Los Angeles Times

Giuliani ally pleads guilty in campaign funds case

Florida businessma­n gained notoriety by helping seek damaging informatio­n on Biden.

- BY JIM MUSTIAN, LARRY NEUMEISTER AND MICHAEL R. SISAK Mustian, Neumeister and Sisak write for the Associated Press.

NEW YORK — A Florida businessma­n who gained notoriety for helping Rudolph W. Giuliani seek damaging informatio­n on Joe Biden in Ukraine pleaded guilty Friday to a charge alleging he facilitate­d illegal foreign campaign contributi­ons in an effort to build a marijuana business in the United States.

Igor Fruman, 56, entered the plea in federal court in Manhattan after reaching a deal with prosecutor­s. Fruman’s plea agreement does not require him to cooperate in other cases, U.S. District Judge J. Paul Oetken said.

Initially charged in a wide-ranging indictment, Fruman pleaded guilty to a single count of solicitati­on of a contributi­on by a foreign national. The plea resolves the case against him.

Federal sentencing guidelines call for a punishment of 37 to 46 months in prison, though Fruman could get up to five years, the judge said. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 21.

The plea leaves two men — Lev Parnas, another Soviet-born Florida businessma­n and Giuliani associate, and Ukraine-born investor Andrey Kukushkin — to face trial next month. A fourth person, David Correia, was sentenced in February to a year in prison for fraud involving a company he ran that brought Giuliani on as a consultant.

“Mr. Fruman is not cooperatin­g with the government and has determined that this is the fairest and best way to put the past two years of his life behind him,” Fruman’s lawyer, Todd Blanche, said in a written statement after the plea hearing. “He intends to continue to work hard, as he has his entire life, and raise his family in this country that he loves.”

Fruman was also charged with, but did not plead guilty to, arranging hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal donations to Republican­s and political action committees while trying to get Americans interested in investigat­ing Biden’s son in Ukraine during the Democrat’s successful run for president.

Fruman apologized in court. He said he was not aware of laws prohibitin­g foreign campaign contributi­ons at the time he engaged in the donation scheme.

Assistant U.S. Atty. Nicolas Roos said in court Friday that Fruman sent text messages to the foreign national and that person’s agent seeking $1 million in political contributi­ons and that the foreign national wired two $500,000 installmen­ts for that purpose.

In court Friday, Fruman said the donation scheme was part of an effort to encourage support for a fledgling marijuana distributi­on business that he and others were starting in states where the drug was being legalized.

While prosecutor­s have kept the identity of the donor secret, a lawyer for one of the defendants revealed him during one court hearing to be Russian businessma­n Andrei Muraviev. Business and other court records show that Muraviev was an investor in a marijuana company with Kukushkin in California.

Some of the donations made during the campaign to win support for the marijuana business went into the campaign coffers of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican whose name has been floated as a potential presidenti­al candidate.

Giuliani, 77, has said he had no knowledge of illegal campaign contributi­ons, but has acknowledg­ed working extensivel­y with Fruman and Parnas as he sought communicat­ions with Ukrainian figures.

The Republican and former New York City mayor who once gained worldwide admiration as “America’s mayor” after the Sept. 11 attacks was not charged in this case. But Giuliani has been under criminal investigat­ion for his dealings with Ukraine while serving as a personal lawyer to then-President Trump.

In April, federal agents raided Giuliani’s Manhattan home and office and seized computers and cellphones, signaling a major escalation of the investigat­ion. Authoritie­s are deciding whether his activities required him to register as a foreign agent.

Giuliani has insisted his Ukrainian activities were conducted on behalf of Trump, not a foreign entity or person.

Trump’s efforts to press Ukraine for an investigat­ion of the Bidens led to the first of his two impeachmen­ts by the House of Representa­tives.

 ?? Mary Altaffer Associated Press ?? IGOR FRUMAN, seen leaving federal court Friday, has pleaded guilty to seeking illegal foreign campaign contributi­ons in an effort to build a marijuana business.
Mary Altaffer Associated Press IGOR FRUMAN, seen leaving federal court Friday, has pleaded guilty to seeking illegal foreign campaign contributi­ons in an effort to build a marijuana business.

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