PART 2:
Sater Time
Sater, while serving as a U.S. government informant, was an executive with a real estate development company called Bayrock Group LLC, which as early as 2003 leased office space at Trump Tower in Midtown Manhattan.
While with Bayrock, Sater got to know Trump and the duo were soon pursuing multimillion-dollar business deals in Russia and the U.S. between 2005 and 2007, including a condo development project called Trump SoHo in Midtown Manhattan.
In 2005, Trump cut a business deal with Bayrock to build a
hotel in Moscow, but the project didn’t pan out. He did later team with Bayrock, however, on the Trump SoHo project, which
in 2007 received a shot in the arm, along with several other Bayrock projects, in the form of a $50 million dollar investment from an Icelandic investment firm. That company, the FL Group, was backed by Russians “who were in favor with [Russian President] Putin,” pleadings in a lawsuit against Bayrock allege.
Bayrock is currently the target of a civil-racketeering lawsuit filed by the company’s former finance director and another employee. The plaintiffs allege in the pleadings that Bayrock is “covertly mob-owned and operated” and accuse the company’s principals of engaging in “money laundering, conspiracy, bribery, extortion and embezzlement.”
Bayrock was founded and led by a native Russian named Tevfik Arif, who served as a commerce official during the Soviet era, according to the litigation, which is still pending and being contested by Bayrock’s attorneys in federal court in New York.
Sater was hired by Bayrock a few years after he pleaded guilty in 1998 to racketeering charges in relation to his role in a $40 million pump-and-dump Wall Street stock and money-laundering scheme that was carried out in partnership with Russian and New York organized-crime syndicates, according to
legal documents and media reports related to the case.
In fact, Sater worked in Russia from roughly 1996 through 1998, when he returned to the U.S. to face criminal charges pending against him in that case, according to his sentencing-hearing transcript.
In the early 1990s, Sater also was convicted and served a year in prison for stabbing a man in the face with the stem of a margarita glass during a bar fight.
Sater’s criminal past, however, was cloaked from public view because his legal case was sealed after he cut a deal in 1998 to become a U.S. government informant in exchange for hopes of a lighter sentence in the stock-fraud case. That also meant his criminal past and work as an informant was presumably kept secret from Bayrock and Trump.
That is, until 2007, when a
New York Times story exposed Sater’s past misdeeds and the fact that he likely agreed to cooperate with the US government to avoid a long jail sentence. Still, in 2010,
after Sater had left Bayrock in the wake of the public exposure of his past, the Trump Organization retained Sater as a consultant and issued him a business card with the title “Senior Advisor to Donald Trump.”
One of Sater’s FBI handlers, Leo Taddeo, whose specialty was US and Russian organized-crime syndicates, told the judge at Sater’s 2009 sentencing that “without his cooperation, it would have been a few more years [before] the FBI would have effectively removed La Cosa Nostra [the New York City Mafia families] from the penny stock business.”
Years later, in early 2015, in written
congressional testimony, current U.S. Attorney General Janet Lynch also made public that in addition to Sater’s work as an FBI informant targeting organized crime, he also provided “information crucial to national security.”
By the time of his sentencing hearing in 2009, Sater had worked some 11 years as an informant (or cooperating witness per the technical term) — most of that time during the Bush presidency. The judge in Sater’s case apparently believed he had been redeemed. Slater walked away from his judgment day in court with a
$25,000 fine and no jail time or restitution required for his role in a $40 million mob-linked stock-fraud scam.
Sater’s light sentence isn’t necessarily an accurate reflection of the value of his work and character, however.
The federal judge in Sater’s stock-fraud case, Leo Glasser, gave a similarly light sentence years earlier to the notorious Salvatore “Sammy the Bull” Gravano, who participated in some 19 murders while working as a mob hitman. Gravano later became an FBI informant and helped to convict his boss, the so-called Teflon Don, John Gotti.
Judge Glasser sentenced Gravano in 1994 to a five-year prison stint, or about three months for each murder. The judge’s character assessment in that case proved faulty, however, given Gravano was
later convicted of running a major ecstasy-distribution ring out of Arizona, in league with a white supremacist group, and in 2002 was sentenced to
20 years in prison.
