An independent Ukrainian lawmaker said on Dec. 5 he had met President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer in Kyiv to discuss the alleged misuse of American taxpayer money by Ukrainian state bodies.
In a statement on Facebook accompanying photos of the meeting, Andriy Derkach said he and Rudy Giuliani discussed creating an interparliamentary group to fight corruption.
Giuliani, Trump’s lawyer, traveled to Budapest, Hungary, and Kyiv this week to meet with current and former Ukrainian officials for a documentary series.
Giuliani could not be reached for immediate comment. He said on Dec. 3 that he was “working on an important project” with One America News Network, a broadcaster based in San Diego, that was “intended to bring before the American people information” that House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) “covered up.”
“Stay tuned,” he wrote.
Ukraine is central to the impeachment inquiry against Trump because of allegations that the president abused his power to pressure its Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.
Derkach, the Ukrainian lawmaker who met with Giuliani, held a press conference in November making explosive unverified allegations against Burisma and the Bidens, including that $16.5 million received by Hunter Biden as payment from Burisma was stolen from Ukrainian citizens. Details he talked about were cited by Trump’s lawyer as evidence in his criticisms of the Biden family.
Derkach said in a statement after meeting Giuliani, “Unfortunately, our country has been at the center of scandals about international corruption.”
“Among other things, there are facts about the inefficient use of American taxpayers’ money by representatives of Ukrainian state bodies,” he added on Facebook on Thursday.
Derkach also said that he and a lawmaker from Zelensky’s party had invited several senior figures in Washington to help form the interparliamentary group on corruption, including House Intelligence Ranking Member Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and White House acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney.
Reeker met the new Prosecutor General Ruslan Ryaboshapka for what the U.S. Embassy said was a discussion about reforms.
Giuliani also met former Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko, according to pictures posted on Twitter and a statement on Facebook by Lutsenko’s spokeswoman. While he was prosecutor general, Lutsenko privately met Giuliani twice this year: in New York in January and later somewhere in Poland.