Eight
indicted for illegally funneling $3.5
million to support Clinton’s 2016
presidential bid
By Dan
Friedman
December 06, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-
The Justice
Department on Tuesday announced it had
indicted eight men for conspiring to
illegally funnel $3.5 million to political
committees supporting Hillary Clinton’s 2016
presidential bid. Prosecutors say the money
came from George Nader—a businessman who was
was
recently charged
with trafficking a child for sexual
purposes. Nader was a key figure in the
Trump-Russia scandal. According to special
counsel Robert Mueller, he helped arrange
meetings between Trump advisers and Russian
emissaries. But this week’s indictment
leaves a key question unanswered: Was Nader
also the source of a $1 million donation
from one of the defendants to Donald Trump’s
inaugural committee?
According to the indictment, Nader conspired
with Andy Khawaja, the CEO of an embattled
online payment processing company, in a plot
to provide massive campaign donations to
Democratic groups. Khawaja allegedly made
the contributions in his own name and
through his wife and his company, and was
then reimbursed by Nader. Six Khawaja
associates were also charged with acting as
straw donors as part of the scheme. It’s
illegal to make political campaign donations
in someone else’s name. Such charges are
among the 53 counts in Tuesday’s indictment.
While arranging
the payments to Democratic groups, Nader
“reported to an official from a foreign
government about his efforts to gain
influence,” prosecutors said in a statement
Tuesday. They didn’t name that
government. According to the Mueller
report,
Nader “worked for the United Arab Emirates
royal court” in 2016. The report described
Nader’s efforts during the presidential
transition period to help the UAE set up
meetings between the Trump team and Russia.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
But
prosecutors said conspicuously little
Tuesday about a $1 million donation that
Khawaja’s company, Allied Wallet, gave to
Trump’s inaugural committee. According to
emails obtained by Mother Jones,
Khawaja brought Nader as his guest to the
inauguration. In a form apparently sent to
the inaugural committee, Khawaja described
Nader as an “advisor” to Allied Wallet.
In
interviews and electronic messages
prior to his indictment, Khawaja denied that
Nader was his guest at the inauguration or
an adviser to Allied Wallet. Any email
suggesting this, he said, “is inaccurate.
It’s bullshit. It’s fabricated.”
Tuesday’s indictment contradicted this
denial, alleging that Nader had indeed
attended the inauguration as Khawaja’s
guest. Prosecutors also charged Khawaja with
obstructing the investigation, in part by
allegedly giving a witness false information
in an attempt to downplay Nader’s ties to
Allied Wallet.
The
indictment, however, did not address an
obvious question: Did Nader put up the $1
million that Allied Wallet gave Trump?
Khawaja says Nader had nothing to do with
it. “Nader did not give me money for [the]
inauguration,” he told Mother Jones
Thursday. He also disputed the charges in
the indictment. “Nader never gave me any
money to give to [Hillary Clinton],” he
said, asserting that Nader had instead
simply done business with his company.
“Nader was a Trump supporter and never cared
about Hillary or her campaign,” said Khawaja.
“This is a hit job to make Democrats look
bad.”
Lawyers for Nader did not respond to
requests for comment.
The charges
paint a picture of an effort by Nader to
gain influence with Clinton’s supporters,
and to hedge his bets by cultivating Trump’s
team—all while reporting back to unnamed
foreign masters. According to the
indictment, in a July 19, 2016, WhatsApp
message to an unidentified foreign official,
Nader said he was “developing a steady,
consistent and constructive relationship
with both camps!” After Trump’s electoral
victory, Nader appears to have hustled to
ingratiate himself with the incoming
administration. His attendance at the
inauguration came as part of an effort in
which he
developed
relationships
with Steve Bannon, Donald Trump Jr., Jared
Kushner, GOP fundraiser Elliott Broidy, and
Erik Prince, the Blackwater founder and
brother of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.
The
indictment also detailed WhatsApp messages
in which Khawaja and Nader allegedly
discussed plans for Nader to reimburse
Khawaja for his donations, in part through
allegedly fake invoices Khawaja sent Nader.
