Los Angeles Times

Trump pursued Moscow hotel deal

The effort began during the campaign and involved a Putin aide, attorney says.

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s company sought to build a luxury hotel and condominiu­m project in Moscow at the start of the U.S. presidenti­al race and requested help from an aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump’s personal attorney said Monday.

The attorney, Michael Cohen, said that he worked on the plan to build Trump Tower Moscow for five months after Trump declared his candidacy for president in 2015, partnering with Felix Sater, a Russianbor­n businessma­n in New York who had worked with Trump’s company on previous deals.

Cohen abandoned the Moscow project in January 2016 after deciding it was “not feasible,” he said in the two-page statement to the House Intelligen­ce Committee. He added that “to the best of my knowledge,” Trump “was never in contact with anyone about this project other than me.”

The House Intelligen­ce Committee is one of four congressio­nal panels investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election and possible coordinati­on between the Trump campaign and Russia.

The proposed Moscow deal, details of which were first reported by the Washington Post, is likely to draw scrutiny from Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel who is leading an FBI investigat­ion into the links between Trump associates and Moscow.

The Trump Organizati­on’s unsuccessf­ul effort to build a hotel in Moscow is the latest in a series of interactio­ns by Trump associates and family members that have raised questions about the campaign’s dealings with Russia.

Trump has repeatedly cast doubt on U.S. intelligen­ce conclusion­s that Russia meddled in the 2016 campaign, and he has denied having investment­s there, though he acknowledg­ed in May that he “had dealings over the years” in Russia.

In his statement, Cohen denied any links between Trump’s business ambitions in Moscow and his political ambitions. Trump had previously sought to build large projects in Moscow but never did.

“The Trump Tower Moscow proposal was not related in any way to Mr. Trump’s presidenti­al campaign,” Cohen said.

But Sater, a Manhattan real estate developer who kept an office in Trump Tower, exchanged emails with Cohen touting the proposed project and his ties to Putin, which he said could help get Trump elected.

“Our boy can become president of the USA and we can engineer it,” Sater wrote in one of the emails, which were disclosed by the New York Times on Tuesday. “I will get all of Putins team to buy in on this, I will manage this process.”

Cohen played down Sater’s unusual claims in his statement to the Intelligen­ce Committee.

Sater was prone to using “colorful language” and “salesmansh­ip,” said Cohen, who said he had known Sater for decades.

Cohen said he did not pass Sater’s emails to Trump or anyone else in the Trump Organizati­on.

“Mr. Sater, on occasion, made claims about aspects of the proposal, as well as his ability to bring the proposal to fruition,” he said. “I did not feel that it was necessary to routinely apprise others within the Trump Organizati­on of communicat­ions that Mr. Sater made only to me.”

Sater acted as a “deal broker” for the Moscow project, serving as an intermedia­ry between the Trump Organizati­on and a Russian real estate developmen­t company that planned to license the Trump name, Cohen said.

Cohen said that he “performed some initial due diligence” on the Moscow project and that Trump signed a nonbinding letter of intent with a Moscow-based developer, I.C. Expert Investment Co., in October.

Sater urged Cohen to have Trump come to Moscow to “push forward” the project, but Cohen said he declined the overtures.

The project was contingent upon the Russian developer finding an appropriat­e property and getting permits. Sater claimed to have the connection­s to get the required approvals.

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