This Article is From Sep 23, 2018

How A British Music Publicist Ended Up In Middle Of Russia Investigation

Since helping broker a meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian lawyer, Rob Goldstone said his life has been "quite a whirl."

How A British Music Publicist Ended Up In Middle Of Russia Investigation

The hastily composed missive thrust Rob Goldstone into the center of an investigative storm.

It was just a short email that British music publicist Rob Goldstone tapped out on his iPhone on a Friday morning in June 2016 in an effort to land a meeting for his client. In retrospect, he admits, he "puffed up" some details when he promised Donald Trump Jr. incriminating information about Hillary Clinton as part of a Russian government effort to help the Trump campaign.

The hastily composed missive thrust Goldstone into the center of an investigative storm.

In the last year, he has been interviewed four times by congressional investigators, sat for hours with prosecutors working for special counsel Robert Mueller and was questioned in front of a federal grand jury (a group he said was a remarkable demographic cross-section of Washington residents). His collection of selfies in goofy hats became the butt of jokes by late-night comedians. He has been decried as a Russian spy, a traitor, a white supremacist.

Through it all, Goldstone has emerged as a rare independent voice in the Russia story - one of the few witnesses who voluntarily sat with any investigator who asked and, out of courtesy to the process, kept his mouth shut along the way.

With his testimony now complete, Goldstone is ready to talk about of the events that now shadow President Donald Trump, detailing the saga in a book called "Pop Stars, Pageants and Presidents: How an Email Trumped My Life" that will be released Tuesday.

"The press seemingly couldn't decide if I was ridiculous, bonkers and so naive as to be irrelevant. Or if I was some kind of brilliant operative," Goldstone, 57, said in an extensive interview this month. "The reality is, I'm not either of those things. . . . I'm a publicist. I wrote an email."

He said he has no doubt that Russia interfered in the 2016 campaign (though he insists it was not with his help) and believes Trump's team was open to such assistance. He praised the special counsel, whom Trump has accused of running a "witch hunt," for investigating an issue with global stakes.

After more than nine hours with Mueller's team, Goldstone has also drawn some conclusions about what the special counsel is pursuing. Investigators were focused less on the details of the Trump Tower meeting that followed his email invitation to Trump Jr., he said.

Rather, prosecutors were keenly interested in his observations about the Trumps' relationship with Aras and Emin Agalarov, Russian father-and-son billionaires who financed Trump's Miss Universe pageant in Moscow in 2013 and then requested the 2016 sit-down at Trump Tower - as well as the Agalarovs' relationship with the Kremlin, he said.

"They weren't as interested in the minutia," Goldstone said. "It was a bigger picture thing."

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Born in Manchester, England, Goldstone said he grew up as an outsider, picked on as a gay, Jewish and overweight youth. At 16, he wheedled his way onto the staff of a local newspaper. Later, he became a radio reporter with a focus on entertainment, crossing paths with Princess Diana, Muhammed Ali and Michael Jackson.

After discovering he had a knack for promotion, Goldstone left journalism to become a publicist. Over the years, his clients included Venezuelan actress Patricia Velasquez, who had appeared on "The Celebrity Apprentice," and New York's famed Russian Tea Room. (During testimony before the House Intelligence Committee in December, Goldstone said one congressman asked him if the committee should be worried about that engagement. "I was like, 'It's a restaurant! It's been there 90 years! Leave me alone!' " he recalled.)

In 2012, a friend suggested he meet Emin Agalarov, a Moscow-based crooner who had achieved some success in Russia and was looking to break out in America.

Goldstone was intrigued. Agalarov was a billionaire playboy whose father, Aras, was a top Moscow real estate developer and whose father-in-law was president of Azerbaijan. "My ex-journalist side kicked in," he said. "There was a story here." He took Agalarov on as a client.

The wealthy Russians and Trump came together as a result of a whim, he said.

In the spring of 2013, Goldstone said he and Emin Agalarov visited Paula Shugart, the president of the Miss Universe Organization, in New York in hopes of booking a pageant contestant to appear in one of the singer's music videos.

Shugart mentioned that she had been thinking about bringing the international pageant to Baku, where Agalarov was born. Agalarov countered by suggesting Moscow and Crocus City Hall, a new concert venue owned by the Agalarovs - an idea he came up with on the spot.

