Ex-FBI informant charged with false intel about the Bidens is set to appear in court
Former FBI informant Alexander Smirnov, who was charged with allegedly providing false claims about President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden during the 2020 presidential campaign to the bureau, is scheduled to appear for a hearing in a California federal court Monday as a judge weighs whether to keep him in jail.
A federal judge in California last week ordered the rearrest of Smirnov, 43, after federal prosecutors told the judge that he was “likely” planning to leave the United States. The order came after Smirnov was arrested by federal authorities at the airport in Las Vegas this month upon his return from an international flight. A federal magistrate judge in Nevada last week ordered Smirnov to be released with a GPS monitor, prompting the judge in California, where the case against Smirnov was brought, to issue the order.
“It has come to this Court’s attention that counsel for defendant has sought an emergency hearing in the District of Nevada to arrange the release of Defendant Smirnov, likely to facilitate his absconding from the United States,” U.S. District Judge Otis D. Wright wrote in an order unsealed Friday. The judge wrote, bolding his order for emphasis, that he “issued an arrest warrant specifying that upon his arrest Defendant should be brought promptly to this Court” for a hearing in his Los Angeles courtroom on Monday.
Prosecutors said in a filing last week that Smirnov, who had worked as a confidential source for the FBI since 2010, said some information he shared about the Bidens came from “officials associated with Russian intelligence.” They added that Smirnov “is actively peddling new lies that could impact U.S. elections after meeting with Russian intelligence officials in November.”
Prosecutors with special counsel David Weiss’ office said Smirnov “provided false derogatory information to the FBI” about the Bidens, including bogus claims that officials at the Ukrainian energy company Burisma, where Hunter Biden had worked, had paid them $5 million each and it would take 10 years for investigators to locate the alleged payments.
House Republicans made Smirnov’s allegations against the Bidens a central part of their impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden. Although GOP leaders had repeatedly pointed to Smirnov’s unsubstantiated claims, but since his indictment they have been downplaying the importance of his false allegations to their probe.
Weiss’ office did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment on Monday’s hearing.
Smirnov’s lawyers, David Z. Chesnoff and Richard A. Schonfeld, declined to comment to NBC News about the hearing. The previously said they are “advocating for Mr. Smirnov’s release in both the federal [district] court and in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.”
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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