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Mrs. Overall

(6,839 posts)
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 08:47 PM Jul 2018

Accused Russian Spy Maria Butina Told American CEO: Send Cash to Moscow

Source: The Daily Beast

‘It’s more evidence that she had a broader agenda, she was doing other work for the Kremlin,’ one observer tells The Daily Beast.

Maria Butina, the accused Russian operative, didn’t just allegedly cultivate the NRA on behalf of the Kremlin. The 29-year-old Russian national also braced one of America’s best-known businessmen, pushing him to increase his investments in his bank in Moscow—a bank that was facing trouble with Kremlin authorities.

The encounter, detailed to The Daily Beast by multiple sources, paints a more detailed picture than previously known of the actions of the alleged foreign agent in the United States. It indicates that courting American politicos wasn’t her only mission. She also took keen interest in contentious, complex matters involving international finance—all while attempting to influence the primary financier of what would become Washington’s most Trump-friendly foreign policy think tank.

Butina, who is currently incarcerated, has pleaded not guilty to charges that she worked as a covert operative for the Kremlin, infiltrating the NRA and American conservative politics through a charm offensive that included, according to U.S. prosecutors, a series of sexual favors.

“I would think it’s even more evidence that she had a broader agenda, she was doing other work for the Kremlin,” said Evelyn Farkas, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and former Pentagon official focused on Russia. “It’s interesting that she was not only seeking to provide ways for the Russian government to put money into the U.S. political system in order to influence our electoral outcome but that she clearly also was interested in luring American money to Russia.”

Read more: https://www.thedailybeast.com/accused-russian-spy-maria-butina-told-american-ceo-send-cash-to-moscow

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Frustratedlady

(16,254 posts)
2. Be sure to read the article...more Republicans caught in the web and dumb enough to fall for their
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 09:07 PM
Jul 2018

scheme.

They won't have a prison big enough to lock all these people up.

Disappointed to see Huntsman's name included. I always thought he was pretty level.

Frustratedlady

(16,254 posts)
5. I saw him in the July 4th holiday meeting the Republican senators made with Russia. He looked very
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 11:56 PM
Jul 2018

nervous and concerned. Of course, he'd still be in Russia after the senators went back home, which would tend to make me nervous.

Unless I missed it, I never did hear what the senators were doing there in the first place.

 

RandomAccess

(5,210 posts)
3. Holy Cow -- she was one very busy young lady!! Very busy with the US corporations
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 09:19 PM
Jul 2018

of all sorts.

This Russian infiltration has been immense and wide-spread. Not all of it falls within Mueller's perview, probably, but there's so much that surely does that it's no wonder it's taking such a long time to wrap things up.

 

watoos

(7,142 posts)
8. Mueller is going to have to
Wed Aug 1, 2018, 07:04 AM
Aug 2018

hire more prosecutors.

Seriously, people, just imagine what Mueller's report is going to look like. His team does not leak what it has found.

Ever watch a fireworks display, the grand finale? That's what Mueller's report will be like, explosion after explosion, only longer.

Nitram

(22,822 posts)
9. Why would she solicit money for "a bank that was in trouble with the Kremlin?"
Wed Aug 1, 2018, 08:40 AM
Aug 2018

I thought she worked for the Kremlin...

lagomorph777

(30,613 posts)
12. That jumped out at me too.
Wed Aug 1, 2018, 10:03 AM
Aug 2018

Maybe the idea was to buy their way out of trouble; Putin was directing them to try this?

wishstar

(5,270 posts)
14. Probably they were keeping too much profit and not funneling enough back to Kremlin
Wed Aug 1, 2018, 05:20 PM
Aug 2018

Seems that Putin and his henchmen expect beneficiaries of their largesse and people who they allow to do business in Russia, to money launder and pay back part of their profits.

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