Steele Dossier's Billionaire Claim 'Misleading', Judge Says
A central allegation by a former British spy in his dossier about alleged ties between Moscow and Donald Trumps presidential campaign was inaccurate and misleading, a London judge ruled.
Christopher Steele stated in his report that Mikhail Fridman and his fellow Alfa Group billionaire Petr Aven arranged for the delivery of large amounts of illicit cash to Vladimir Putin in the 1990s. But Judge Mark Warby ruled Wednesday that Steeles intelligence firm failed to take reasonable steps to verify the allegation as he awarded 18,000 pounds ($22,600) in compensation to each man.
Ever since these odious allegations were first made public in January 2017, my partners and I have been resolute and unwavering in our determination to prove that they are untrue, and through this case, we have finally succeeded in doing so, Fridman said in a statement.
Before the London lawsuit, the so-called Steele Dossier had been a major political issue in America because of its allegations.
Steele, who Trump once called a lowlife, was retained by a Washington-based research firm, Fusion GPS, in June 2016 to examine Trumps links to Russia. The Democratic National Committee and the campaign of Hillary Clinton hired Fusion after Trump was headed for the nomination.
While Steele admitted during questioning at trial that the individual who allegedly delivered the cash didnt work for Alfa at the time, he insisted that it didnt mean the incident was inaccurate, the judge said.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-07-08/billionaire-allegation-in-steele-dossier-misleading-judge-says