Prosecutors Were ‘Mistaken’ in Claim that Maria Butina Traded Sex for Political Access
In a court filing on Friday, prosecutors said they misunderstood text messages by accused Russian agent Maria Butina, and that mistake led them to wrongly accuse her of exchanging sex for political access in the U.S.
Nevertheless, the remaining allegations that Butina worked on behalf of the Russian government without registering in the U.S. are strong enough to require her to remain in jail pending trial, prosecutors argued ahead of a Monday hearing.
The filing states:
Following the detention hearing, the defense has disputed the assertion in the government’s memorandum in support of pretrial detention that the defendant offered sex in exchange “for a position with a special interest organization.” That statement was based both on a series of text messages between the defendant and another individual, “DK”15 and other information about the relationship between the defendant and DK gained through a review of additional communications between them. Even granting that the government’s understanding of this particular text conversation was mistaken, other communications and materials in the government’s possession (and produced to the defense) call into doubt the defendant’s claim that her relationship with U.S. Person 1 is a sufficiently strong tie to ensure her appearance in court to face the charges against her if she is released.
Butina’s lawyer, Robert Driscoll, said the text that prosecutors based the claim on was three years old and sent to a close friend, the Associated Press reported.