Hillary and Bill Clinton’s ties to two influential Lebanese-Nigerian businessmen are raising fresh questions about whether the State Department showed favoritism to Clinton Foundation donors — an issue that has continued to dog the Democratic nominee during the 2016 presidential contest.
Responding to the report, the State Department said this week that the land was considered but not acquired.
Clinton had left the State Department before it sent a letter three years ago expressing interest in possibly buying the property. While the letter was sent after she had left office, the State Department had identified the Eko project as a potential location when Clinton was still secretary of state in 2012. Asked if Clinton was cognizant of that, a department spokeswoman said earlier this week, “I’m not aware she was.”
But the Clinton Foundation’s ties to Gilbert Chagoury and Eko Atlantic have led critics to allege the development was given special consideration.
Gilbert Chagoury has donated over $1 million to the Clinton Foundation, according to the foundation’s website, which also notes that The Chagoury Group — run by the brothers — pledged to commit $1 billion to fight coastal erosion through the Eko Atlantic development as part of a Clinton Foundation initiative on climate change. Eko Atlantic is built on reclaimed land protected by a sea wall.
Bill Clinton attended the project’s dedication ceremony in 2013 and was photographed with the Chagoury brothers, and he appears in Eko Atlantic promotional videos.
Brian Fallon, a spokesman for the Clinton campaign, said, “Citizens United is a right-wing group that’s been attacking the Clintons since the 1990s and, once again, is trying to make something out of nothing. This draft letter was written after Hillary Clinton had already left the State Department and it never led to any deal.”
CNN did not receive a response to a request for comment from The Chagoury Group.
This isn’t the first time the State Department has faced questions about the Chagourys.
Last week, documents released by the conservative legal watchdog group Judicial Watch revealed a top Clinton Foundation official had asked two Hillary Clinton aides at the State Department to put Gilbert Chagoury in contact with the department’s “substance person” on Lebanon. Emails were exchanged, but a meeting never took place.
The Clinton Foundation has become a lightning rod for criticism in the presidential race.
On Tuesday, The Boston Globe published an editorial calling for the foundation to “remove a political — and actual — distraction and stop accepting funding.”
And former Democratic Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, a Clinton supporter, told The New York Daily News over the weekend the foundation should be disbanded if she’s elected.
A US official also told CNN last week that the FBI and Department of Justice met several months ago to discuss opening a public corruption case into the Clinton Foundation, after the FBI received notification from a bank of suspicious activity from a foreigner who had donated to the foundation.
Clinton has yet to address the future of the foundation or her husband’s role in it should she win the White House.
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