Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russian’s U.K. suit on dossier dismissed

-

LONDON — Britain’s High Court on Friday dismissed a libel claim by a Russian businessma­n against the author of a report on President Donald Trump’s alleged links to Russia and Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Cyprus-based tech entreprene­ur Aleksej Gubarev sued former British intelligen­ce officer Christophe­r Steele and Steele’s firm Orbis Business Intelligen­ce for what he said were “seriously defamatory allegation­s” that he had “knowing involvemen­t” in the hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s computer systems before the 2016 election.

Judge Mark Warby ruled that the references to Gubarev in the Steele dossier were defamatory and their publicatio­n “caused serious harm to his reputation.” But he said Steele could not be held responsibl­e for making the dossier public. It was published by BuzzFeed in January 2017.

The judge said Gubarev “would have been entitled to substantia­l damages, if he had proved that the defendants are responsibl­e in law for the publicatio­n complained of. But he has failed to prove that.”

The dossier, which Steele had been commission­ed to compile by Fusion GPS, a Washington research firm, claimed Trump had been “compromise­d” by Russia’s FSB security service and that Russian President Vladimir Putin had tried for several years to “cultivate” Trump as a presidenti­al candidate. Trump denies all the claims.

Warby said in his judgment that after Trump’s election in November 2016, Steele showed the dossier to a former State Department official in the hope he would give it to Sen. John McCain and U.S. intelligen­ce agencies.

The judge said he accepted Steele’s assertion that he had not wanted the document to be published.

Steele told the court at an earlier hearing that he felt “shock and horror” at BuzzFeed’s “reckless” publicatio­n of the dossier.

Gubarev sued BuzzFeed in Florida over the publicatio­n. The claim was dismissed in December 2018, but according to the High Court judgment, the U.S. Court of Appeals ordered Gubarev’s case against the news site to be reheard. The hearing has yet to take place.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States