Rudy Giuliani's apartment raided by feds, accelerating inquiry into Ukraine dealings; warrant served on DC lawyer
Federal authorities raided the Manhattan apartment and offices of former President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, on Wednesday amid a continuing investigation into the former New York mayor's dealings in Ukraine, his attorney said.
The move represents the highest-profile action yet as part of the inquiry into Giuliani's lobbying efforts in Ukraine at a time when he was searching for damaging information to assist Trump in the campaign against President Joe Biden.
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The development was first reported by The New York Times.
Late Wednesday, Giuliani's lawyer, Robert Costello, issued a statement on his client's behalf renewing a campaign to discredit the Biden family while asserting that the former mayor had done nothing wrong.
"The search warrants involve only one indication of an alleged incident of failure to register as a foreign agent," Costello said. "Mayor Giuliani has not only denied this allegation, but offered twice in the past two years ... to demonstrate that it is entirely untrue."
Costello also said that the "electronics" seized by investigators contained proprietary information protected by the attorney-client privilege.
"The warrant served on Mr. Giuliani's law office is another disturbing example of complete disregard for the attorney-client privilege," Costello said.
The former mayor's son, Andrew Giuliani, a former Trump aide, called the Justice action "extremely disturbing."
Speaking to reporters outside his father's apartment building late Wednesday, he said the investigation represented a "continued politicization of the Justice Department."
"This is disgusting ... absolutely absurd," he said.
The Justice Department declined comment Wednesday; the FBI did not respond to inquiries.
Who is Victoria Toensing?
As the investigation played out in public in New York, federal investigators also served a search warrant early Wednesday at the home of Washington lawyer Victoria Toensing, who along with her husband, lawyer Joe diGenova, have been close to Giuliani.
Toensing handed over a cell phone, a person familiar with the matter said.
"Ms. Toensing is a former federal prosecutor and senior Justice Department official," a spokesperson for the couple's firm said. "She has always conducted herself and law practice according to the highest legal and ethical standards. She would have been happy to turn over any relevant documents. All they had to do was ask."
The firm also said that agents informed Toensing that she is "not a target of the investigation."
Going back to Lev Parnas, Igor Fruman
Federal investigators have been examining Giuliani since at least early 2019 related to his business dealings with Ukranian-born Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, of Belarus, who had been indicted in the fall of 2019 on campaign finance charges.
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An attorney, Kenneth McCallion, who has represented several Ukrainian clients in U.S. court cases, including former Ukraine Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, told USA TODAY at the time that agents asked him about Giuliani's business dealings with Parnas and Fruman.
The two men played instrumental roles in connecting Giuliani with Ukrainian officials as Giuliani sought information about the financial dealings there of Biden's son, Hunter Biden.
At the time, McCallion said he “was asked a lot of questions by FBI and other counterintelligence investigators who were looking at Giuliani’s comings and goings in Ukraine and business dealings.”
In the last year of the Trump administration, the federal inquiry had been tangled in an internal dispute as prosecutors sought to push it forward.
During the transition to the Biden administration, it was expected that Attorney General Merrick Garland would be consulted on how the inquiry would proceed.
Following Trump's unsuccessful re-election campaign, Giuliani led Trump's failed efforts to challenge Biden's election, as courts across the country rejected unfounded claims of voter fraud.
Second Trump lawyer targeted
The raid marks the second time a personal lawyer for Trump has been targeted by federal authorities.
Three years ago, federal investigators raided the offices and home of Michael Cohen, as part of an investigation that led to his conviction.
Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 to lying to Congress about plans to build a Trump Tower in Russia and, in a separate case, to paying off an adult film star and a former Playboy model who said they had sexual affairs with Trump before he was elected.
The attorney, who has since turned against Trump, insisted he acted at the direction of Trump, who has denied both affairs. Cohen had been sentenced to a three-year prison sentence but was released to home confinement because of the coronavirus pandemic.
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Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a vocal defender of Trump, said he is "suspicious" of the Giuliani search.
“We've been told a 1,000 times that everybody in the Trump world was a Russian agent. It turned out to be not accurate. I’ve known Rudy for a long time, because somebody issues a search warrant doesn't mean you're guilty, let the system move forward.”
Contributing: Bart Jansen
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rudy Giuliani's apartment raided amid Ukraine investigation