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Russian Tech Exec Sues Steele Dossier Author in UK Court

LONDON (AFP) — A Russian tech entrepreneur on Monday began a defamation claim against the British author of a controversial report at the heart of 2016 U.S. election meddling allegations first leaked to BuzzFeed.

Alexej Gubarev said in documents released in London's High Court that former U.K. intelligence officer Christopher Steele was responsible for the U.S. news site's January 2017 publication of his dossier.

Some of its findings were used by special counsel Robert Mueller to conduct his own investigation that found evidence of Russian interference but no collusion with Donald Trump's team.

Both Gubarev and Steele attended the opening hearing but did not give evidence on Monday.

Buzzfeed is not a defendant in the case.

The five-day hearing covers the tumultuous few months that followed Trump's November 2016 U.S. presidential election victory.

Steele's firm Orbis collected raw intelligence alleging that Kremlin officials had gathered compromising material on Trump in the years he was still a New York property tycoon.

His dossier alleged that Russian intelligence agencies hacked into Democratic Party servers to collect damaging material on opponent Hillary Clinton.

It accused Gubarev's tech company Webzilla of conducting "operations against the Democratic Party leadership."

Gubarev denied this.

The report was published by BuzzFeed in January 2017.

"The central question for the court on liability, and the one to which the majority of material before the court is directed, is whether the defendants were responsible in law for the publication of the Steele Dossier by BuzzFeed," Gubarev's lawyers said in a statement.

"The claimant's case is that the answer is demonstrably yes."

The claim said it expected the damages to be capped by the court at $410,000.

Steele and his company said they had nothing to do with Buzzfeed's "unauthorized online publication."

The defendants "did not intend the December memorandum or its content to be made public (and) did not provide the December memorandum to BuzzFeed or any other media organization."

'Not a public figure'

The court case is being held in London because Gubarev claims that he has friends and business connections in Britain that have been damaged by Steele.

Yet little is known about Gubarev and his Cyprus-registered firm.

A report by a former FBI cyber crime division official concluded last year that the internet servers provided by Gubarev's firm were used by Russian intelligence agencies to tap into the Democratic Party servers.

But the report did not directly implicate Gubarev's team of conducting the operations, according to reports in U.S. media.

The court documents said Gubarev was born in Russia but has been a resident of Cyprus for 18 years.

It did not provide his age but said "his eldest daughter is pursuing higher education in the U.K."

"He is by no means a public figure, but he is well known within the technology sector, and his Cypriot community," Gubarev's court papers said.

Gubarev's lawyer Andrew Caldecott said the "ultimate client" of the dossier was the "Democratic National Committee and/or Hillary Clinton's presidential election campaign."


© Agence France-Presse
by Dmitry ZAKS

Categories / Civil Rights, International, Politics, Technology

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