DHS Issues Statement Debunking Trump Claim That Former AG Loretta Lynch Let Natalia Veselnitskaya Into US

KOMMERSANT PHOTO/YURY MARTYANOV/REUTERS

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Thursday evening issued a statement contradicting President Trump’s claim that Loretta Lynch, President Obama’s attorney general, allowed the Russian lawyer who met with three Trump associates, including his son, into the United States. “In Sept. 2015, DHS paroled Natalia Veselnitskaya into the U.S. in concurrence with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of New York, allowing her to participate in a client’s legal proceedings,” the DHS statement to BuzzFeed News read. “Ms. Veselnitskaya was subsequently paroled into the U.S. several times between 2015 and 2016, ending in February 2016. In June 2016, she was issued a B1/B2 nonimmigrant visa (a standard tourist visa) by the U.S. Department of State.”

These facts contradict a statement America's loose-lips President Trump said in Paris on Thursday that “Somebody said that her visa or her passport to come into the country was approved by Attorney General Lynch. Now, maybe that's wrong. I just heard that a little while ago, but a little surprised to hear that. So, she was here because of Lynch,” echoing a conspiracy theory that the lawyer was actually part of a Democratic Party plot. 

Former Attorney General Lynch's spokesperson immediately issued a statement insisting that she had no authority over whether or not the Russian lawyer was allowed to enter the country.

In a potentially related matter, House Judiciary Committee Democrats are questioning why Trump Attorney General Jeff Sessions settled a Dept of Justice Case cheaply, with the very client that Natalia Veselnitskaya was representing. 

Under the Obama Administration her client Prevezon was scheduled to go on trial for allegedly laundering money from a $230 million tax fraud. Sessions settled the case with a $6 million penalty, avoiding a trial completely. 

House Judiciary ranking member John Conyers and other Dems wrote a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions asking whether lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya had a hand in settlement talks between Russian real estate firm Prevezon Holdings Ltd. and the U.S. Department of Justice.

Related: The Russian Attorney at the Center of the Trump Jr. Scandal The Atlantic

“She’s like tank,” says her friend, the Russian-born film director Andrei Nekrasov. “Maybe she overstepped some bounds when she was there [in New York last June]. But she felt she could do something on behalf of Russia. That’s the kind of person she is. She could get misty-eyed talking about this stuff. She’s a patriot.”

And it was evidently this sense of patriotism that took her from obscure origins as a regional prosecutor in Russia to Trump Tower last summer—and from there to the center of a scandal engulfing the American president.