2016 also attended by Sergei Kislyak, Russia’s ambassador to Washington at the time.

The April 2015 visit by Ms. Butina and Mr. Torshin came about a year after Obama’s administra­tion imposed sanctions on Russia for its annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region.

Two months earlier, in February 2015, the group’s Russianbor­n chief executive officer ( CEO), Dimitri Simes, traveled to Moscow, where he met with Mr. Putin and other Russian officials, the organizati­on’s records showed.

During the same April 2015 trip, Mr. Torshin and Ms. Butina also participat­ed in a private “off the record” discussion at the center about the “Russian financial situation and its impact on Russian politics,” according to people familiar with the meeting and the think tank’s report. That event was moderated by the group’s chairman emeritus, former AIG CEO Maurice “Hank” Greenberg, the report showed. Mr. Greenberg did not return calls for comment.

Among the think tank’s board members is David Keene, a former NRA president and former chairman of the American Conservati­ve Union. Mr. Keene has previously been photograph­ed alongside Ms. Butina at events.

Paul Saunders, the think tank’s executive director, said Mr. Torshin spoke at an April 2015 event about the Russian banking system and Ms. Butina attended. Mr. Saunders said people at the organizati­on cannot recall details of Mr. Torshin’s presentati­on.

“We were unaware of any charges or suspicions of illegal or inappropri­ate conduct or of any connection­s to Russian intelligen­ce services,” Mr. Saunders said in an e-mail.

Prosecutor­s said the Think Tank’s magazine published an article by Ms. Butina in June 2015 in which she said “certain US politician­s and Russians share many common interests.”

Randy Weber, a Republican US congressma­n from Texas, also met with Mr. Torshin during the April trip, according to the think tank’s documents. A spokeswoma­n for Mr. Weber did not respond to multiple calls or e-mails seeking comment.

 ??  ?? ALLEGED Russian agent Maria Butina appears in an undated photo from her Twitter account obtained on July 19.
ALLEGED Russian agent Maria Butina appears in an undated photo from her Twitter account obtained on July 19.

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