The Agalarovs would ultimately pay about $15 million to host the Miss Universe pageant.

A few months later, Goldstone accompanied them to meet Trump in Las Vegas, where the Miss USA pageant was being held.

At dinner, Goldstone was seated between Emin Agalarov and Michael Cohen, Trump's personal attorney, whom he was meeting for the first time.

Trump appeared to hit it off with Emin Agalarov. At one point during dinner, Trump loudly challenged the young singer: " 'Hey Emin! I'll reduce the [pageant] fee right now by a million dollars if you tell me if you've ever slept with any contestants!' " Goldstone recalled Trump saying.

Agalarov shot back: "Interesting. I'll increase your fee by $5 million right now if you tell me if you've ever slept with any contestant."

Trump responded with a smile, " 'We should just forget the bet.' " The room cracked up.

"It was like frat boy behavior," Goldstone said. "It was kind of a bonding thing."

Scott Balber, an attorney for the Agalarovs, said he was not aware of such an exchange. An attorney for Trump declined to comment.

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In November 2013, the group of men were reunited in Moscow for the Miss Universe pageant, a 36-hour whirlwind of meetings and public events.

Goldstone said he was in Trump's company from the time the celebrity mogul landed in Moscow on his private plane at about 3 p.m. on a Friday until the time he departed at 3 a.m. early Sunday morning, except for a five-hour window that Trump was afforded to sleep early Saturday morning.

In his testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee in December 2017, Goldstone said he had no knowledge of Trump engaging with prostitutes on the trip, as had been alleged in an unverified research dossier financed by Hillary Clinton's campaign.

Goldstone told The Post he believes such an encounter would have been "unlikely," given Trump's packed schedule.

In Moscow, Goldstone said he got a taste of Russians' affinity for Trump, a perspective he said shaped what he wrote in his famous email to Trump Jr. three years later.

Trump's first stop was dinner at Nobu, a high-end Japanese restaurant, where he fielded questions from top Russian business leaders and financiers. Goldstone recalled that one Russian mogul asked Trump for his thoughts on the European debt crisis and the recent bailout of the Greek economy.

Instead, Trump launched into another topic.

" 'Do you watch 'The Apprentice?' " Goldstone recalled Trump responding, before providing a 10-minute description of its ratings and profits. It was televised in Europe, Trump explained, in his only nod to the question.

Goldstone thought the answer was comical - but he said the business executives were dazzled and gave Trump a standing ovation.

"He represented what their country was becoming, which is, 'You can make it! You can do it!' You know, it's all about money, business, capitalism," Goldstone said.

Trump also conveyed another sentiment that the Russian tycoons appreciated: President Barack Obama, Trump declared, was a weak president. Putin was strong.

Trump was determined to meet the Russian president, Goldstone said. So, at Emin Agalarov's suggestion, Goldstone said he had urged Trump before arriving in Moscow to write a letter inviting the Russian president to the pageant.

"Lots of beautiful women!" Goldstone recalled that Trump scrawled in pen at the bottom. He said he believes the Agalarovs delivered the letter. Balber declined to comment.

But a few hours before the pageant began, Putin's personal spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, called Aras Agalarov to deliver the bad news, Goldstone said: The King of Holland was stuck in traffic, delaying a planned meeting that day with Putin. As a result, the Russian president would have no time for Trump. Peskov said that Putin promised to meet Trump the next time he was in Russia.

"I remember just thinking, 'Don't tell me we're not going to the Kremlin because the King of Holland is late?' " Goldstone said.

But today, he's grateful, glad that notorious Moscow traffic spared him an encounter with Putin that would have brought even more scrutiny from U.S. investigators. He dedicated his book to "H.M. King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands."

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Goldstone, a dual citizen of the United States and Britain who currently lives in New Jersey, said he thought Trump would win the presidency, but he added that he was never a political fan of the real estate developer. Independent Bernie Sanders was more his speed, he said, though he has never voted.

However, Goldstone had high hopes for his Russian client once Trump's candidacy took off: Perhaps Emin Agalarov would be invited to sing at the inauguration or visit the White House.

So he was peeved when Agalarov called on the morning of June 3, 2016, and asked him to use his pull with the Trump family for something else entirely.

