Factbox: Smoke or fire? Contacts between
Trump campaign and Russia
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[March 23, 2019]
By Andy Sullivan
(Reuters) - Special Counsel Robert Mueller
and other U.S. prosecutors have been investigating whether President
Donald Trump's 2016 campaign conspired with Russia. Trump and Moscow
have denied any collusion.
Mueller handed in the keenly awaited report on his probe, the Justice
Department said on Friday.
U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded Russia interfered in the
presidential election with a campaign of hacking and propaganda to sow
discord in the United States and damage the Republican Trump's
Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton. Russia denies it.
Here are some key interactions between Trump advisors and Russian
figures that have been unearthed by Mueller's probe and investigations
in Congress.
TRUMP TOWER MEETING
Several top Trump aides, including campaign chairman Paul Manafort,
son-in-law Jared Kushner and son Donald Trump Jr., met in June 2016 at
Trump Tower in New York with a Russian lawyer who had offered damaging
information about Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
U.S. prosecutors said the lawyer, Natalia Veselnitskaya, was an agent
for the Kremlin. The meeting was arranged by Rob Goldstone, a British
music publicist. Participants in the meeting said nothing improper
occurred and that Veselnitskaya discussed U.S. sanctions on Russia and
adoption policy, not election issues. The president said he did not know
about the meeting beforehand.
EFFORTS TO BUILD A SKYSCRAPER IN MOSCOW
Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, said he pursued a deal to
build a Trump-branded skyscraper in Moscow until June 2016, after Trump
had clinched the Republican presidential nomination. Cohen said in a
guilty plea that he spoke with an assistant to Russian President
Vladimir Putin's press secretary in January of that year and briefed
Trump on the project more than three times.
Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, said the Moscow skyscraper talks
continued until Trump won the November 2016 election but later said he
misspoke.
Trump, who repeatedly said during the campaign that he had no contacts
with Russia, said after Cohen's guilty plea in November 2018 there was
nothing wrong with pursuing the deal.
EFFORTS TO SET UP A MEETING WITH RUSSIAN LEADERS
Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos worked between March 2016 and
August 2016 to set up a meeting with Russian leadership, according to
prosecutors. They said a London-based professor with ties to the Russian
government told him in April 2016 that Moscow had compromising
information on Clinton.
Papadopoulos served 14 days in prison after pleading guilty to lying to
the FBI about those efforts.
MANAFORT OFFERS CAMPAIGN INSIGHTS
Manafort shared election campaign polling data in August 2016 with
Konstantin Kilimnik, a former business partner who Mueller has described
as having ties to Russian intelligence, according to a court filing
inadvertently made public by Manafort's lawyers. The two also discussed
a plan to resolve the conflict in Ukraine, a major Kremlin foreign
policy goal as it seeks relief from U.S. economic sanctions, according
to court filings.
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President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake
hands as they hold a joint news conference after their meeting in
Helsinki, Finland, July 16, 2018. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger/File Photo
Manafort, a veteran Republican political consultant who earned
million of dollars working for pro-Russian politicians in Ukraine,
also offered private briefings about the campaign to Russian
billionaire Oleg Deripaska, who is close to Putin, in an effort to
collect past debts, according to the Washington Post.
ROGER STONE AND WIKILEAKS
Roger Stone, a veteran Republican political consultant who has
worked on and off with Trump for decades, shared with Trump campaign
officials advance knowledge he had of a plan by the WikiLeaks
website to release emails stolen from the Clinton campaign by
Russians, prosecutors said. The charging document mentions that a
senior Trump campaign official "was directed to contact Stone about
any additional releases and what other damaging information"
WikiLeaks had about the Clinton campaign, raising the possibility
Trump himself made the request. Stone pleaded not guilty to lying to
Congress and witness tampering.
MEETINGS WITH RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR SERGEI KISLYAK
Several Trump advisers met with Russia's ambassador to the United
States, Sergei Kislyak, before Trump became president.
They included: Michael Flynn, who served as Trump's first White
House national security advisor. Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying
to the FBI about his communications with Kislyak in December 2017,
after Trump won the election but before he took office. During those
calls, according to the indictment, Flynn discussed U.S. sanctions
against Russia and asked Kislyak to help delay a U.N. vote seen as
damaging to Israel, a move that ran counter to the policies of
then-President Barack Obama, a Democrat.
Jeff Sessions, a Republican U.S. senator serving as a campaign
adviser who Trump later named attorney general, said he met with
Kislyak at least twice in 2016 after initially telling Congress he
was unaware of any communications between the campaign and Russia.
As attorney general, Sessions recused himself from oversight of the
Russia investigation, drawing the ire of Trump. The recusal by
Sessions left Rod Rosenstein, the No. 2 Justice Department official,
with oversight over the probe, which at the time was headed by the
FBI. After Trump fired FBI Director James Comey in May 2017,
Rosenstein appointed Mueller as special counsel to take over the
probe.
Kushner said he asked Kislyak if he could set up a secure
communications channel at the Russian Embassy after Trump won the
election. Kushner also said he met with Sergei Gorkov, the head of
Russian state-owned bank, Vnesheconombank, during that period at
Kislyak's insistence. Vnesheconombank has been subject to U.S.
economic sanctions since mid-2014.
(Compiled by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Will Dunham)
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