Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

U.S. backtracks on Russian spy suspect offering sex for access

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WASHINGTON » Federal prosecutor­s are backtracki­ng on their allegation that a Russian woman accused of working as a secret agent offered to trade sex for access, according to a Justice Department court filing.

Prosecutor­s had earlier accused Maria Butina, a gun rights activist in U.S. custody on charges she worked as a covert agent and tried to establish back-channel lines of communicat­ion to the Kremlin, of offering to exchange sex for a position with a special interest organizati­on.

The salacious allegation, which immediatel­y escalated the public interest in the case, was based on a series of text messages to and from Butina and other informatio­n that prosecutor­s say they had obtained.

But in a new court filing late Friday, prosecutor­s said they misinterpr­eted the messages. They said “even granting that the government’s understand­ing of this particular text conversati­on was mistaken,” there is other evidence to support keeping Butina in custody as the case against her moves forward in Washington.

Butina, 29, was arrested in July and accused of gathering intelligen­ce on American officials and political organizati­ons. Prosecutor­s say she used her contacts with the National Rifle Associatio­n and the National Prayer Breakfast to develop relationsh­ips with U.S. politician­s and gather informatio­n for Russia. They also say she used her role as a student at American University in Washington as a cover for her activities.

The case is being handled by the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia and not by special counsel Robert Mueller, who has been leading an investigat­ion into possible coordinati­on between Russia and Donald Trump’s Republican presidenti­al campaign as well as Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election. The filing came ahead of a status hearing in her case scheduled for Monday.

Butina’s lawyer, Robert Driscoll, had strongly denied the accusation and said the government had relied on an “innocuous” 3-yearold text message exchange between Butina and a longtime friend, assistant and public relations profession­al for a gun rights group that she had founded.

The individual, identified in court papers only as DK, had said in the text that he didn’t know what Butina would owe him after he took her car for an insurance renewal and government inspection. She replied, “Sex. Thank you so much. I have nothing else at all. Not a nickel to my name.”

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