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Investigators Are Scrutinizing Newly Uncovered Payments By The Russian Embassy - BuzzFeed 1/17

JacksinPA

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https://www.buzzfeed.com/jasonleopo...us-of-election?utm_term=.qvRVMLdmL#.pxyYGAm5A

US authorities are poring over hundreds of newly uncovered payments from Russian diplomatic accounts. Among them are transactions by former ambassador Sergey Kislyak 10 days after the 2016 presidential election and a blocked $150,000 cash withdrawal five days after the inauguration. Officials investigating the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 US presidential election are scrutinizing newly uncovered financial transactions between the Russian government and people or businesses inside the United States.

Records exclusively reviewed by BuzzFeed News also show years of Russian financial activity within the US that bankers and federal law enforcement officials deemed suspicious, raising concerns about how the Kremlin’s diplomats operated here long before the 2016 election.

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team, charged with investigating Russian election interference and possible collusion by the Trump campaign, is examining these transactions and others by Russian diplomatic personnel, according to a US official with knowledge of the inquiry. The special counsel has broad authority to investigate “any matters” that “may arise” from his investigation, and the official said Mueller’s probe is following leads on suspicious Russian financial activity that may range far beyond the election.

The transactions reveal:

One of the people at the center of the investigation, the former Russian ambassador to the US Sergey Kislyak, received $120,000 ten days after the election of Donald Trump. Bankers flagged it to the US government as suspicious in part because the transaction, marked payroll, didn’t fit prior pay patterns.

Five days after Trump’s inauguration, someone attempted to withdraw $150,000 cash from the embassy’s account — but the embassy’s bank blocked it. Bank employees reported the attempted transaction to the US government because it was abnormal activity for that account.

From March 8 to April 7, 2014, bankers flagged nearly 30 checks for a total of about $370,000 to embassy employees, who cashed the checks as soon as they received them, making it virtually impossible to trace where the money went. Bank officials noted that the employees had not received similar payments in the past, and that the transactions surrounded the date of a critical referendum on whether parts of Crimea should secede from Ukraine and join Russia — one of Vladimir Putin’s top foreign policy concerns and a flash point with the West.

Over five years, the Russian Cultural Centre — an arm of the government that sponsors classes and performances and is based in Washington, DC — sent $325,000 in checks that banking officials flagged as suspicious. The amounts were not consistent with normal payroll checks and some transactions fell below the $10,000 threshold that triggers a notice to the US government.

The Russian Embassy in Washington, DC, sent more than $2.4 million to small home-improvement companies controlled by a Russian immigrant living not far from there. Between 2013 and March 2017, that contractor’s various companies received about 600 such payments, earmarked for construction jobs at Russian diplomatic compounds. Bankers told the Treasury they did not think those transactions were related to the election but red-flagged them because the businesses seemed too small to have carried out major work on the embassy and because the money was cashed quickly or wired to other accounts.

Each of these transactions sparked a “suspicious activity report” sent to the US Treasury’s financial crimes unit by Citibank, which handles accounts of the Russian Embassy. By law, bankers must alert the government to transactions that bear hallmarks of money laundering or other financial misconduct. Such reports can support investigations and intelligence gathering — but by themselves they are not evidence of a crime, and many suspicious activity reports are filed on transactions that are perfectly legal. Intelligence and diplomatic sources who reviewed the transactions for BuzzFeed News said there could be justifiable uses for the money, such as travel, bonuses, or pension payouts.

The Treasury Department turned over the suspicious activity reports to the FBI after the bureau asked for records that might relate to the investigation into the election, according to three federal law enforcement officials with knowledge of the matter. The bureau did not respond to requests for comment on what, if anything, it has done to investigate the transactions.
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Hmmm...Suspicious payments from Russia state-owned bank to Russian ambassador & spy master right after the election? What could this possibly imply? Bribery? Money laundering?????
 
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Russia Sent Dozens of Wire Transfers 'to Finance Election Campaign of 2016,' Report Says

RUSSIA SENT DOZENS OF WIRE TRANSFERS 'TO FINANCE ELECTION CAMPAIGN OF 2016,' REPORT SAYS

The Kremlin's foreign ministry sent more than 60 wire transfers worldwide last year, totaling over $380,000, with a memo saying the cash was meant "to finance election campaign of 2016," a report revealed Tuesday.

The transfers to Russian embassies came in between August 3 and September 20, close to the final stretch of the U.S. presidential election, according to a BuzzFeed report. The transactions included nearly $30,000 sent to the Russian embassy in Washington, D.C., from Russia's state-owned VTB Bank, which is one of many Russian financial institutions under Obama-era sanctions. The money appeared in the embassy's Citibank accounts.

Federal investigators have not determined how the funds were used or intended to be used. But the discovery comes as special counsel Robert Mueller and several congressional committees investigate Russia's attempts to influence the 2016 race, and whether President Donald Trump's campaign colluded with those plans

Citibank noticed the money in the accounts for the Russian embassy in Washington and investigated. The global financial titan discovered “dozens” of other transfers that included the same memo about campaign finance, BuzzFeed reported. Altogether, Citibank claimed to find 650 “suspicious transactions” adding up to roughly $2.9 million between November 2013 and March 2017, but most did not appear to pertain to the election.

Seven other countries, including Russia, also held national elections last year during the time the wire transfers crossed the globe.

The federal probes into the Trump campaign have tapped the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, for records from people with financial links to Russia and other apparent connections to the investigations. Last month, Mueller indicted former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and former Trump adviser Rick Gates for an alleged series of international financial schemes, though there appeared to be no direct ties to Russia.

The wire transfers report came as the Trump administration was dealt another blow this week regarding Russia. The Atlantic reported that Donald Trump Jr. exchanged direct Twitter messages during the campaign with WikiLeaks, which published emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton's campaign manager. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has denied that Russia was the source of the leaks.