Agalarov explained that his father had met that day with a "well connected" Russian lawyer, someone Agalarov said was either a current or former prosecutor. The lawyer had damaging information about Russian funding of the Democrats, Agalarov relayed. He asked Goldstone to get a meeting with "the Trumps" so the information could be passed along.

Goldstone said he was confused. What lawyer? What information? But Agalarov either didn't know or refused to answer, insisting Goldstone should just secure the meeting and not worry about such details, Goldstone recalled. (Balber, the Agalarov attorney, said the singer does not recall telling Goldstone the information had to do with Russian funding for Democrats.)

At the time, Goldstone said, it never occurred to him that the offer might be unethical or even illegal. "Hindsight is a beautiful thing," he said.

Sitting in his apartment in Hoboken, Goldstone dashed out an email to Trump Jr., whom he had met at a dinner in New York and with whom he occasionally corresponded.

He wrote that Aras Agalarov had met with "the Crown Prosecutor of Russia," a phrase he remembered from his time in England. He said that the prosecutor had provided information that "would incriminate Hillary" and was "very high level and sensitive," all of which he said struck him as reasonable assumptions based on what Agalarov told him.

The most provocative detail: Goldstone wrote that the information was "part of Russia and its government's support for Mr. Trump."

Agalarov had not mentioned the Russian government in their conversation, Goldstone acknowledges. The line, he said, was a bit of flattery intended to reflect the attitudes he had seen toward Trump in Russia.

"It wasn't made up. It was puffed up," he said of his email. "There's a huge difference in that."

To Goldstone, the most important line came toward the end: "Would you be able to speak to Emin about it directly?" he wrote. His goal was to separate himself from this request and get Agalarov and Trump Jr. talking directly.

"If it's what you say I love it," Trump Jr. responded.

Phone records provided to Congress show Trump Jr. and Emin Agalarov spoke briefly three days later as the singer stepped off a concert stage in Moscow.

Trump Jr. testified to Congress that he has no memory of a call. Balber said Agalarov has only vague recollection that they spoke.

The next day, Trump Jr. emailed Goldstone to say that he had invited Jared Kushner, his brother-in-law, and senior campaign official Paul Manafort to attend a meeting with the Russian lawyer set for June 9.

Trump Jr. testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee he did not know what to think of Goldstone's email, but saw no problem with exploring whether he had important information. "I didn't think that listening to someone with information relevant to the fitness and character of a presidential candidate would be an issue," he said.

Goldstone said he concluded that Trump Jr. had been impressed by whatever Agalarov told him on the phone.

"My email didn't get a meeting at Trump Tower. My email got a call," he said, adding that unless the details of the call are revealed, "we'll never know why there was a meeting."

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The meeting, from Goldstone's perspective, was a bust. Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya had brought along uninvited guests, including an interpreter and a Russian-American lobbyist. Ushered onto the 25th floor of Trump Tower, the group acted like noisy tourists, snapping photos and selfies of themselves in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows with views of Central Park.

Goldstone had not planned on attending the meeting itself, but he was waved into the conference room by Trump Jr. Once the discussion began, he said Veselnitskaya began talking about donors who had contributed to Democrats who she said had failed to pay Russian taxes. The presentation, he said, was incomprehensible.

He believes the information was dangled so Veselnitskaya could get in the door to lobby on her real issue: the Magnitsky Act, sanctions imposed by the United States on Russia in 2012 for human rights abuses. Putin considered the law a personal affront and had blocked adoption of Russian children by American families in retaliation for its passage.

As the meeting broke up, Goldstone said he quietly apologized to the candidate's son for wasting everyone's time. Leaving Trump Tower, he said he called Emin Agalarov. " 'Well, of all the things you've ever asked me to do, this indeed was the most embarrassing,' " he said he told the pop star. " 'We just sat in on a meeting about adoption.' "

Then, he said, he did his best to put the meeting out of his mind - until more than a year later, when The New York Times broke the news of the gathering.

Sitting at lunch at a cafe in Greece the next day, he received a call from a Post reporter, inquiring if he had set up the encounter.

Since then, he said, "it's been quite a whirl."

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The Washington Post's Carol D. Leonnig contributed to this report.



(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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