Las Vegas Sun

April 30, 2024

The informant turned defendant who took aim at the Bidens

hunter biden informant

Kenny Holston / New York Times, file

Hunter Biden, son of President Joe Biden, outside the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, Dec. 13, 2023. A former FBI informant accused of making false bribery claims about President Biden and his son Hunter claimed to have been fed information by Russian intelligence, according to a court filing on Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2024.

WASHINGTON — Alexander Smirnov was, in many ways, the archetype of an informant operating in the shadowlands of the former Soviet Union — a profiteer, fixer and gossip who promoted his ability to make sense of a confusing landscape to U.S. law enforcement agencies.

For more than a decade, he played a double game, giving the FBI tantalizing visibility into a cast of oligarchs and public officials while offering himself as a consultant, with a hard-to-define skill set, to some of the same people he was keeping tabs on.

Then he stepped over the line.

In 2020, Smirnov told his FBI handler what prosecutors say was a brazen lie — that the oligarch owner of the Ukrainian energy company Burisma had arranged to pay $5 million bribes to both Joe Biden and his son Hunter. The explosive claim was leaked to Republicans, who made Smirnov’s allegations a centerpiece of their now-stalled effort to impeach the president, apparently without verifying the allegation.

Last week, Smirnov, 43, was indicted on charges that he lied to investigators about the Bidens. He was arrested as he was preparing to leave for what prosecutors called “a monthslong, multicountry foreign trip” during which he claimed to have plans to meet with contacts from multiple foreign intelligence agencies.

In court filings, prosecutors working for David Weiss, the special counsel investigating Hunter Biden, described Smirnov as a serial liar who could not even be trusted to describe honestly his own occupation or account for his finances.

Congressional Democrats predicted that the indictment would kill the impeachment push. Lawyers for Hunter Biden seized on it to try to undermine the tax and gun cases Weiss has brought against him. In a court filing, they contended that Smirnov’s false claims “infected” the cases, and suggested, without providing evidence, that prosecutors reneged on a plea deal last summer because they had followed “Mr. Smirnov down his rabbit hole of lies.”

How Smirnov managed to convince business partners, law enforcement agencies and politicians that he had something of value to offer remains as much of an enigma as the man now at the center of the saga.

Little is known about Smirnov beyond a few public records and snippets of biography in papers filed in federal court in Las Vegas, where he lives and was taken into custody last Thursday. He appears to have no presence on social media, and he covered his face as he walked out of detention Tuesday.

(He was released Tuesday by a federal judge after paying a personal recognizance bond and surrendering his U.S. and Israeli passports. Prosecutors filed an appeal Wednesday to that decision, citing the risk he posed to national security.)

Smirnov, a dual citizen of Israel and the United States, moved into a three-bedroom, three-bath condo off the Las Vegas Strip that his longtime girlfriend bought two years ago for $980,000. There is no public record of prior criminal charges against him in the United States.

Before that, he lived for at least 16 years in California, most recently in the affluent seaside community of Laguna Beach.

It is not clear, either in court filings or public records, where Smirnov was born. He is fluent in Russian, speaks English with a heavy accent and might have roots in Ukraine, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

In court filings this week, his lawyers portrayed him as a law-abiding resident of Nevada with a valid driver’s license and a “stable residential history.” He suffers from a severe, unspecified problem with his eyes that requires regular treatment.

“Mr. Smirnov has had seven surgeries in the last year, is required to take prescription medication daily and requires ongoing care,” wrote David Chesnoff, his lawyer.

His lawyers cited his close personal connections with three people — his longtime girlfriend, Diana Lavrenyuk, her grown son in the District of Columbia area, and a cousin from Miami, Linor Shefer — to counter claims by prosecutors that he would flee the country if released.

Shefer — who was crowned “Miss Jewish Star” in Moscow in 2014 at a pageant officiated by Israel’s ambassador to Russia, according to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency — declined to comment.

The special counsel’s office did little to fill in any of these biographical blanks, in part because prosecutors appeared uncertain whether anything he told them was true.

In a memo arguing for his indefinite detention, deputies to Weiss described him as a perpetual fabulist. He not only fed the FBI bogus information about the Bidens and misled prosecutors about his wealth, estimated at $6 million, but also told officials there that he worked in the security business, even though the government could find no proof that was true.

Chesnoff, in a brief interview, said his client had misunderstood the government’s questions about his finances, and had reported only his modest personal wealth without including the more substantial holdings in business accounts.

Even while sharing some of the startling information he relayed to his handlers — including a claim that he had been fed unspecified information about Hunter Biden from Russia’s intelligence services — prosecutors cast doubt on anything he told the FBI.

“The misinformation he is spreading is not confined” to his false claims about the Bidens, prosecutors wrote.

“He is actively peddling new lies that could impact U.S. elections after meeting with Russian intelligence officials in November,” they added.

Nonetheless, some level of mendacity is expected among informants working in a part of the world where misinformation is commonplace, forcing law enforcement officials to sift for germs of useful intelligence.

A federal prosecutor involved in screening claims about Hunter Biden’s foreign work testified last year that Smirnov was an “important confidential human source” who “had been used in other investigations.” But court documents show that law enforcement officials have long harbored doubts about the veracity of Smirnov’s reports and assertions he made about his associations that seemed intended to overstate his importance.

And many of his most provocative claims, outlined in Justice Department documents, have not yet been publicly verified. For instance, he appears to have told the FBI that a business associate who introduced him to Burisma executives had ties to Russian organized crime, according to notes of this conversation, which do not indicate whether there is proof of the claim.

It is the sort of raw intelligence that law enforcement routinely collects and vets behind closed doors before determining whether to act on it, and the investigation into Hunter Biden’s foreign business dealings attracted so much of it that the Justice Department created a special intake process.

But Smirnov’s allegations made their way to congressional Republicans, who forced the release of raw FBI notes chronicling the bribery claims and featured them prominently in the impeachment push.

Yet while Smirnov’s indictment provided a rare public relations boost to Hunter Biden — who is scheduled to appear before a House committee next week — Smirnov’s claims are not mentioned in the indictments of Biden. And there is no evidence they were central to Weiss’ investigation of Biden’s foreign business dealings and finances, which drew upon financial records and grand jury interviews with a number of associates.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.