Beyond that, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions appeared Tuesday before the House Judiciary Committee and fended off questions about his possible knowledge of Russian collusion. He said he did not recall former campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos telling him about meeting Russians last year. Papadopoulos has pleaded guilty to lying to federal investigators about his Russian contacts.

Sessions also denied that he had lied under oath about his own Russian contacts at hearings earlier this year, including a confirmation hearing in January.
 
Just a note. VTB Bank LLC (Vneshtorgbank) is wholly owned by the Russian government and is itself the owner of many subsidiary banks including the Bank of Moscow.

A separate Kremlin owned banking entity, VEB (Vnesheconombank) is touted as a 'development' bank. It helps finance Kremlin projects such as the North/South Stream oil pipelines into Europe. VEB also funds 'projects' of the Russian FSB/GRU intelligence services. Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner met with Sergey N. Ghorkov (December 2016), the head of VEB even though VEB was under US/EU sanctions for its role in the Crimea invasion/annexation.
 
Just a note. VTB Bank LLC (Vneshtorgbank) is wholly owned by the Russian government and is itself the owner of many subsidiary banks including the Bank of Moscow.

A separate Kremlin owned banking entity, VEB (Vnesheconombank) is touted as a 'development' bank. It helps finance Kremlin projects such as the North/South Stream oil pipelines into Europe. VEB also funds 'projects' of the Russian FSB/GRU intelligence services. Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner met with Sergey N. Ghorkov (December 2016), the head of VEB even though VEB was under US/EU sanctions for its role in the Crimea invasion/annexation.

Oh what tangled webs they weave.
 
Sessions also denied that he had lied under oath about his own Russian contacts at hearings earlier this year, including a confirmation hearing in January.

What's disturbing to me is that the investigation has been going on for a year and a half, and they're just now looking into suspicious bank transfers. These were flagged at the time they happened by the banks involved. This should have been where the investigation started -- that's basic. Another indication of how badly this investigation has gone off track.
 
https://www.buzzfeed.com/jasonleopo...us-of-election?utm_term=.qvRVMLdmL#.pxyYGAm5A

US authorities are poring over hundreds of newly uncovered payments from Russian diplomatic accounts. Among them are transactions by former ambassador Sergey Kislyak 10 days after the 2016 presidential election and a blocked $150,000 cash withdrawal five days after the inauguration. Officials investigating the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 US presidential election are scrutinizing newly uncovered financial transactions between the Russian government and people or businesses inside the United States.

Records exclusively reviewed by BuzzFeed News also show years of Russian financial activity within the US that bankers and federal law enforcement officials deemed suspicious, raising concerns about how the Kremlin’s diplomats operated here long before the 2016 election.

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team, charged with investigating Russian election interference and possible collusion by the Trump campaign, is examining these transactions and others by Russian diplomatic personnel, according to a US official with knowledge of the inquiry. The special counsel has broad authority to investigate “any matters” that “may arise” from his investigation, and the official said Mueller’s probe is following leads on suspicious Russian financial activity that may range far beyond the election.

The transactions reveal:

One of the people at the center of the investigation, the former Russian ambassador to the US Sergey Kislyak, received $120,000 ten days after the election of Donald Trump. Bankers flagged it to the US government as suspicious in part because the transaction, marked payroll, didn’t fit prior pay patterns.

Five days after Trump’s inauguration, someone attempted to withdraw $150,000 cash from the embassy’s account — but the embassy’s bank blocked it. Bank employees reported the attempted transaction to the US government because it was abnormal activity for that account.

From March 8 to April 7, 2014, bankers flagged nearly 30 checks for a total of about $370,000 to embassy employees, who cashed the checks as soon as they received them, making it virtually impossible to trace where the money went. Bank officials noted that the employees had not received similar payments in the past, and that the transactions surrounded the date of a critical referendum on whether parts of Crimea should secede from Ukraine and join Russia — one of Vladimir Putin’s top foreign policy concerns and a flash point with the West.

Over five years, the Russian Cultural Centre — an arm of the government that sponsors classes and performances and is based in Washington, DC — sent $325,000 in checks that banking officials flagged as suspicious. The amounts were not consistent with normal payroll checks and some transactions fell below the $10,000 threshold that triggers a notice to the US government.

The Russian Embassy in Washington, DC, sent more than $2.4 million to small home-improvement companies controlled by a Russian immigrant living not far from there. Between 2013 and March 2017, that contractor’s various companies received about 600 such payments, earmarked for construction jobs at Russian diplomatic compounds. Bankers told the Treasury they did not think those transactions were related to the election but red-flagged them because the businesses seemed too small to have carried out major work on the embassy and because the money was cashed quickly or wired to other accounts.

Each of these transactions sparked a “suspicious activity report” sent to the US Treasury’s financial crimes unit by Citibank, which handles accounts of the Russian Embassy. By law, bankers must alert the government to transactions that bear hallmarks of money laundering or other financial misconduct. Such reports can support investigations and intelligence gathering — but by themselves they are not evidence of a crime, and many suspicious activity reports are filed on transactions that are perfectly legal. Intelligence and diplomatic sources who reviewed the transactions for BuzzFeed News said there could be justifiable uses for the money, such as travel, bonuses, or pension payouts.

The Treasury Department turned over the suspicious activity reports to the FBI after the bureau asked for records that might relate to the investigation into the election, according to three federal law enforcement officials with knowledge of the matter. The bureau did not respond to requests for comment on what, if anything, it has done to investigate the tran
Hmmm...Suspicious payments from Russia state-owned bank to Russian ambassador & spy master right after the election? What could this possibly imply? Bribery? Money laundering?????

Obama was president right after the election. :lamo
 
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