Exclusive: Ukraine to fire prosecutor who discussed Bidens with Giuliani
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[November 05, 2019]
By Polina Ivanova and Ilya Zhegulev
KIEV (Reuters) - Ukraine plans to fire the
prosecutor who led investigations into the firm where Joe Biden's son
served on the board, a central figure in the activity at the heart of
impeachment proceedings against U.S. President Donald Trump, a source
told Reuters.
Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani has acknowledged meeting the
prosecutor, Kostiantyn Kulyk, to discuss accusations against the Bidens.
The decision to sideline someone who played an important role in
Giuliani's efforts to find out damaging information about the Bidens
comes as Ukraine has tried to avoid getting drawn into a partisan fight
in Washington.
Trump's Democratic opponents have launched impeachment proceedings,
arguing that Trump abused his power by pressing Ukraine to investigate
the Bidens to hurt the former vice president, front-runner to challenge
him in the 2020 election.
The source said a decision had been taken to fire Kulyk for failing to
show up for an exam that all employees of the General Prosecutor's
Office have been ordered to pass to keep their jobs during a clean-up of
the prosecution service.
Prosecutor General Ruslan Ryaboshapka has already fired more than 400
prosecutors, or around a third of all staff.
Some prosecutors have told Reuters that many of those sacked had refused
to sit the exam in protest at what they see as a purge designed to
cement new President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's political control of the
service.
Zelenskiy has said the overhaul is essential because the office is
widely distrusted by Ukrainians and had been seen as a political tool
for the well-connected to punish their enemies.
Trump discussed investigating the Bidens during a July 25 phone call
with Zelenskiy. Trump's Democratic opponents have launched impeachment
proceedings, arguing that Trump abused power to press Ukraine to hurt a
political foe. Trump calls the investigation a witch hunt and denies
wrongdoing.
Reuters was unable to reach Kulyk for comment. He was not present at a
home address where Reuters has spoken to him in the past.
Kulyk did not show up for the mandatory exam, which was imposed last
month, the source said.
He also did not file an official justification for missing it, as other
prosecutors have done, and will consequently be dismissed, the source
said. His dismissal will take place by Dec. 31, if not earlier.
Earlier this year, Kulyk compiled a seven-page dossier on the business
activities of Hunter Biden in Ukraine, two sources told Reuters.
Reuters could not independently verify the existence of such a dossier
but Kulyk detailed his investigations into areas of interest to Trump
and Giuliani in an interview with a pro-Trump columnist for The Hill
newspaper in April.
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Deputy Head of the Department of International Legal Cooperation of
the Prosecutor General’s Office of Ukraine Kostiantyn Kulyk attends
a news conference in Kiev, Ukraine April 11, 2019. REUTERS/Viacheslav
Ratynskyi
Kulyk has been responsible for formally investigating a criminal
case related to the founder of Ukrainian energy company Burisma.
Biden's son sat on the company's board from 2014-2019.
In a recent interview, Giuliani told Reuters he met Kulyk in Paris.
He said at that meeting Kulyk echoed allegations that in 2016 Biden
had tried to have Ukraine's then-chief prosecutor, Viktor Shokin,
fired to stop him investigating Burisma. Biden has accused Giuliani
of peddling "false, debunked conspiracy theories" for repeating
these allegations.
"(Kulyk) was another prosecutor somewhat lower level who told me the
same thing: that there was collusion and Biden had (the) prosecutor
fired to kill case on (his) son and Burisma," Giuliani told Reuters.
Giuliani did not respond to a request for comment on the decision to
fire Kulyk. A spokesman for Joe Biden declined comment.
Kulyk told Reuters in October that he had been investigating
Burisma's founder, Mykola Zlochevsky, for around two years.
Reuters could not independently verify the extent of Kulyk's
involvement, but a source close to the energy company saw a spike in
activity by Kulyk in regards to Burisma after Giuliani's interest in
the company and the Bidens had been conveyed to Kulyk's then
superior, Lutsenko.
In late January, Kulyk sent Zlochevsky the first of several summons
for questioning, documents seen by Reuters showed.
Zlochevsky has not commented on the summons or an announcement by
Ryaboshapka in October that his office was reviewing a series of
investigations linked to Zlochevsky.
In April, Kulyk gave an interview to the columnist John Solomon at
The Hill newspaper in Washington. In that article, Kulyk said he and
other prosecutors were investigating allegations concerning Shokin's
dismissal.
Kulyk told The Hill that Ukrainian officials had unsuccessfully
tried to pass on evidence on this and other probes to the U.S.
authorities before looking for other people, including Giuliani, to
present their findings.
(Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Karen Freifeld in
Washington and Maria Tsvetkova in Kiev; Writing by Matthias Williams
and Polina Ivanova; Editing by Peter Graff)
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