Connecticut Post

Middleman helped Saudi give to Obama inaugural

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When President Barack Obama was reelected in 2012, a Saudi tycoon and his business associate sent hundreds of thousands of dollars to the U.S. to help pay for the inaugural celebratio­n and get a picture with the president, according to court documents and an analysis of campaign finance records by The Associated Press.

U.S. election law prohibits foreign nationals from making those sorts of political contributi­ons.

But the donations Sheikh Mohammed Al Rahbani tried to send to Obama’s inaugural committee were funneled through a seasoned straw donor, the records and the AP analysis show.

That intermedia­ry, Imaad Zuberi, agreed this month to plead guilty to making illegal campaign contributi­ons to several American political candidates on behalf of foreign nationals. He is also set to plead guilty to concealing his work as a foreign agent as he lobbied highlevel U.S. government officials.

The prosecutio­n by the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles is the latest in a string of cases that highlight the prevalence of banned foreign money in American politics and the often lax approach campaigns take in vetting contributi­ons.

Zuberi, a jetsetting fundraiser and venture capitalist, has raised millions of dollars for Democrats and Republican­s alike over the years. Prosecutor­s say he has worked on behalf of several foreigners, not just Rahbani.

He served as a top fundraiser for both Obama and Hillary Clinton during their presidenti­al runs, including stints on both of their campaign finance committees, before switching his support to President Donald Trump immediatel­y after his 2016 victory, pumping nearly $1 million into the Republican’s inaugural committee.

Federal Election Commission records show hundreds of donations from Zuberi and his family to Republican and Democratic national committees, the presidenti­al campaigns of Trump and Clinton, and dozens of congressio­nal candidates across the political spectrum. Zuberilink­ed donations often went to lawmakers who are influentia­l or outspoken on foreign policy issues, like Sen. Lindsey Graham and Democratic Rep. Eliot Engel, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Only Zuberi has been charged in the case, and prosecutor­s have not alleged that any campaign that received money from him was aware that at least some of his donations were financed by foreigners.

Zuberi’s case raises questions about the degree to which political committees vet donors. One campaign, not identified by name, accepted donations made in the name of one of Zuberi’s dead relatives, prosecutor­s said. Another political committee took donations from a person Zuberi invented.

Steve Kerrigan, CEO of Obama’s 2013 inaugurati­on committee, said it had a very thorough vetting process that included requiring donors to certify that their contributi­ons complied with the law. He declined to comment further on the specifics of Zuberi’s donations.

As a middleman, Zuberi was deeply flawed.

Zuberi, 49, admitted in a plea agreement that only $97,500 of the $850,000 that he was supposed to deliver to the Obama inaugural committee on Rahbani’s behalf actually made it into the committee’s hands. The rest, he skimmed for himself.

Rahbani declined to comment through an assistant. Zuberi’s attorneys and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles all declined to comment.

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