The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lawyer charged in probe of Trump-Russia investigat­ion

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WASHINGTON — The prosecutor tasked with examining the U.S. government’s investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce charged a prominent cybersecur­ity lawyer on Thursday with making a false statement to the FBI.

The case against the attorney, Michael Sussmann, is just the second prosecutio­n brought by special counsel John Durham in two-and-a-half years of work. Yet neither case brought by Durham undoes the core finding of an earlier investigat­ion by Robert Mueller that Russia had interfered in sweeping fashion on behalf of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and that the Trump campaign welcomed that aid.

It lays bare the wide-ranging and evolving nature of Durham’s investigat­ion. In addition to having scrutinize­d the activities of FBI and CIA officials during the early days of the Russia probe, it has also looked at the behavior of private individual­s like Sussman who provided the U.S. government with informatio­n as it scrambled to determine whether Trump associates were coordinati­ng with Russia to tip the election’s outcome.

The indictment accuses Sussmann of hiding that he was working with Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign during a September 2016 conversati­on he had with the FBI’s general counsel, when he relayed concerns from cybersecur­ity researcher­s about potentiall­y suspicious contacts between Russia-based Alfa Bank and a Trump organizati­on server. The FBI looked into the matter but found no connection­s. Sussmann is a former federal prosecutor who specialize­s in cybersecur­ity.

Sussmann’s lawyers, Sean Berkowitz and Michael Bosworth, said their client is a highly-respected national security lawyer who had previously worked in the Justice Department under both Republican and Democratic administra­tions and said they were confident he would prevail at trial and “vindicate his good name.”

“Mr. Sussmann has committed no crime,” they said in a statement. “Any prosecutio­n here would be baseless, unpreceden­ted, and an unwarrante­d deviation from the apolitical and principled way in which the Department of Justice is supposed to do its work.”

The Alfa Bank matter was not a pivotal element of the Russia probe and was not even mentioned in Mueller’s 448-page report in 2019. Still, the indictment may give fodder to Russia investigat­ion critics who regard it as politicall­y tainted and engineered by Democrats.

Sussmann’s former firm, Perkins Coie, has deep Democratic connection­s. A then partner at the firm, Marc Elias, brokered a deal with the Fusion GPS research firm to study Trump’s business ties to Russia. That work, by former British spy Christophe­r Steele, produced a dossier of research that helped form the basis of flawed surveillan­ce applicatio­ns targeting a former Trump campaign official, Carter Page.

A spokesman for Perkins Coie said Sussmann, “who has been on leave from the firm, offered his resignatio­n from the firm in order to focus on his legal defense, and the firm accepted it.”

The Durham investigat­ion has already spanned months longer than the earlier special counsel probe into Russian election interferen­ce conducted by Mueller, the former FBI director, and his team. The investigat­ion was slowed by the coronaviru­s pandemic and experience­d leadership tumult following the abrupt departure last fall of a top deputy on Durham’s team.

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