U.S. indicts Russian analyst who contributed to 'Steele dossier'
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[November 05, 2021]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. federal grand
jury has indicted the Russian analyst who contributed to the "Steele
dossier" alleging potential ties between Donald Trump's 2016 election
campaign and Russia, a special prosecutor investigating the matter said
on Thursday.
Analyst Igor Danchenko is accused of five counts of making false
statements to the FBI relating to sources for the material he gave a
British firm that prepared the dossier, said John Durham, the special
prosecutor appointed by the U.S. Justice Department during Trump's
administration.
At a brief hearing on Thursday in Alexandria, Virginia, U.S. Magistrate
Judge Theresa Buchanan ordered Danchenko's pretrial release on $100,000
unsecured bail after his lawyer told the court he lived with his family
in Virginia.
Danchenko's lawyer indicated his client would plead not guilty to the
charges although his plea was not formally entered. A prosecutor said
that, if convicted, Danchenko could face up to five years in prison on
each count of his indictment.
The indictment alleges that between June and November 2017, Danchenko
made false statements regarding the sources of certain information he
provided to a British investigative firm which Durham did not identify.
Sources identified the firm to Reuters as having been linked to former
British intelligence officer Christopher Steele.
The dossier, which was circulated to the FBI and media outlets before
the November 2016 election, set out still-unproven assertions that
Russia had embarrassing information about and some of his Republican
campaign's advisers and that Moscow was working behind the scenes to
defeat his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
The indictment alleges Danchenko made false
statements about information he said he had received from an anonymous
caller who claimed the Kremlin might have been helping to get Trump
elected. It says Danchenko knew the information to be untrue.
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A person stands behind textured glass at an address which has been
linked by local media to former British intelligence officer
Christopher Steele, who has been named as the author of an
intelligence dossier on President-elect Donald Trump, in Wokingham,
Britain, January 12, 2016. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
A lawyer for Danchenko did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Two sources familiar with Durham's activities said he had issued
subpoenas seeking evidence from multiple sources, including people
linked to Fusion GPS, the Washington investigations firm that
commissioned the dossier.
Steele is a former British intelligence officer who prepared the
dossier for Fusion GPS, which was working for a law firm that
represented the Democratic Party and Clinton's 2016 presidential
campaign.
Steele declined to comment in an emailed message.
One of the sources familiar with Durham's activities said Fusion GPS
was not a target of Durham's investigation. Steele had previously
declined to cooperate with investigators working for Durham.
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Tim Ahmann; Editing by Scott
Malone, Howard Goller and Jonathan Oatis)
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