Former Giuliani associates plead not guilty in New York to amended
indictment
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[December 01, 2020]
By Jonathan Stempel and Karen Freifeld
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Ukraine-born
businessman who once helped Donald Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani
gather information about U.S. President-elect Joe Biden pleaded not
guilty to cheating investors in a fraud-insurance company, even after
his former partner in the venture pleaded guilty.
At a hearing on Monday before U.S. District Judge Paul Oetken in
Manhattan, Lev Parnas and another former Giuliani associate,
Belarus-born Igor Fruman, also pleaded not guilty to violating campaign
finance laws and other charges in an amended indictment.
Prosecutors accused Parnas and his partner of conning people into
investing more than $2 million in their Florida-based start-up, Fraud
Guarantee, only to withdraw much of it for personal uses, including
political donations.
Giuliani, now leading the Trump legal team's push to overturn Biden's
presidential election win, told Reuters in October 2019 he was paid
$500,000 for work he did for Fraud Guarantee. He has not been criminally
charged and has denied wrongdoing.
Oetken also agreed to postpone the trial, after defense lawyers said the
COVID-19 pandemic and prosecutors' being too slow to turn over evidence
made the planned March 1, 2021 date unworkable.
The judge said the pandemic had created a backlog of "dozens and dozens"
of cases in the Manhattan court, and that while trials have begun the
chief judge asked "not to do anything in the courthouse unless we
really, really have to."
Oetken asked both sides to propose a new trial date between June and
October 2021.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos defended the government's handling
of the case, telling Oetken that prosecutors had not been able to access
seven locked electronic devices from Parnas and Fruman that it had
seized.
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Ukrainian-American businessman Lev Parnas arrives for a hearing at
the Manhattan Federal Court in the Manhattan borough of New York,
U.S., February 3, 2020. REUTERS/ Bryan R Smith
Parnas' and Fruman's case has drawn added attention because of their
work with Giuliani on matters related to Ukraine.
This included efforts to help the former New York City mayor dig up
damaging information about Biden and his son Hunter, and what
prosecutors called an effort to remove then-U.S. Ambassador to
Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.
David Correia, who was Parnas' partner in Fraud Guarantee, pleaded
guilty on Oct. 29 to wire fraud conspiracy for cheating investors,
and to making false statements to the Federal Election Commission.
Parnas and Fruman also face charges of concealing an illegal
$325,000 donation they made to support Trump's re-election.
They and another defendant, Andrey Kukushkin, were also charged with
illegally using donations to U.S. politicians from a Russian
businessman to help them obtain licenses for a legal, recreational
marijuana business.
Kukushkin also pleaded not guilty on Monday.
The case is U.S. v. Parnas et al, U.S. District Court, Southern
District of New York, No. 19-cr-00725.
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