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Tuesday, 17 July 2018
Russian woman charged with spying for Moscow by 'infiltrating' NRA
Maria Butina was charged with conspiracy to act as an agent of Russia
within the US without prior notification to the attorney general.
Photograph: Facebook
A Russian woman has been charged with spying for Moscow in the US by
infiltrating the National Rifle Association (NRA) in an attempt to
influence the Republican party and American politics.
Maria Butina, who purported to be a pro-gun activist, met American
politicians and candidates to establish “back channels” and secretly
reported back to the Kremlin through a high-level Russian official,
according to the US justice department.
Prosecutors said in a statement that Butina, 29, had been “developing
relationships with US persons and infiltrating organisations having
influence in American politics, for the purpose of advancing the
interests of the Russian federation”.
Butina was charged with conspiracy to act as a Russian agent within
the US without notifying the attorney general. She was arrested on
Sunday and appeared before a magistrate in Washington on Monday,
officials said. In an affidavit, an FBI agent said investigators had
searched Butina’s laptop computer and mobile phone.
The NRA did not respond to requests for comment.
The charges were unveiled hours after Donald Trump, on a stage with the Russian president Vladimir Putin, cast further doubt over the US intelligence establishment’s conclusion
that Russia attacked the 2016 US election. “I don’t see any reason why
it would,” Trump said at a joint press conference in Helsinki.
Butina has come under increasing scrutiny amid the investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 campaign. Footage emerged of her asking Trump a question in front of an audience at a conservative event in July 2015.
She is known as a protege of Alexander Torshin, a senior official at
the Russian central bank, who is also a longtime associate of the NRA.
Torshin, who met Donald Trump Jr at an NRA event in 2016, was placed under sanction by the US in April.
Trump winks at Putin at start of Helsinki summit - video
Charging
documents unsealed on Monday say Butina was directed by a “high-level
official in the Russian government”. The unnamed official’s biography
matched that of Torshin, but he was not identified by name.
Two unidentified Americans, one of them described as a “political
operative”, were said in the charging documents to have assisted Butina
in her efforts to make political contacts in the US. Neither was charged
with a crime.
Butina has a longstanding working relationship with Paul Erickson, an
NRA member and conservative operative based in South Dakota. Erickson
did not respond to a voicemail left on Monday afternoon.
Prosecutors said Butina emailed the first American associate in March
2015, suggesting a specific political party “would likely obtain
control over the US government after the 2016 elections” and noting the
powerful role in this party played by a certain gun rights organisation.
While neither organisation was identified by prosecutors, their descriptions matched those of the Republican party and the NRA.
The filings said the first American associate emailed an acquaintance
on October 4 2016, about a month before the election, and said he had
been “involved in securing a VERY private line of communication between
the Kremlin” and leaders of the political party.
Butina attended national prayer breakfasts and other events in an
attempt to make influential contacts, according to officials, and
emailed the second US associate in March 2016, while trying to setup a
series of dinners with Americans in Washington and New York.
According to prosecutors, she reported that a Kremlin official had
given approval for the back channel she was building, and she told the
American: “All we needed is ‘yes’ from Putin’s side. The rest is
easier.”
Officials said the investigation into Butina was conducted by the
FBI’s Washington office and was being prosecuted by the national
security sections of the US attorney’s office in Washington and justice
department headquarters. The office of Robert Mueller, the special
counsel, played no immediately apparent role.
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