PART 4:
WASHINGTON
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In November of 2017, the U.S. House intelligence committee summoned Glenn Simpson, the co-founder of strategic-intelligence firm Fusion GPS, to testify about his role in producing what became something like the foundation documents of the entire Trump-Russia saga, a series of memos written by former British spy Christopher Steele. Mr. Steele had written that his sources in Moscow believed Mr. Trump had been heavily compromised by his behaviour, during a 2013 visit to the Russian capital, that included scandalous acts involving prostitutes, which Mr. Steele said had been videotaped by the KGB’s successor agency, the FSB.
Mr. Simpson, tasked by Mr. Trump’s political opponents to dig up dirt on the Republican presidential candidate, had hired Mr. Steele to research and write his report. Speaking to the intelligence committee, Mr. Simpson not only defended Mr. Steele’s findings; he provided intriguing insights into the vast web of connections between Mr. Trump and figures associated with both Russian organized crime and the Russian state.
Mr. Simpson also spoke about Mr. Trump’s business ties in Toronto; and in this part of the testimony, he gave both Boris Birshtein and Alex Shnaider starring roles.
Mr. Shnaider, he said, was “probably the most interesting” of Mr. Trump’s former business partners. Why? In large part because his father-in-law was Mr. Birshtein, a man Mr. Simpson called “a very important figure in the history of the KGB-mafia alliance. Boris is connected to [alleged mob boss Semion Mogilevich]. And all these people know each other. And they are all connected in one way or another to the Russian mafia, and some of them are connected to the intelligence services.”
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Glenn Simpson, co-founder of Fusion GPS, listens to his lawyer speak after a meeting with members of the House judiciary committee on Oct. 16, 2018.
ZACH GIBSON/GETTY IMAGES
In an e-mail reply to questions from The Globe and Mail, Mr. Shnaider’s spokeswoman said that “any statement implying that there was improper conduct relating to the [Trump Toronto] project is false.” She said Mr. Shnaider had severed business ties with his father-in-law in 1995, and that the two men had been estranged since 2003. “Mr. Shnaider has no information regarding any improper activity involving Mr. Birshtein,” she wrote, adding that Mr. Shnaider had been “deeply saddened” that Trump Tower Toronto (which came under new management last year, stripped of the Trump name, and rebranded the St. Regis) had proved a failure.
In his Washington testimony,
Mr. Simpson also claimed that RZB, the Austrian bank that financed the construction of Trump Toronto, was “the go-to bank for top-level Russian dirty stuff,” an allegation based on a series of Russian corruption scandals.:weebaynanimated: (In response to written questions from The Globe, a spokeswoman for the parent company of RZB said Austria’s bank secrecy laws prevented her from commenting on the bank’s involvement in the Trump Toronto project. But she called Mr. Simpson’s comments “absolutely unsubstantiated.”)
Intrigued, I flew this fall to Washington, and visited the offices of Fusion GPS. Although Mr. Simpson was welcoming, the former journalist was also cagey about saying anything more on the record about Mr. Trump, the Kremlin, or Mr. Birshtein and Mr. Shnaider. Fusion GPS, he told me, had become a target of right-wing hate in the wake of his testimony. Indeed, he was less worried about the lawsuits launched against himself, Mr. Steele and Fusion than he was about a car often stationed across the street from the unmarked door of his firm’s office;
Fusion staff are convinced someone is surveilling the comings and goings of those they meet with.
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Congresswoman Jackie Speier, shown in New York in 2018, has been pressing to find out whether the U.S. President's Russian business ties account for his 'bizarre behaviour' with regard to Russia.
MARK LENNIHAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The stakes are only getting higher in Washington, where Democrats have now won control of the House of Representatives.
Jackie Speier, the congresswoman who elicited Mr. Simpson’s testimony about Mr. Birshtein and Mr. Shnaider, is a top Democrat on the House intelligence committee. And she is laser-focused on finding out whether Mr. Trump’s “bizarre behaviour” vis-a-vis Russia – most notably his public deference to Mr. Putin – is a result of his business ties to alleged Russian mafia figures. Her staff has even invented a mock board game called “Trumpopoly” to help voters visualize the U.S. President’s curious real-estate dealings around the world. (Trump Toronto is an orange tile, located where St. James Place would be on a regular Monopoly board. The White House occupies the Boardwalk square.)
“There was Russian money that came into Trump’s orbit for decades. At one point, I thought they were laundering money, then I came to believe these were payments to Trump,” Ms. Speier told me when I visited her Capitol Hill office. “That’s the Russian way. Long-term focus. Develop a relationship with individuals who can be helpful to Putin and the regime, and make them indebted to you.”
Ms. Speier said the committee’s hearings into Mr. Trump’s ties to Russia – which concluded that there was no evidence of collusion – were “a joke.” Speaking just before last month’s midterm elections, she vowed hearings would start anew if Democrats won control of the House, which they have: “Subpoenas will be flying off the chairman’s desk.”
The press service of the Trump Organization did not reply to e-mailed questions about Mr. Trump’s business dealings.
TORONTO
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There was someone else who entertained suspicions about Boris Birshtein: His son (and Simona Shnaider’s only sibling), Alon Birshtein.
