Exclusive: Giuliani told U.S. his client deserves leniency for financing
Venezuela's opposition - Parnas
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[January 22, 2020]
By Aram Roston, Matt Spetalnick and Brian Ellsworth
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - At a lavish August
gathering at a private estate in Spain, a wealthy Venezuelan businessman
under criminal investigation in the United States introduced Rudy
Giuliani, President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, to the father of
Venezuela’s opposition leader, Juan Guaido.
The affair was part of a campaign for leniency for the businessman,
Alejandro Betancourt, who sought to demonstrate his close ties to
opposition figures looking to oust Venezuela's socialist President
Nicolas Maduro - a key objective of the Trump administration.
Betancourt told Giuliani he secretly helped bankroll Guaido’s efforts to
take over the leadership of Venezuela, according to four people familiar
with the situation, two of whom provided details about the meeting in
Spain. Betancourt hoped those bona fides would enable Giuliani, his
lawyer, to persuade Trump’s Justice Department to drop its probe of
Betancourt in connection with a Florida money laundering and bribery
case, the people said.
A month later, at a meeting in Washington, D.C., Giuliani urged Justice
Department prosecutors to go easy on Betancourt, according to a person
with direct knowledge of the meeting, and Lev Parnas, a former Giuliani
associate, who said Giuliani told him about it soon afterward. Parnas
and the other person said Giuliani told prosecutors that Betancourt had
provided assistance for Guaido’s political efforts, and was therefore
doing good work for the United States.
This is the first time Parnas detailed his story about Betancourt,
Giuliani and Venezuela.
Giuliani declined to confirm meeting with U.S. prosecutors on
Betancourt’s behalf and wouldn’t say whether the Venezuelan businessman
is a client. “Lev Parnas has no right to be talking about that meeting,”
Giuliani told Reuters in a brief phone interview. “It was a confidential
meeting - if it did happen.”
“Lev Parnas’s credibility is worth nothing,” Giuliani said.
The Justice Department declined to comment. Betancourt and his attorney
Frank Wohl did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Reuters couldn’t determine whether Betancourt did provide financing to
the U.S.-backed opposition or if he was just claiming he did.
Guaido and the main opposition political party, Popular Will, both
denied receiving funding from Betancourt. Guaido was a member of Popular
Will until he stepped back from it earlier this month.
“I do not know Mr. Betancourt, there is no relationship,” Guaido told
Reuters. “As such, that is not possible.”
Wilmer Guaido, Guaido’s father, denied meeting Betancourt in Spain. “I
only support my son like the whole family against that criminal
dictatorship but I have not met anyone,” he said.
Giuliani’s meeting with Betancourt at the Spanish estate, and his
efforts to lobby the Justice Department on the businessman’s behalf,
were previously reported by the Washington Post. Reuters is the first to
report that Betancourt told Giuliani that he provided financial support
for Venezuela’s opposition, and that Giuliani touted that alleged
assistance to U.S. prosecutors as a reason to remove the legal cloud
dogging his client.
The episode speaks to the complex roles that Giuliani, the former New
York City mayor, has played in Washington since Trump took office in
2017.
Giuliani frequently proclaims himself a business consultant and lawyer
working on behalf of private clients. Yet he also enjoys extraordinary
access to the halls of power as the president’s unpaid personal attorney
- work that has landed him at the center of Trump’s impeachment trial.
Any attempt by a Giuliani client to avoid possible prosecution by
claiming to have been backing an American foreign policy objective - the
toppling of Maduro in this case - could prove embarrassing to the
administration.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Parnas played a key role in Giuliani’s effort to dig up dirt on
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden in Ukraine for Trump. Now
under indictment for campaign finance violations, Parnas has been
sharing information with Capitol Hill impeachment investigators, as well
as the media, about the extent of the work he did for Giuliani.
Betancourt said “he was backing Guaido financially,” Parnas told
Reuters, and “was helping America with his cause.”
Since January 2019, the United States and dozens of other countries have
recognized Guaido as Venezuela’s rightful president. But Maduro has
remained firmly in power, much to the frustration of the Trump
administration.
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President Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani has coffee with
Ukrainian-American businessman Lev Parnas at the Trump International
Hotel in Washington, U.S. September 20, 2019. REUTERS/Aram Roston/File
Photo
Maduro’s government cut off paychecks for opposition lawmakers in
2016 after the opposition took control of the National Assembly.
Claims that Betancourt helped finance his country’s opposition are
potentially explosive in Venezuela, where the mogul forged a
profitable relationship with the socialist government. Derwick
Associates, his Caracas-based energy firm, obtained hundreds of
millions of dollars in state contracts to build power plants under
Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez, according to local media.
In a statement to Reuters, the opposition Popular Will party said
that "information about the supposed remittance of funds by
Alejandro Betancourt to our political organization is not true.”
The existence of the U.S. criminal probe of Betancourt was confirmed
to Reuters by a source familiar with the matter. The Miami Herald
reported last November that the investigation is linked to a large
money laundering case in Miami, and that Betancourt is an unindicted
co-conspirator listed, but not named, in legal records. The 2018
charges accused eight defendants of embezzling $1.2 billion from
Venezuela’s government-owned oil company PDVSA, then laundering it
through schemes in Miami involving false real estate and security
deals.
A representative of Betancourt who declined to be identified said
the magnate “didn’t do anything and he has not been charged with any
wrongdoing.” He also told Reuters that the businessman had provided
“very substantial” financial support to Venezuela’s opposition.
PDVSA did not respond to a request for comment.
At the State Department, Elliott Abrams, the U.S. Special
Representative for Venezuela, told Reuters the administration is
aware of the lack of transparency in the opposition’s financing.
“We’re concerned about who are all these people, and how did they
make their money. And that is something we have raised with the
opposition,” Abrams said.
Asked whether Betancourt was one of those individuals of concern,
Abrams said: “No comment on individual names.”
He added that Giuliani had not been authorized to play any role in
U.S. policy in Venezuela.
‘HELPING THE UNITED STATES’
Parnas said the August meeting at Betancourt’s estate outside
Madrid, and the presence of Guaido’s father, were meant to
demonstrate Betancourt’s strong ties to Guaido and his support for
U.S. interests in Venezuela. It was to show Giuliani “that
Betancourt is a really important person for the cause and that he is
helping America,” Parnas said.
The lobbying took place in Washington the month after the Spain
meeting. Giuliani met with Assistant U.S. Attorney General Brian
Benczkowski, a Justice Department lawyer working on the case, and
some other government lawyers, according to Parnas and the person
with direct knowledge of that meeting.
Department of Justice spokesman Peter Carr, who handles
communications for Benczkowski, said the department declined to
comment.
The person said Giuliani was there with two other Betancourt
lawyers, and made his pitch that the prosecutors let Betancourt off
the hook for the case in Florida.
Giuliani first insisted there wasn’t enough evidence to prosecute
the case. He then moved to U.S. foreign policy, pointing to
Betancourt’s alleged support for Guaido. “This guy’s been helping
the United States,” the person with direct knowledge of the meeting
said in describing Giuliani’s reasoning.
Giuliani argued that Betancourt was crucial to the survival of the
Venezuelan opposition, and he urged the Justice Department lawyers
to talk to Guaido themselves to corroborate his claims, the person
said.
(Reporting by Aram Roston and Matt Spetalnick in Washington, Brian
Ellsworth in Caracas; Additional reporting by Paola Luelmo in
Madrid; Editing by Marla Dickerson)
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