Mueller Investigating Trump Team's NRA Ties

News  |  Jan 22, 2019

The National Rifle Association spent three times the amount of money on Donald Trump's presidential campaign than it did on Mitt Romney's run in 2012, and that huge leap in financial investment has led both congressional investigators and Special Counsel Robert Mueller to look closer at the pro-gun group and where it gets its money. 

Investigators' interest in possible ties between the NRA and the Russian government is well-documented, but CNN now reports Mueller has been asking questions about when and how the Trump campaign and the NRA first engaged.

"When I was interviewed by the special counsel's office, I was asked about the Trump campaign and our dealings with the NRA," Sam Nunberg, a former Trump campaign aide, told CNN.

The special counsel's team was curious to learn more about how Donald Trump and his operatives first formed a relationship with the NRA and how Trump wound up speaking at the group's annual meeting in 2015, just months before announcing his presidential bid, Nunberg said. 

Nunberg's interview with Mueller's team in February 2018 offers the first indication that the special counsel has been probing the Trump campaign's ties to the powerful gun-rights group. As recently as about a month ago, Mueller's investigators were still raising questions about the relationship between the campaign and the gun group, CNN has learned.

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President Trump was not asked about his connection with the NRA in the written questions Mueller posed to him, according to a source familiar with the questions. 

The NRA had already come under scrutiny from lawmakers for its massive spending in support of Trump in 2016 and its ties to Russian nationals.

Maria Butina, a Russian national, pleaded guilty in DC federal court in December to engaging in a conspiracy against the US. As part of her plea, she acknowledged that she attempted to infiltrate GOP political circles and influence US relations with Russia, in part by building ties with prominent members of the NRA.

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Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, is among the lawmakers who has pressed the NRA for more information, particularly about its finances.

In letters to Wyden, the NRA revealed it had received contributions from more than 20 Russian nationals in the US or people associated with Russian addresses since 2015. But the donations amounted to a little more than $2,500, according to the NRA's letter. The group also insisted it did not use foreign funds for election-related purposes.

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Trump quickly became a darling of the NRA during the 2016 campaign, despite his history of supporting a ban on assault weapons.

Trump spoke at the NRA's annual meeting in Tennessee in 2015, along with a number of other GOP presidential hopefuls. By May 2016, the NRA was all in for Trump, officially endorsing his candidacy at the group's annual meeting in Kentucky.

"To get the endorsement, believe me, is a fantastic honor," Trump told the NRA crowd in 2016. "I will not let you down."

The NRA spent more than $30 million to back Trump's candidacy -- a stunning sum even for an organization known for its political might.

It was more than the NRA had spent on all races combined -- presidential, House and Senate -- in the 2008 and 2012 election cycles, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Trump's son Donald Trump Jr. is an avid outdoorsman who helped his father build closer ties to the NRA.

"They love the NRA more than anyone I know," Trump said at the 2015 NRA meeting, as he brought his sons Trump Jr. and Eric Trump onstage with him. "They happen to be my sons. They're lifetime members."

"These are our people," Trump Jr. said as he took the stage. "We're shooters, we're hunters, we're outdoorsman, we're sportsman and we love the Second Amendment."

A year later, Trump Jr. had a brief meet-and-greet with Torshin, the former Russian banker, on the sidelines of the 2016 NRA meeting.

In May 2018, Spanish prosecutor José Grinda told an audience at the conservative Hudson Institute that Don. Jr. had reason to be concerned because the FBI had obtained Spanish police transcripts of conversations between Torshin and Alexander Romanov, a convicted Russian money launderer.

Mueller wants to know about 2016 Trump campaign's ties to NRA (CNN)