Using what prosecutors say was a code, the
men referred to funds as “baklava” and to
Clinton as “sister.” These messages included
hints that Nader may have been obtaining the
funds from another source. When Khawaja
pressed Nader in early July 2016 about the
status of a reimbursement, Nader responded,
“I shall pursue it vigorously!” Nader also
told Khawaja that he was conferring with
someone he called “HH.” In an August 4,
2016, message, for example, Nader told
Khawaja he had met with “HH” and “as soon as
we get back to [foreign city] prepare
something with bakery for the upcoming
event.” Nader told Khawaja that in this
meeting, he “stressed important and unique
role you are playing.”
“HH” was not identified in the indictment.
According to the Mueller report and other
public sources, Nader in 2016 was in direct
contact with Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown
prince of Abu Dhabi and the effective ruler
of the UAE. Bin Zayed, known as MBZ, is
referred to by many Emirates as “High
Highness.” Press officials at the Emirati
embassy in Washington, DC, did not respond
to questions about whether the UAE is the
unidentified foreign government referenced
in the indictment.
Khawaja’s indictment makes him the second
major Trump inaugural donor to be charged
with illegally funneling earlier political
donations to Democrats. In October, Imaad
Zuberi, a California businessman who gave
$900,000 to Trump’s inaugural committee,
agreed to
plead guilty in connection with a nearly
10-year scheme in which he solicited money
from foreign people and firms to donate to
US political campaigns on the foreigners’
behalf. As with Khawaja, prosecutors have
not said if they are investigating whether
the funds Zuberi gave to the inaugural
committee came from another source. Zuberi
told Mother Jones last year that
his inaugural donation came from his own
pocket.
Even if prosecutors were able to identify
straw donations to Trump’s inaugural
committee, they might face significant
hurdles in bringing a criminal case. That’s
because fundraising for presidential
inaugurations is “not regulated as strictly
as funds raised to influence the election
itself,” says Paul Ryan, a campaign finance
expert with Common Cause. In particular, the
statute that prohibits making a contribution
in the name of another person to a political
campaign does not apply to inaugural
committees. Thirteen of the charges in
Tuesday’s indictment relate to violations of
that law.
Peter Carr, a spokesperson for the Justice
Department’s criminal division, which
announced the indictment against Khawaja and
Nader, declined to comment when asked about
possible investigations related to the
inaugural committee.
The charges
against Khawaja and Nader come amid other
legal problems for both men. Nader, who was
convicted
in the Czech Republic in 2003 of sexually
abusing minors, was arrested in June in New
York. He remains jailed on charges that
include child pornography and transporting a
14-year-old child for sexual activity. On
Monday, six attorneys representing Nader in
that case filed motions to withdraw as his
counsel. It’s not clear if their withdrawal
has anything to do with the new campaign
finance allegations.
In May, Khawaja
and his firm
agreed to pay
the Federal Trade Commission $110 million to
settle charges that the company knowingly
processed payments for online
firms—including sketchy debt collection and
pornography outfits—that were engaged in
fraud. Khawaja also faces an ongoing federal
criminal investigation into his company’s
conduct, according to people with knowledge
of the probe. That investigation is
apparently separate from the campaign
finance case. Khawaja, who did not respond
to questions about this probe, told
Mother Jones in October that he had
retained a high-powered legal team that
includes former FBI director Louis Freeh and
two former lawyers for OJ Simpson: Robert
Shapiro and Alan Dershowitz. Dershowitz, a
prominent defender of Trump, said Tuesday
that he cannot comment on who he represents.
Freeh and Shapiro did not respond to
inquires.
Khawaja has said he has been traveling
abroad for the past few months. In message
sent Thursday, he said that he is in China
but plans to return to the US to “deal with
these fake accusations.” In a phone call in
October, speaking from what he said was
Tokyo, he was defiant. He argued that the
allegations against him were manufactured by
unnamed Republican operatives worried about
his support for Joe Biden’s presidential
campaign. Khawaja said his lawyers will
“come down on” his critics “like the hand of
God.”
“Tell them Andy is not gonna stop supporting
Democrats,” he said. “He’s not gonna stop
supporting Joe Biden. And let them go fuck
themselves.”
This article was originally published by
"Mother
Jones"
- -
Do you agree or
disagree? Post your comment here
|