GOP lawmaker (Dana Rohrabacher) met with lawyer at center of Russia probe

Source: The Hill | October 3, 2017 | Olivia Beavers

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), who has come under scrutiny for his sympathetic views toward Moscow, reportedly met last year with Natalia Veselnitskaya, the same Russian lawyer embroiled in Donald Trump Jr.’s controversial meeting at Trump Tower.

Rohrabacher’s meeting came two months before Veselnitskaya’s with the president’s eldest son. He has also met with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who during the 2016 campaign published leaked Democratic emails the intelligence community says were hacked by Russia.

Trump Jr. took the meeting last year in New York after being promised damaging information on Hillary Clinton, though he has denied that any was offered.

The California lawmaker, who has largely supported improving relations between Washington and Moscow, met with the lawyer in April 2016 to discuss the U.S. sanctions against Russia that were in response to the Kremlin’s human rights abuses. Veselnitskaya lobbied against the punitive measure, known as the Magnitsky Act.

Veselnitskaya disclosed the previously unknown meeting during a Tuesday interview with a pro-Russian Crimean news service, Foreign Policy reported.

“We just asked to listen to us, just to listen to the alternative version,” Veselnitskaya reportedly said, while slamming the sanctions and claiming lawmakers like Rohrabacher had been deceived with such measures.

“‘Do not let yourself be used by scammers,’” she recalled saying.

Kenneth Grubbs, a spokesman for Republican lawmaker, told the magazine that he believed the Russian lawyer was “among many people” Rohrabacher met with during his trip to Moscow, in which he led a congressional delegation.

Grubbs also told Foreign Policy that Rohrabacher “was not focused on her identity” and did not recall the meeting. 

Rohrabacher’s trip and his willingness to hear arguments against the Magnitsky case have previously been reported.

“I had a meeting with some people, government officials, and they were saying, ‘Would you be willing to accept material on the Magnitsky case from the prosecutors in Moscow? ‘And I said, ‘Sure, I’d be willing to look at it,’ ” Rohrabacher recalled in an interview with The Hill in July.

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