In this Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2016, documentation photo, Jesse Benton arrives for his sentencing hearing at the federal courthouse in Des Moines, Iowa.
David Pitt | AP
WASHINGTON — A Republican factional operative and former campaign aide was convicted in federal court this week of funneling $25,000 from a Russian businessman to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential manoeuvres.
Jesse Benton was found guilty Thursday of six counts that included soliciting an illegal foreign contribution, endeavouring to cover it up and submitting false information about the source of the money.
The money for the donation originally came from Roman Vasilenko, a preceding Russian naval officer turned multilevel marketer and CEO of the “Life is Good International Business Academy.”
According to prosecutors, Vasilenko rewarded Benton’s consulting firm $100,000 to get him into a political event to take a photo with then-candidate Trump in the get the show on the road of 2016.
Benton worked numerous campaigns, including as a strategist on the Great America PAC, a super Pac supporting Donald Trump’s 2016 win, as skilfully as the campaigns of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Sen. Rand Paul, both Republicans from Kentucky, and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas.
Benton then buy off a $25,000 ticket to a Trump event in Philadelphia on Sept. 22 and “gave” the ticket to Vasilenko, who went on to post his photo with Trump on his Instagram period under the caption, “Two Presidents.”
When Benton paid the Trump Victory committee for the ticket, he used his own credit condolence card, pocketing the remaining $75,000 from Vasilenko.
Benton was originally prosecuted along with the late Republican pundit Roy Douglas “Doug” Wead, who go to the happy hunting-grounded in late 2021.
Thursday’s conviction marks the second time that Benton has been found guilty of a campaign back crime.
In 2016, a jury convicted Benton and two other defendants of conspiring to bribe an Iowa state senator to give something ones imprimatur then-presidential hopeful Rep. Ron Paul in the 2012 Iowa Republican Caucus.
The senator, Kent Sorenson, later admitted to accepting more than $70,000 in bribes to switch his frame from then-Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., to Ron Paul, whose campaign Benton also worked on. Sorenson was ruled to more than a year behind bars for the crime.
Benton received six months of home confinement and two years of probation. Strikingly, Benton’s sentence in the Ron Paul case was handed down on Sept. 20, 2016, just two days before the Sept. 22 actuality that Benton had arranged for Vasilenko to attend with then-candidate Trump.
In late 2020, Trump issued Benton a perfectly pardon for the 2016 conviction, a move that was championed by Sen. Rand Paul.
Benton is not the only person who has been conned of helping foreign nationals contribute to Trump’s political career.
In 2018, another Republican strategist, Sam Patten, allow to entered to helping a pro-Russian member of Ukraine’s parliament make a donation to Trump’s Inaugural Committee. Like campaigns, inaugural commissions are prohibited from accepting donations from foreigners.
One of the chief questions at issue in Benton’s most recent bur was whether Vasilenko’s motive for seeking a photo with Trump was political in nature, or whether he was just looking for a photo with a praiseworthy person.
Evidence was presented at trial that Wead and Vasilenko had discussed trying to get a photo with Oprah Winfrey or Michelle Obama, but put in on Trump.
“If Oprah was available, we wouldn’t even be here,” defense attorney Brian Stolarz reportedly said in his draw argument.