The informant's claims have been a pillar of a months-long effort by congressional Republicans to impeach the president. But Special Counsel David Weiss, who is prosecuting Hunter Biden on gun and tax charges, alleged on Feb. 14 that Smirnov had spun up a false story, and he was arrested at a Las Vegas airport after returning from overseas.
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Russia contact In a 28-page memo submitted Tuesday opposing bail for Smirnov, prosecutors said Smirov had admitted to having contacts with foreign intelligence services from countries including Russia.
“While Smirnov has no ties to the community in Las Vegas, what he does have is extensive foreign ties, including, most troublingly and by his own account, contact with foreign intelligence services, including Russian intelligence agencies, and has had such contacts recently,” Weiss wrote to the court. “Smirnov could use these contacts to resettle outside the United States” if released on bail.Weiss said that prosecutors were aware of Smirnov’s spy connections because he had shared them with his FBI handlers. Smirnov began working as an FBI informant in 2010 and was authorized to break some laws in that role, prosecutors said.
“As noted, law enforcement knows about Smirnov’s contact with officials affiliated with Russian intelligence because Smirnov himself reported on a number of those contacts to his FBI Handler,” Weiss wrote, adding, “...these contacts are extensive and extremely recent, and Smirnov had the intention of meeting with one of these officials on his upcoming planned overseas travel.”In October 2023, Smirnov reported "numerous contacts" with the person he described to his FBI handlers as the chief of two Russian assassination squads, and "as someone with ties to a particular Russian intelligence service," the memo said.
The informant also told his handlers of a "recent" overseas meeting with a second official, who he described as "a high-ranking member of a specific Russian foreign intelligence service," Weiss said.Millions of dollars
Lawyers for Smirnov and Hunter Biden couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
In arguing against bail, prosecutors said that Smirnov “has access to over $6 million in liquid funds – more than enough money for him to live comfortably overseas for the rest of his life,” and that he lied to the court about his assets, claiming to have only $1,500 in cash and $5,000 in a checking account.
President Biden is identified in the memorandum as "Public Official 1, an elected official in the Obama-Biden Administration who left office in January 2017," while Hunter Biden is referred to as "Businessperson 1."


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