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Special counsel John Durham's investigators arrest analyst behind Steele dossier which claimed Donald Trump had been compromised by Russian intelligence

  A key source who provided information to British ex-spy Christopher Steele for his 'dirty dossier' of allegations against   Donald...

 A key source who provided information to British ex-spy Christopher Steele for his 'dirty dossier' of allegations against Donald Trump has been arrested in the US. 

Igor Danchenko, a Russian-born analyst living in the United States, was arrested on Thursday by federal agents assigned to John H. Durham's special counsel inquiry into the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation, according to the Justice Department.  

Danchenko is the third person, and second in a two-month span, to face charges in Durham's probe. 

The Russian political analyst was the primary researcher for Steele's dossier alleging that Trump's 2016 presidential campaign conspired with Russia in a covert operation to beat Hillary Clinton, and that Russia had salacious videos that could be used to blackmail Trump.

Many of the dossier's claims remain unproven or have been debunked, though the document was cited by the FBI in a secret warrant application to spy on a Trump campaign advisor.

Igor Danchenko, a Russian-born analyst living in the United States, was arrested on Thursday by federal agents assigned to John H. Durham's special counsel inquiry

Igor Danchenko, a Russian-born analyst living in the United States, was arrested on Thursday by federal agents assigned to John H. Durham's special counsel inquiry

Special Counsel John H. Durham is investigating whether the FBI's Trump-Russia probe, code-named 'Crossfire Hurricane,' was opened and conducted legally

Special Counsel John H. Durham is investigating whether the FBI's Trump-Russia probe, code-named 'Crossfire Hurricane,' was opened and conducted legally


The charges against Danchenko were not immediately clear, and his attorney was in trial and could not be immediately reached by DailyMail.com on Thursday morning. 

A Justice Department spokesman confirmed Danchenko's arrest, which was first reported by The New York Times. An indictment revealing more details is likely to be unsealed later on Thursday.

Trump has long denied any illegal conspiracy with Russia in his 2016 campaign, insisting that the allegations were trumped up by his political enemies. Likewise, Democrats claim that Durham's probe is a political hatchet job.

Durham was appointed as special counsel by Trump administration Attorney General Bill Barr in October 2020, and tasked with investigating whether the FBI's Trump-Russia probe, code-named 'Crossfire Hurricane,' was opened and conducted legally.

Danchenko's role in the affair emerged last year, when he was revealed as the primary researcher behind Steele's explosive but dubious claims in the dossier, which was funded by the Democratic Party and Clinton's campaign.

In FBI hands, the dossier was used to further its probe into Trump during the presidential campaign, and was cited in a FISA warrant application to surveil Trump campaign advisor Carter Page, an American who has never been criminally charged.

Durham previously signaled his interest in Danchenko and the Steele dossier by obtaining subpoenas in February for old personnel files and other documents related to Danchenko from the Brookings Institution, where he worked from 2005 until 2010.

Danchenko was the primary researcher for British ex-spy Christopher Steele's (above) dossier alleging that Trump's 2016 presidential campaign conspired with Russia in a covert operation

Danchenko was the primary researcher for British ex-spy Christopher Steele's (above) dossier alleging that Trump's 2016 presidential campaign conspired with Russia in a covert operation

Trump is seen at the 2013 Miss Universe competition in Moscow, on the trip that is at the center of the dossier's most salacious allegations

Trump is seen at the 2013 Miss Universe competition in Moscow, on the trip that is at the center of the dossier's most salacious allegations

Last year, Trump allies Senator Lindsey Graham, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Representative Devin Nunes, top Republican on the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, made comments suggesting that Danchenko is a Russian agent. 

Danchenko responded to the allegations with a statement denying that he was working as a spy for Russia. 

Danchenko told Reuters in an email that he was merely 'an experienced expert in Russian affairs who has spent more than a decade in business intelligence.'

Danchenko previously denied that he was working as a spy for Russia

Danchenko previously denied that he was working as a spy for Russia

'My academic and business intelligence work in Russia has always been on behalf of Western clients and never on behalf of Russia,' he added.

Danchenko also told the Guardian that he didn't back down from the dossier's claim that the Russians' may have held compromising information on Trump. 'I stand by it. I got it right,' he said.

But he also downplayed the most salacious claims of the dossier, which also argued broadly that the Russians held financial leverage over the president.

He said he traveled to Russia and St. Petersburg, Russia to assist Steele in his reports.

He said his own work with sources of information in Russia amounted to 'hearsay' and 'jest.'

Information about Danchenko's role in gathering information for the 2016 dossier emerged during Senate look-backs at the Russia probe. 

In September, Durham indicted cybersecurity lawyer Michael Sussmann (above) accusing him of lying to the FBI about who he was working for in a tip-off about alleged Trump-Russia ties

In September, Durham indicted cybersecurity lawyer Michael Sussmann (above) accusing him of lying to the FBI about who he was working for in a tip-off about alleged Trump-Russia ties 

Michael Sussman, a cybersecurity lawyer who worked for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, pleaded not guilty to lying to the FBI
FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith pleaded guilty to altering an email in a warrant application

Sussman (left) and FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith (right) are the only other people to be charged as part of Durham's probe thus far

Durham has moved methodically and quietly since he first began probing Crossfire Hurricane in May 2019, first as a US Attorney and later as special counsel.

His office has been the source of very few media leaks and has issued only a handful of terse statements. 

But in recent weeks the probe has appeared to be increasing in tempo and intensity. 

In September, Durham indicted a cybersecurity lawyer, Michael Sussmann, accusing him of lying to the FBI during a September 2016 conversation in which he relayed concerns about potentially suspicious cyber contacts between a Trump Organization server and the server of a Russian bank. 

The indictment alleges Sussmann told the FBI's then-general counsel, James Baker, that he was not bringing the concerns to the FBI on behalf of any particular client when he was actually representing the Hillary Clinton campaign and a technology executive. 

Sussmann has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers have attacked the case as driven by politics rather than facts. 

The first criminal charges in Durham's probe were against Kevin Clinesmith, an FBI attorney assigned to the Robert Mueller probe, who altered an email during the process of acquiring a wiretap warrant renewal on Page.

Clinesmith pleaded guilty and was sentenced to probation.  

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