Wall Street Journal: Giuliani associates asked former Ukrainian President to investigate Bidens and 2016 election
Two associates of President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani asked the former Ukrainian President in February to open an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden and alleged interference into the 2016 election — and in turn receive a state visit to Washington, DC, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
Citing people familiar with the matter, the paper reported that Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman — two Giuliani associates indicted on criminal charges last month for allegedly funneling foreign money into US elections — met to discuss the exchange with then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and then-Ukrainian general prosecutor Yuriy Lutsenko at Lutsenko’s office.
The requests for investigations during the meeting mirror those later made by President Donald Trump when he asked current Ukrainian President Volodymy Zelensky — who unseated Poroshenko — on a July phone call to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either Biden.
Poroshenko never ultimately announced any such investigations, according to the Journal. Giuliani’s lawyer Robert Costello told the paper that Giuliani had no knowledge of the meeting between his associates and the Ukrainian officials.
Poroshenko, who was in midst of a competitive reelection campaign, was interested in the potential Washington visit — and the subsequent prestige — floated by Giuliani’s associates, one of the people familiar with the matter told the Journal.
Poroshenko “wanted to come to Washington and meet with Trump and then after the state dinner he would have an interview” with a major news outlet, the person said. “Then he would say he would investigate meddling in 2016 and the Bidens.”
The possibility of a Ukrainian President announcing an investigation on a wide-reaching American media platform is also reminiscent of Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent’s recently released testimony outlining American diplomatic efforts to have Zelensky appear on CNN to publicly greenlight similar investigations. CNN host Fareed Zakaria said on Thursday that he had been set to interview Zelensky before news about the Ukrainian’s call with Trump broke — though CNN did not cancel the interview.
Kent testified that “there was discussion that President Zelensky would have an interview with CNN the week of the U.N. General Assembly leaders meetings,” which lasted from September 23 to 27. It was during that week that the transcript of the July 25 call and the whistleblower report would both be released. Trump also met with Zelensky that week in New York.
Then-US Special Envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker wanted Zelensky to convey “his willingness to open investigations in the two areas of interest to the President and that had been pushed previously by Rudy Giuliani,” Kent said.