Durham probe offers fresh support for man who has long denied being 'Steele dossier' source
ABC News
An indictment in the investigation into how officials probed Donald Trump's ties to Russia has raised new questions about the sourcing of the Steele dossier.
The long-running special investigation into how the government probed candidate Donald Trump's ties to Russia brought a new indictment last week and in the process cast fresh doubt on earlier claims that a little-known Belarussian-born businessman named Sergei Millian had been an unwitting source for the "dossier" prepared by former British spy Christopher Steele.
The indictment from special counsel John Durham alleged that Igor Danchenko, the key "collector" hired by Steele to gather information for the dossier, had lied to the FBI when he suggested that he had spoken with Millian, who at the time served as president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce, and had obtained information from Millian that then made its way into the dossier.
Danchenko, a Russian national living in the U.S., was arrested last week on charges that he "willfully and knowingly" made a number of false statements during interviews with the FBI, including the alleged lies about Millian, in describing how he obtained information that he later provided to Steele for inclusion in the dossier.
"Danchenko stated falsely [to the FBI] that, in or about late July 2016, he received an anonymous phone call from an individual who Danchenko believed to be ... then president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce" and obtained information about Trump from that man, the indictment says, referring to Millian but not naming him. "Danchenko never received such a phone call or such information from any person he believed to be [Millian] ... rather, Danchenko fabricated these facts regarding [Millian]." The indictment alleges that Danchenko "never spoke to" Millian at all.