In mid-2005, Boris and Alon fell out over the ownership of a condominium on Avenue Road, in Toronto’s upscale Yorkville neighbourhood, and Alon sued his father in an effort to take possession of the property. In his statement of claim, Alon alleged that the $1.7-million condominium had been transferred into his name in 1997 as his father sought to hide assets “from powerful enemies in the Russian, Belgian, Kyrgyz and Ukrainian governments.”
Over an audacious 47-page statement of claim, Alon Birshtein described a wild childhood that saw his father,
“with the help of former KGB employees he had put on the payroll,” grow Seabeco into one of the most powerful companies in Eastern Europe.
In his statement,
Alon also claimed his father once brought Mr. Mikhailov, the reputed head of the Solntsevskaya mafia, to the family’s home in Zurich while the Birshteins were living between Belgium and Switzerland in the mid-1990s.:weebaynanimated: The lawsuit also explains how organized crime insinuated itself into every corner of Russia back then. “With the disintegration of traditional political authority, there was no effective legal system … bankers, entrepreneurs, and manufacturers depended on the assistance of organized crime to operate. Many of those alleged to be members of organized crime were those who had been members of the KGB secret police before the Soviet Union disintegrated.”
Danger swirled around the family throughout. After the 1991 car crash that killed the prime minister of Kyrgyzstan, which Boris Birshtein interpreted as an attempt on his own life, he decreed that none of his immediate family was allowed to travel anywhere without being accompanied by “private bodyguards, police escort, or both,” the affidavit says.
Alon Birshtein said the failed move against Mr. Yeltsin in 1993 had been a “watershed” for his father: “[His] public image was deteriorating, and his circle of allies seemed to be shrinking.” :ALERTRED:
Mr. Birshtein abandoned a planned hotel he had hoped to build in Moscow – a project first announced shortly after Mr. Trump’s own first visit to the Russian capital, in 1987, during which Mr. Trump declared he “really wanted” to build a Trump-branded Moscow hotel.:ALERTRED::weebaynanimated:
According to Alon’s lawsuit,
Belgian police raided the family’s Antwerp home in June, 1996, planning to arrest Mr. Birshtein on charges of forgery and money laundering – but could not, because the family was vacationing in Puerto Rico at the time.
Three months later, Mr. Mikhailov was arrested in Geneva on charges of belonging to a criminal organization; a Rolls-Royce owned by one of Mr. Birshtein’s companies was in the garage.
Mr. Birshtein never did return to Belgium – claiming, as he would more than two decades later when I sought to interview him – that he was too ill. (“This was false,” his son’s lawsuit says; he was “completely unimpaired by ill-health.”) Instead of returning to Belgium, the family found what Alon described as “safe haven” in North York.
Mr. Mikhailov, meanwhile, spent two years in a Swiss prison awaiting trial, during which a key witness was assassinated and evidence mysteriously disappeared. He was acquitted in 1998.:shakingdamn: In a recent interview with the Financial Times, Mr. Mikhailov described Mr. Birshtein as “a very talented businessman” who “trusted me and this is a very important factor in business.” (He also recalled meeting Mr. Birshtein’s son-in-law, Mr. Shnaider, at a restaurant in Belgium in the 1990s.)
Mr. Birshtein’s lawyer told The Globe that his client “has no comments regarding any alleged connections to Mr. Mikhailov, and has never had any business dealings with him.”
SHANTY BAY, ONT.
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No decision was ever filed in the case of Birshtein v Birshtein, opened at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The most recent publicly available document is an affidavit filed in 2005 by a law student tasked with serving Boris Birshtein with his son’s statement of claim.
After trying, and failing, to deliver the documents at two Toronto addresses, the law student, Carlin McGoogan, made the 75-minute drive north to Shanty Bay, a quilt of elegant farm and cottage properties on the western shore of Lake Simcoe. Faced with a gated driveway and what he described as a 10-foot-high fence at Mr. Birstein’s home there, Mr. McGoogan taped Alon Birshtein’s statement of claim to the iron gate.
This fall, 13 years later, I found myself following in the student’s footsteps.
Along with the foray to the house in North York, I tried twice to visit the Toronto offices of Royal HTM, one of Mr. Birshtein’s post-Seabeco companies. On my first visit, in January of this year, I peeked in the windows to see a bare reception area with outlines on the walls where pictures once hung.
Property records showed that a numbered corporation controlled by Boris and Tamara Birshtein had sold the building in 2017 to a Chinese developer for almost $5.5-million. When I returned in September, the address was inhabited by a Russian hairdresser.
Shortly after my attempts to visit Mr. Birshtein, I received a phone call from Gavin Tighe, a lawyer who had represented Doug Ford, now the Premier of Ontario, and his late brother and former Toronto mayor, Rob, through a series of scandals (and who was recently awarded by the Ford government to a four-year, $667,000 contract to serve as chair of the province’s Public Accountants Council, a body whose job, according to its website, is to “ensure that public accounting in Ontario is practised in accordance with internationally respected public accounting standards”). Mr. Tighe informed me – shortly after his new appointment– that he was now representing Mr. Birshtein. He asked me to stop trying to contact Mr. Birshtein, and instead to send him any questions I might have.
I then e-mailed him a list of 37 questions about Mr. Birshtein, along with a request for an interview with the businessman. The four-page reply arrived replete with denials and threats of legal action: “Any and all allegations of impropriety, criminality or association with criminals are vehemently denied. Our client is a law abiding businessperson with no criminal record or history,” it reads in part. Added Mr. Tighe, “He is not obligated to provide an interview to you or any other journalist.”