The Columbus Dispatch

Giuliani associates go on trial in scheme

Jury selection set to begin Tuesday

- Tom Hays and Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK – Lev Parnas once pitched himself in TV interviews and through an unorthodox publicity campaign by his lawyer as someone who could expose corruption in the Trump Administra­tion over its dealings in Ukraine.

Less than two years later and with less fanfare, the 49-year-old is going on trial in a federal case that makes him out to be more of an ordinary grifter than a whistleblo­wer who would bring down former President Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin Tuesday in a trial in which Parnas, a Soviet-born Florida businessma­n, and a co-defendant, Ukraine-born investor Andrey Kukushkin, are accused of making illegal campaign contributi­ons to U.S. politician­s in order to further their business interests.

Parnas and another Soviet-born Florida businessma­n who has already pleaded guilty in the case, Igor Fruman, initially caught the attention of journalist­s and investigat­ors after making big donations through a corporate entity to Republican political committees, including a $325,000 donation in 2018 to America First Action, a super PAC supporting Trump.

The pair then became middlemen in Giuliani’s effort to discredit then-candidate Joe Biden. They connected Giuliani with Ukrainian officials as the former New York City mayor tried to get that country to open an investigat­ion into the future president’s son, Hunter Biden. Ukrainian tycoons and officials, meanwhile, sought Giuliani’s help connecting with the Trump administra­tion. Federal prosecutor­s in New York City, however, have made it clear that anyone looking for the trial to produce new, damaging informatio­n about Trump or Giuliani will be disappoint­ed.

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