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Trump-Russia collusion investigations
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Roger Stone, pictured at his office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in 2014, is a veteran Republican political operative. Photo: Miami Herald via TNS

Donald Trump’s adviser, Roger Stone, admits meeting ‘Russian’ during election – but says it was an FBI trick

Roger Stone says he was offered dirt on Hillary Clinton by ‘Henry Greenberg’ but turned it down – and says he believes the FBI was trying to trick him

Special counsel Robert Mueller is examining a previously undisclosed meeting between US President Donald Trump’s long-time confidante Roger Stone and a Russian figure who allegedly tried to sell him dirt on Hillary Clinton.

The meeting between Stone and a man who identified himself as Henry Greenberg was described in a pair of letters sent Friday to the House Intelligence Committee and first reported by The Washington Post.

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Stone and Michael Caputo, a Trump campaign aide who arranged the 2016 meeting, did not disclose the contact in their interviews with the committee.

But they now say they believe the man was an FBI informant trying to set them up in a bid to undermine Trump’s campaign. Greenberg could not immediately be reached for comment, but in a text to the Post he denied he was working for the FBI when he met with Stone.

President Donald Trump listens to a question from reporters on the North Lawn of the White House on Friday. Photo: AP

The letters, obtained by The Associated Press and written by Stone and Caputo’s lawyers, say that, in late May 2016, Caputo received a call from his Russian business partner introducing him to Greenberg, who claimed he had information about Clinton that he wanted to share with the campaign.

Caputo suggested Greenberg meet with Stone, who had left the campaign in 2015 but remained an informal Trump adviser.

At Caputo’s request, Stone met with Greenberg at a Florida cafe, where Greenberg asked for US$2 million in exchange for the information, according to Stone’s lawyer.

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Stone swiftly rejected the offer, explaining that neither he nor Trump would ever pay for “political information,” his lawyer wrote.

Both men say they quickly forgot about the episode, which marks the latest in a long list of unusual contacts between Russians and Trump campaign officials as well as offers of help.

The special counsel has spent months investigating Russian meddling in the 2016 election and whether Trump campaign aides played any role in the foreign interference plot.

Trump and his lawyer, meanwhile, have tried to discredit the investigation, insisting it’s unfounded and plagued by misconduct and political bias.

“WITCH HUNT!” Trump tweeted on Sunday, insisting: “There was no Russian Collusion. Oh, I see, there was no Russian Collusion, so now they look for obstruction on the no Russian Collusion.

“The phoney Russian Collusion was a made up Hoax. Too bad they didn’t look at Crooked Hillary like this. Double Standard!”

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As part of their campaign, Trump and his loyalists have tried to convince the public that the FBI violated its usual operating procedures, including installing “spies” inside Trump’s campaign, though there’s no evidence that is the case.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a member of Trump’s legal team, on Sunday dismissed the significance of the Stone meeting.

“So, yes, sure, there was contact, as there was in that meeting. But that meeting led to nothing. This led to nothing. So, if anything, it’s proof there was no collusion,” he said in an interview with CBS’s Face the Nation.

He added that Mueller’s team “can investigate from here to, you know, to Timbuktu, and they’re not going to find a darn thing.”

Both Stone and Caputo failed to disclose the Greenberg meeting in their interviews with the House Intelligence Committee – an omission their lawyers said was accidental.

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Caputo’s lawyer, Dennis Vacco, said his client had “simply forgotten about this brief encounter in 2016”, and only remembered it as he was preparing for his interview with Mueller’s team.

Caputo told the AP that Mueller’s team asked him at length about the meeting.

“They knew more than I did, which set off alarms. I thought – was this a set-up?” he recalled.

Donald Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani (seen on July 18, 2016) has said that the meeting between Stone and the informant ‘led to nothing’, calling that ‘proof there was no collusion’. Photo: AFP

Caputo said he hired investigators using money from his legal defence fund to dig into Greenberg’s background and has produced a “dossier” with the findings, which Stone endorses.

“Mr Stone believes it is likely that Mr. Greenberg was actively working on behalf of the FBI at the time of their meeting with the intention of entrapping Mr. Stone and to infiltrate and compromise the Trump effort,” his lawyer, Grant J. Smith, wrote.

The FBI declined to comment, but has said its counter-intelligence investigation didn’t begin until July 2016, two months after the meeting.

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The Washington Post, citing interviews and documents, reported that Greenberg has at times used the name Henry Oknyansky, and claimed in a 2015 court filing that he had been providing information to the FBI for 17 years.

The Post notes the meeting happened around the same time that others members of the Trump campaign were being approached by people with Russian ties offering dirt on Clinton.

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