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Prosecutors had evidence last year to charge prominent Trump ally Tom Barrack

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn investigating Tom Barrack, a prominent ally to former President Donald Trump, for allegedly violating foreign lobbying laws had enough evidence to bring charges last year, but held off doing so until the arrival of the new presidential administration, according to people briefed on the matter.

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By
Evan Perez, Erica Orden, Paula Reid
and
Katelyn Polantz, CNN
CNN — Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn investigating Tom Barrack, a prominent ally to former President Donald Trump, for allegedly violating foreign lobbying laws had enough evidence to bring charges last year, but held off doing so until the arrival of the new presidential administration, according to people briefed on the matter.

Prosecutors wanted to move forward on the case and believed they could obtain an indictment, one source familiar with the matter said. The source said the investigation was mostly done well before the time period when prosecutors are discouraged from advancing politically sensitive matters ahead of an election.

But two sources tell CNN the US attorney in Brooklyn at the time, Richard Donoghue, expressed misgivings about the case. It's unclear if he delayed the case outright or if prosecutors chose not to move forward at the time knowing the US attorney would not support it. Donoghue did not respond to CNN's request for comment.

Donoghue's then-boss, former Attorney General William Barr, was also known inside the department to have reservations, in general, about foreign lobbying cases, which the Justice Department has struggled to prosecute in the past.

A spokesman for the Brooklyn US attorney's office declined to comment.

The case, which was charged Tuesday, became among the sensitive matters that awaited the arrival of the Biden administration's Justice Department officials this year.

Barrack's indictment struck a blow in Trump circles because of his close association with "Donny," as Barrack referred to the former President in a deposition last year.

With a four decade-old friendship with Trump and his position as an adviser during the 2016 campaign, transition and early days of the administration, Barrack is well-informed about people around the former president, and about events that have already prompted criminal charges.

But Barrack, the wealthy head of a real estate and private equity firm, has vowed to fight the charges and can afford a robust defense, making it less likely that he would flip to become a cooperating witness against a bigger target. A person familiar with Barrack's thinking said he doesn't intend to cooperate in any federal or state investigations related to Trump.

Instead, prosecutors appear to be treating Barrack as their big fish, the object of what current and former Justice officials acknowledge is an aggressive case that is part of a broader crackdown by the Justice Department on alleged violations of foreign lobbying laws, which were rarely enforced for decades.

He was charged Tuesday with illegal foreign lobbying on behalf of the United Arab Emirates for what federal prosecutors in Brooklyn described as an effort to influence the foreign policy positions of both the 2016 Trump presidential campaign and the subsequent incoming administration. In a seven-count indictment, Barrack was charged with acting as an agent of the UAE between April 2016 and April 2018. He also was charged with obstruction of justice and making false statements to federal law enforcement agents.

To be sure, Barrack could always decide he wants to avoid trial and provide evidence of possible wrongdoing by others. His deep ties to the Trump world during the 2016 campaign, have made him a witness in Robert Mueller's special counsel investigation and others.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan also examined his role as chairman of the Trump inaugural committee, on which he was chairman, including allegations that some people associated with the inauguration violated influence peddling laws, but that probe hasn't been active since last year and no one has ever been charged in that case, according to people familiar with the matter.

Because of his chairmanship of the inaugural committee, Barrack was deposed in an ongoing civil suit over the inauguration festivities by the DC attorney general.

The relative novelty of foreign lobbying cases gave some senior Justice officials, in the Trump administration, pause on the Barrack matter, particularly after prosecutors lost or ran into problems in other, similar cases.

Then, Mark Lesko, who helped oversee the Barrack case as the first deputy US attorney in Brooklyn, was tapped earlier this year to take over as acting assistant attorney general for the national security division at Justice headquarters, the unit that is helping bring the case, people briefed on the matter said.

The delay of a politically sensitive matter within the Justice Department until the arrival of a new administration is not without precedent. Last year, when Manhattan federal prosecutors raised the prospect of seeking a search warrant for Rudy Giuliani's communications, high-ranking Justice officials decided not to make a final decision, in part because of the impending change in administration.

Earlier this year, after the installation of new leadership at the Justice Department, federal agents executed search warrants on Giuliani's apartment and office.

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