Andrey Muraviev, Charged With Making Illegal Political Contributions
A Russian tycoon
whose name arose prominently in the illegal political contribution case against
two associates of Rudy Giuliani was secretly charged with conspiracy in a New
York court, prosecutors revealed Monday.
Conspiracy and illegal campaign contribution charges that
were lodged against Andrey Muraviev in September 2020 in Manhattan federal
court were unsealed by prosecutors who told a judge that the businessman was
not in custody and was believed to be in Russia.
An indictment returned against Muraviev in September said
some of Muraviev’s money was used for political contributions and donations
aimed at launching a business to acquire U.S. retail cannabis and marijuana
licenses, but the source of the funds was disguised as coming from the Giuliani
associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman.
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a release that
Muraviev “attempted to influence the 2018 elections by conspiring to push a
million dollars of his foreign funds to candidates and campaigns. He attempted
to corrupt our political system to advance his business interests.”
The release described Muraviev as a “Russian oligarch.”
Michael J. Driscoll, head of New York’s FBI office, said
Muraviev conspired with Parnas, Fruman and Andrey Kukushkin to make illegal
contributions.
“The money Muraviev injected into our political system, as
alleged, was directed to politicians with views favorable to his business
interests and those of his co-conspirators,” Driscoll said. “As today’s action
demonstrates, we will continue to aggressively pursue all those who seek to
illegally effect our nation’s elections.”
Parnas and Fruman were involved in Giuliani’s unsuccessful
efforts to get Ukrainian officials to investigate Joe Biden’s son during
Biden’s campaign for president.
Giuliani remains under criminal investigation as authorities
decide whether his interactions with Ukraine officials required him to register
as a foreign agent, but he wasn’t alleged to have been involved in illegal
campaign contributions and wasn’t part of a recent New York trial.
Prosecutors said Muraviev’s money was used to reimburse and
fund federal and state political donations in Florida, Nevada and Texas, and
Muraviev agreed that his money could also be used for donations to politicians
in New York and New Jersey.
Muraviev, 47, traveled to Nevada as part of the conspiracy
and received regular updates from Kukushkin about the political progress of
their pursuit of cannabis and marijuana licenses, the indictment said.
Kukushkin, a Ukrainian-born investor, was scheduled to be
sentenced on Tuesday after he and the Soviet-born Parnas were convicted of
campaign finance crimes at an October trial in Manhattan.
Kukushkin’s lawyer, Gerald Lefcourt, asked a judge Monday to
consider sentencing Kukushkin to a counseling program and community service
that would allow him to volunteer to work 28 hours a week assisting with the
Ukrainian refugee crisis. After the Muraviev charges were unsealed, Lefcourt
described the government’s timing as a “publicity stunt” designed to influence
Kukushkin’s sentencing.
Prosecutors have asked that Kukushkin be sentenced to four
to five years in prison, which would be consistent with the calculations of
federal sentencing guidelines. In a pre-sentence submission, they dismissed as
“self-serving” Kukushkin’s claims that he never agreed to help steer Muraviev’s
money to U.S. political candidates and was unaware of U.S. election laws.
Fruman, who pleaded guilty in September to a single charge
of solicitation of a contribution by a foreign national, was sentenced in
January to a year and a day in prison.
Parnas awaits sentencing.
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