House of Mirrors
Former DEA agent Levine’s warnings about the nature of the informant business and the potential for informants and other cooperators to abuse the system seems to merit some attention in the case of Sater, given claims he recently made about his “national security” work.
Sater told Narco News the following via email correspondence:
I was the person buying the 20 stingers [shoulder-fired missiles] in Afghanistan not Russia, on behalf of the CIA. We needed to scoop them all up. The old stingers didn't have the chip that prevented shooting them at US aircraft, and when some fell into the hands of Al-Qaeda, we needed to get the rest off the market as fast as possible. I was on the ground running an operation for US military intelligence already, so the CIA let me run with this as well.
I developed a strong relationship with [name redacted] and we began arranging the purchase of stingers based on President Clinton’s directive. As well as planning attacks and elimination of UBL [Osama bin Laden] in 1998, [a] couple of years before 9/11.
Yes I played a major role in President Clinton’s bombing of UBL's camp in ‘98. And after 9/11, I went into overdrive on the World Trade Center bombers, their financial network, hunting for operatives still at large, etc., as well as coordination of bombing targets in Afghanistan etc. etc. etc.
[Emphasis added.]
One former CIA officer who spoke with Narco News, but asked that his name not be used, said of Sater’s Forest Gump-like claims: “I would not trust him. My sense from being in the intelligence business would be to let him go. If he was in business with Trump, that’s Trump’s problem. If Russia was using him, then they got suckered too. I simply would not want to get my hands dirty with him.”
As evidence of the CIA officer’s trust issues with Sater, two statements made by Sater in his account of his alleged Al-Qaeda-hunting adventures don’t pass the smell test.
First, it is difficult to imagine US military commanders allowing Sater, a convicted con man with Russian-mob connections, “running an operation for US military intelligence.” Second, with respect to Sater’s claim that he “played a major role in President Clinton’s bombing of UBL's camp in ’98,” the timeline simply doesn’t work.
Those bombings occurred in
August 1998. Sater didn’t become a US government informant until December of that year, nearly five months after the bombings, according to the
cooperation agreement he signed with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Eastern New York.
Finally, in Sater’s email to Narco News bragging about his national-security work, he reveals the identity of his alleged source of information in Afghanistan. Narco News chose not to print that information, because even if Sater wasn’t telling the truth, that person’s life may well still be put in danger if exposed in a news article — simply because some might believe Sater’s assertions.
Narco News asked Levine to weigh in on Sater’s account of his national-security undercover work. Here’s what Levine had to say about it:
All stool pigeons tell fantastic moviesque stories. This guy is no exception. The stories fall apart when you apply the standards of corroboration that I still teach. Keep in mind that Operation Agent Brush revealed that 60 percent of all CIA agents [informants] were selling bullshyt to their officer/handlers for decades. The surface of this guy’s [Sater’s] story reeks of bullshyt. He's selling himself not truth.
Sater’s criminal past and his willingness to expose the details of his national-security work, or, as is likely the case, to misrepresent the details of that work, for his own self-aggrandizement, raises serious questions about his credibility as an informant. It also raises serious questions about presidential candidate Donald Trump’s judgement in choosing to do business with such an individual, whether he knew of Sater’s informant status or not at the time. Once president, the opportunities for being duped by con men with far more power than Sater magnify exponentially.
There is no doubt that Sater was an FBI informant for years, and that he
contributed intelligence that was deemed by some federal agents as valuable to US national security, but the veracity of that information is still very much an open question, as is the role Trump played in advancing Sater’s mechanizations.
“A guy like Sater would make any deal he could [with the government] to get that ‘license to commit crimes,’” Levine added.
@88m3 @ADevilYouKhow @wire28 @dtownreppin214
@dza @wire28 @BigMoneyGrip @Dameon Farrow @re'up @Blackfyre @NY's #1 Draft Pick @Skyfall @2Quik4UHoes