The Arizona Republic

Oligarchs drop defamation suit over Trump dossier

- Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – Three Russian oligarchs who said their reputation­s were smeared by a dossier of opposition research examining Donald Trump’s alleged ties to Russia have agreed to dismiss their defamation lawsuit, according to a notice filed in federal court on Friday.

Businessme­n Mikhail Fridman, Petr Aven and German Khan sued Fusion GPS, a research and intelligen­ce firm, and one of its founders, Glenn Simpson, in 2017. The men, co-founders of Russia-based Alfa Bank, alleged they had been defamed by various statements in a Democratic-funded dossier that Fusion had commission­ed former British spy Christophe­r Steele to produce on any relationsh­ip between Trump and the Kremlin.

The Steele dossier has been largely discredite­d since its publicatio­n, with core aspects of the material exposed as unsupporte­d and unproven rumors. A special counsel assigned to investigat­e the origins of the Trump-Russia investigat­ion has charged one of Steele’s sources for the dossier with lying to the FBI, and has also charged a cybersecur­ity lawyer who worked for Hillary Clinton’s campaign with lying to the FBI during a 2016 meeting in which he relayed concerns about Alfa Bank.

But recent sanctions filed against the oligarchs and the bank amid Russia’s war with Ukraine might have complicate­d their path toward proving defamation.

On Tuesday, attorneys for Fusion GPS asked a federal judge to dismiss the case, noting that sanctions “illustrate in stark detail that the alleged defamatory statements are true, and surely must persuade any reasonable trier of fact that none of these Plaintiffs will ever succeed in meeting their burden of proving these statements false.”

The United Kingdom included all three men in a round of sanctions last week, saying it was “going further and faster than ever in hitting those closest” to Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Treasury Department last month sanctioned Alfa Bank and other Russian financial institutio­ns, and the EU

“We are pleased that the plaintiffs decided to abandon their case after 41⁄2 years of needless litigation.”

Joshua Levy, attorney for Fusion GPS

has sanctioned Aven and Fridman.

Alfa Bank has said that Fridman and Aven have stepped down from the board and Khan has left the list of beneficiar­ies.

The oligarchs gave no explanatio­n for the dismissal, but their attorneys said in a single-sentence filing Friday that both sides had stipulated that the court action be “dismissed with prejudice as to all claims, causes of action, and parties, with each party bearing that party’s own attorneys’ fees and costs.” An attorney for the plaintiffs didn’t immediatel­y return a message seeking comment.

Joshua Levy, an attorney for Fusion GPS and Simpson, said in a statement “that we are pleased that the plaintiffs decided to abandon their case after 41⁄2 years of needless litigation.”

“At core, the oligarch owners of Alfa Bank took issue with the observatio­n that they were close to Russian dictator Vladimir Putin and amassed incredible wealth as a result of that associatio­n,” the statement continued.

 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN, POOL/AP FILE ?? Russian businessma­n Mikhail Fridman, a co-founder of Alfa Bank, is part of a group of three Russian oligarchs who dropped their defamation lawsuit against Fusion GPS over its dossier.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN, POOL/AP FILE Russian businessma­n Mikhail Fridman, a co-founder of Alfa Bank, is part of a group of three Russian oligarchs who dropped their defamation lawsuit against Fusion GPS over its dossier.

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