10 June 17
readersupportednews.org
he
hard-charging New York lawyer President Trump chose to represent him in
the Russia investigation has prominent clients with ties to the
Kremlin, a striking pick for a president trying to escape the persistent
cloud that has trailed his administration.
Marc E. Kasowitz’s clients include Oleg Deripaska, a
Russian oligarch who is close to President Vladimir Putin and has done
business with Trump’s former campaign manager. Kasowitz also represents
Sberbank, Russia’s largest state-owned bank, U.S. court records show.
Kasowitz has represented one of Deripaska’s companies
for years in a civil lawsuit in New York and was scheduled to argue on
the company’s behalf May 25, two days after news broke that Trump had
hired him, court records show. A different lawyer in Kasowitz’s firm
showed up in court instead, avoiding a scenario that would have
highlighted Kasowitz’s extensive work for high-profile Russian clients.
Kasowitz, whose scrappy style in the courtroom mirrors
Trump’s approach to politics, represented Trump in various matters for
more than a decade before he took on either Deripaska’s company or
Sberbank, according to one of Kasowitz’s partners in the firm.
Trump has turned to Kasowitz for matters that include
debt restructuring and suing an author who Trump said undercounted his
net worth. On Thursday, Kasowitz became the public face of Trump’s
counterattack on former FBI director James B. Comey, challenging the
former federal prosecutor’s credibility and calling for Comey to be
investigated for leaks after his testimony to Congress.
As Kasowitz takes on his most high-stakes work for Trump yet, the lawyer’s Russian clients could cause complications.
“If the behavior of a Russian client of the firm or
its relationship with Trump becomes an issue in the investigation, a
conflict could arise,” said Stephen Gillers of New York University Law
School, an expert on legal ethics.
Deripaska has said congressional investigators have
contacted his attorneys seeking information about his business dealings
with Paul Manafort, a Trump campaign manager during the presidential
campaign. More than a decade ago, Deripaska invested in a fund that
Manafort set up in the Cayman Islands that bought assets primarily in
Ukraine.
The Associated Press reported in March that Manafort
“secretly worked for” Deripaska as far back as 2006 to influence
politics and business dealings inside the United States to benefit
Putin’s government. Manafort signed a $10 million annual contract
beginning in 2006 and maintained a business relationship until at least
2009, the AP reported.
Deripaska has denied the report, and he sued the AP
for libel last month. Deripaska said he “never had any arrangement,
whether contractual or otherwise, with Mr. Manafort to advance the
interests of the Russian government,” according to the lawsuit. In
newspaper ads taken out after the AP story, he said, “I want to
resolutely deny this malicious assertion and lie.”
Former associates of Sberbank, the other Russia-tied Kasowitz client, also have come under scrutiny in media reports.
The bank’s former vice president, who is now chief
executive of another Russian state-owned financial institution,
Vnesheconombank, met with Trump’s son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner,
in December.
Kushner’s interactions with the Russian banker are a
part of the FBI’s investigation into potential coordination between
Moscow and the Trump campaign team.
Gillers said Kasowitz’s firm should closely monitor
potential conflicts. If one arises, the firm probably would have to drop
one of its clients, he said.
A White House spokesman did not respond to requests
for comment Friday. Michael J. Bowe, a partner at the law firm Kasowitz
Benson Torres, declined to say whether the firm had discussed the
possibility of potential conflicts arising from its Russian clients.
Bowe added that their representation of the Russian firms and Trump “are
totally unrelated.”
CNN and BuzzFeed previously reported Kasowitz’s Russian clients.
Trump hired Kasowitz in 2001 to restructure debt on
his firm’s Atlantic City casinos. More recently, Kasowitz filed a
lawsuit against Timothy O’Brien, arguing that the author of “TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald”
had libeled Trump by understating the businessman’s wealth. Trump lost
the case in 2011. O’Brien told The Post last year that Trump used
Kasowitz because he “always favored scrappy lawyers and street
fighters.”
Kasowitz also wrote a letter during the presidential
campaign threatening to sue the New York Times for an article that said
two women had accused Trump of touching them inappropriately. Kasowitz
said at the time it was “nothing more than a politically motivated
effort to defeat Mr. Trump’s candidacy.” No suit has been filed.
On Tuesday, Deripaska’s company, Veleron, lost an
appeal in federal court in Manhattan in its lawsuit against Morgan
Stanley in a complex financial case involving a dispute over a loan on
which Veleron defaulted during the height of the Great Recession.
Kasowitz was scheduled to deliver oral arguments in the appeal last
month. It’s not clear whether Kasowitz will continue to represent
Veleron.
Records in the case reinforce Deripaska’s close ties
to Putin. When Deripaska’s company ran into financial trouble in 2008
and needed to put up more collateral to cover some its liabilities,
Deripaska put in a call to Putin, who authorized the state-run
Vnesheconombank, or VEB, to offer his firm a bailout, Deripaska
acknowledged in court records.
In 2008, Forbes magazine listed Deripaska as the
ninth-richest man in the world. In 2006, the United States revoked his
visa to enter the country, citing possible ties to organized crime. He
has denied those links, claiming the allegations are part of an effort
to smear him.
Kasowitz represents Sberbank in a 2016 lawsuit that is
still in its preliminary stages. An owner of a Russian granite-mining
business accuses the bank of conspiring with competitors to dismantle
his company and seize its assets. The bank has not responded in court
filings.
Sberbank was one of the sponsors of the 2013 Miss
Universe pageant in Moscow produced by Trump, who owned the competition.
The deputy head of the bank at the time was Sergey Gorkov, who met with
Kushner in December. Gorkov, a graduate of the academy of the Federal
Security Service, or FSB, the domestic successor of the former Soviet
KGB intelligence bureau, was named to head VEB in February 2016.
VEB has maintained that Gorkov’s meeting with Kushner
was part of a new business strategy and was conducted with Kushner in
his role as the head of his family’s real estate business. The White
House has said the meeting was unrelated to business and was one of many
diplomatic encounters the soon-to-be presidential adviser was holding
ahead of the inauguration.
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