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					Originally Posted by  gfejunkie
					 
				 
				Pay wall. So, now you have to pay for your Wapo fake news. Fuck that shit! 
 
Desperate times call for desperate measures, I guess. 
			
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  Washington lawyer, a former White House counsel, under scrutiny by prosecutors in ofhoot of Mueller probe
    By  Tom Hamburger 
  September 23 at 10:57 PM
 Federal  prosecutors have stepped up their investigation of prominent Washington  attorney Gregory Craig for work he conducted at his former law firm on  behalf of the Ukrainian government in 2012, an effort coordinated by  Paul Manafort, according to people familiar with the matter.
 Shortly before Manafort pleaded guilty to charges  of conspiracy and obstruction this month, attorneys for Craig received  requests for information from prosecutors in the Southern District of  New York, who are investigating Craig’s activities as an offshoot of the  broader probe led by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, according  to one person with knowledge of the exchange.
 Craig’s case — and that of two Washington lobbyists who worked with Manafort on Ukrainian matters — were referred last April to  New York prosecutors, who appear to be focused on whether the three  failed to register as foreign agents while working with Manafort’s  Ukrainian clients.
  A  spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office of the Southern District of  New York declined to comment. No charges have been filed, and  representatives for the three men have expressed confidence that their  clients did not violate the law.
  Still, the  investigation of Craig — a White House counsel for President Barack  Obama — along with lobbyists Vin Weber and Tony Podesta, has shaken  Washington’s lobbying and legal community, which until recently had  faced little scrutiny of its representation of foreign clients.
 “There  is a rising level of concern, particularly from law firms providing  services to foreign governments,” said Joshua Ian Rosenstein, an expert  on foreign lobbying registration compliance at the Sandler Reiff law  firm.
[Mueller referred foreign lobbying case to New York prosecutors]
  Since Manafort’s plea deal, Rosenstein said the volume of calls he has received on the topic has spiked.
  “New  and existing clients are asking very specific questions now” about the  rules and regulations governing representation of foreign governments,  he said.
  The 1938 Foreign Agents Registration  Act was passed in the run-up to World War II as an effort to require  Nazi agents to disclose efforts to influence policy and public opinion  in the United States. The once-obscure statute had been enforced  haphazardly, but Mueller has seized on the law as part of his broad  investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential  campaign.
  The special counsel charged both Manafort  and his longtime deputy, Rick Gates, with failing to file as foreign  lobbyists as part of a criminal conspiracy to help their Ukrainian  client exert influence in Washington. Mueller also examined former  national security adviser Michael Flynn’s work for foreign clients  before Flynn pleaded guilty last year to lying to the FBI.
  Now  Craig — along with Weber, a former Republican congressman, and Podesta,  an icon in Democratic lobbying circles — is under scrutiny for work  done related to what prosecutors contend wasa Manafort-directed effort to improve the image of former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych. CNN first reported the intensifying focus by prosecutors on Craig.
According to court filings, companies that match the description of the Podesta Group and Mercury Public Affairs— the company at which Weber is a partner —were paid through a Brussels-based advocacy organization directed by Manafort to promote Yanukovych’s agenda in Washington.
  The  firms, identified in the filings only as Company A and Company B,  received more than $1 million each to work on behalf of Ukraine,  prosecutors said. But neither firm initially registered as a foreign  agent.
  Instead,  they disclosed their activities on congressional lobbyist disclosure  forms, which require less information than foreign agent registrations.
  Representatives for  Podesta and Weber have said they have cooperated with prosecutors and  believe that their clients acted appropriately at all times.
A  partner at Mercury, Michael McKeon, said that his firm waived  attorney-client privilege so Mueller’s team could see exchanges the firm  had with lobbying law experts to show its willingness to register as a foreign agent, if appropriate. 
Craig’s  former law firm, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, was hired by  Yanukovych’s Justice Ministry to review the prosecution of one of  Yanukovych’s leading political rivals, Yulia Tymoshenko. The agreement  with the ministry also included providing advice on improving prosecutions by the ministry, according to court filings.
Attorneys for Craig — who also did notinitially register as a foreign agent for thiswork — said that in the end,the firm did not provide adviceon improving prosecutions.
  Skadden  did produce a 187-page white paper that offered a mixed review of the  trial and imprisonment of Tymoshenko. It states in the executive summary  that it was “rendered with total independence,” according to a copy  obtained by The Washington Post.
  Court documents allege that  the report was written by a “United States law firm” paid millions of  dollars in financing arranged by Manafort and was used as part of a  broad lobbying effort for Ukraine that Manafort and his allies failed to  disclose.
“Manafort arranged to have the law  firm disseminate hard copies of the report to numerous government  officials, including senior U.S. executive and legislative branch  officials,” according to court papers filed this month as part of  Manafort’s plea.
  Skadden  was compensated for its work on the report via an offshore Manafort  account used to “funnel $4 million to pay the law firm, a fact that  Manafort did not disclose to the public,” according to filings.
  The  Ukrainian government reported that the Skadden paper cost $12,000. But  Manafort and his allies allegedly hid the true cost because it would  “undermine the report’s being perceived as an independent assessment”  and thus useful as a lobbying tool, according to court papers.
  Attorneys  for Craig say that although he wrote the report, he played no role in  the lobbying campaign. They acknowledge that he consulted with Manafort,  but say Manafort did not direct Craig’s work. They said they do not  believe Craig needed to register as a foreign lobbyist because he did  not lobby government officials or engage in public relations activity.
“Mr.  Craig never disseminated Skadden’s report on the Tymoshenko trial to  U.S. government officials, and he did not discuss Skadden’s findings  with officials in the Executive Branch or the Congress or their staffs,”  his attorneys, William Taylor and William Murphy, said in a statement.  “Moreover, Mr. Craig’s few media contacts about the report were not part  of an effort to promote the report on behalf of a foreign government.  As a result, he was not required to register.”
  Craig left Skadden in April.
  Another former Skadden lawyer, Alex Van der Zwaan, pleaded guilty in February to lying about work he did on behalf of the Ukrainian regime.
  Alice Crites and Rosalind S. Helderman contributed to this report.