The Russian attorney who met with Donald
Trump Jr. in a highly scrutinized meeting last summer sought to distance
herself Friday from the infamous anti-Trump dossier, following testimony
from a Senate witness that she worked with the firm behind that document
on a separate project.
Natalia Veselnitskaya slammed the dossier as "cheap gossip," in an email
sent in Russian to Fox News. Her translator sent an English version of
the original message, which was reviewed and verified by Fox News.
“When I read some parts of this ‘dossier’ in the media I laughed,”
Veselnitskaya said. “What kind of idiots does one have to take Americans
for to think that they can believe that stupid and incompetent [and]
absurd [dossier]?”
The same email, in a confusing passage, also seemed to both defend and
question the co-founder of the firm behind the document.
Last month, CEO of Hermitage Capital Bill Browder testified before a
Senate committee that Veselnitskaya orchestrated a "smear campaign"
against him as part of an effort to fight anti-Russia sanctions, working
with the firm Fusion GPS and co-founder Glenn Simpson.
Glenn SimpsonExpand / Collapse
Glenn Simpson
Fusion was the same company behind the anti-Trump dossier.
This detail was swiftly picked up by President Trump and his allies, who
pointed to the alleged Fusion-Russia connection as proof Moscow was
actually working against him in 2016 despite "collusion" claims.
Simpson had employed former British intelligence officer Christopher
Steele in the project, which was crafted as opposition research in
requests by unknown political rivals of Trump. The dossier was first
made public when BuzzFeed published contents in January. Steele since
has been ordered to give a deposition in the multi-million dollar libel
case brought against the media outlet.
Simpson and Fusion have refused to say who they were working for on the
dossier case, claiming they must keep clients' identities confidential.
Simpson met with Senate Judiciary Committee staff for hours on Tuesday
behind closed doors as part of their investigation.
Fusion GPS told Fox News the firm is cooperating and turned over more
than 40,000 documents to the staff for their review.
However, the committee said the firm only turned over public headlines
and thousands of blank pages.
“Fusion’s initial production of documents consisted solely of headlines
from publicly available news reports and more than 7,500 pages of blank
paper,” committee spokesman Taylor Foy said after Simpson’s interview.
“Fusion eventually provided a copy of the same unverified dossier that’s
been publicly available since January, and a privilege log that raises
more questions than it answers.”
Simpson's attorney did not respond to a previous Fox News inquiry on how
the blank pages complied with the committee's request.
In her email to Fox News, Veselnitskaya said she was almost in “shock”
when she learned Simpson was behind the compiling of the dossier.
“The only thing I can say is that what I read on BuzzFeed—that is not
something of Glenn’s level, it’s not his modus operandi, it’s not his
work,” Veselnitskaya told Fox News. “Cheap gossip and tall tales—that is
diminishing for an investigator like Mr. Simpson.”
Simpson’s attorney, Josh Levy, told Fox News in a statement this week
that the firm is “proud of the work it has conducted" and stands by it.
Browder, a champion of the Magnitsky Act—a law passed in 2012 in the
wake of Russian whistleblower Sergei Magnitsky’s death to impose
sanctions on Russian oligarchs suspected of money laundering—has
continued to publicly link Russia to Fusion GPS.
In a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley,
R-Iowa, Browder also said the dossier was undertaken “at the same time”
the firm was working on the “smear campaign” against him.
Veselnitskaya acknowledged the two projects coincided, while suggesting
she only learned about the dossier later.
Veselnitskaya's name burst into the headlines after it was revealed she
had a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower with Trump Jr., Jared Kushner,
and then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort. The meeting, first reported in
June of this year, fueled the investigation into Russian meddling and
potential collusion with the Trump campaign during the 2016 presidential
election which the Trump team denies.
In her email, Veselnitskaya acknowledged that Simpson's firm was hired
by "our lawyers" from law firm Baker Hostetler, and looked into
Browder's background in connection with his allegations against a client
in a Magnitsky-related case. Veselnitskaya had worked on a U.S.-based
case for a Cyprus-based real estate holdings company called Prevezon,
which was caught up in a Justice Department money laundering case.
The email renewed numerous allegations against Browder, questioning his
motives.
Fusion GPS told Fox News Wednesday that they did work on the Prevezon
case, but stressed that the Trump dossier was a separate project.
Brooke Singman is a Politics Reporter for Fox News. Follow her on
Twitter at @brookefoxnews.
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