Current:Home > MyCharles McGonigal, ex-FBI official, pleads guilty to concealing $225,000 in payments -EverVision Finance
Charles McGonigal, ex-FBI official, pleads guilty to concealing $225,000 in payments
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-10 00:53:59
Washington — Charles McGonigal, a former top counterintelligence official at the FBI, pleaded guilty Friday to concealing his contacts with foreign officials and hundreds of thousands of dollars that he accepted from a former employee of a foreign intelligence service.
McGonigal, 55, was charged by federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., with concealing $225,000 in cash that he received from a former employee of Albania's intelligence agency. Prosecutors alleged he also misled the FBI by not properly disclosing his overseas travels and contacts with foreign nationals while he was still employed by the bureau.
He pleaded guilty to a single count of concealment of material facts on Friday. He faces up to five years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000. The judge scheduled a sentencing hearing for Feb. 16, 2024. In exchange for his guilty plea, prosecutors agreed to ask the judge to dismiss eight other counts included in the original indictment.
McGonigal pleaded guilty last month to separate charges in New York related to his work for a Russian oligarch.
The case against McGonigal
Before he retired in 2018, McGonigal served as the special agent in charge of the FBI's Counterintelligence Division in New York and formed a relationship with the former Albanian intelligence employee who had become a naturalized U.S. citizen, according to the indictment. The two traveled to Albania and other countries where the individual had business interests and met with foreign nationals on multiple occasions, prosecutors said.
On one of the trips, according to the statement of facts to which McGonigal admitted on Friday, he met with the prime minister of Albania, one of his advisers and a Kosovar politician and failed to report those meetings.
During his meeting with Albania's prime minister, McGonigal allegedly urged him to avoid awarding oil drilling licenses to Russian front companies, according to the plea agreement. Prosecutors said both the former intelligence employee and the prime minister's adviser had a financial interest in Albania's decisions about the contracts.
McGonigal also admitted that he flagged to the Justice Department a U.S. citizen's foreign lobbying work on behalf of a political opponent of the Albanian prime minister. The FBI later opened an investigation into that person based on information McGonigal received from his Albanian contacts and the prime minister's allies.
The individual with whom McGonigal traveled overseas "later served as an FBI source in a criminal investigation involving foreign political lobbying over which McGonigal had official supervisory responsibility," prosecutors noted in a release Friday.
As an employee of the FBI, McGonigal was required to disclose his contacts with foreign nationals and overseas travel.
Speaking in court on Friday, McGonigal told U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly that the money from his Albanian contact was a loan to start a consulting firm after he retired from the FBI, which he admitted he should not have accepted.
"I did not disclose these facts to the FBI," he admitted in court, characterizing his conduct as "inappropriate."
"I want to apologize to the FBI," McGonigal said Friday. "This is not a situation I wanted to be in or put them through."
Seth Ducharme, a top Justice Department official in the Trump administration who now represents McGonigal in the case, said outside court on Friday that his client now recognizes that "there needs to be a clear separation and a break" between official work on behalf of the U.S. government and personal work in preparation for retirement.
In the New York case, prosecutors alleged McGonigal was on the payroll of Oleg Deripaska, whom he investigated in his role as the special agent in charge of the counterintelligence division in the FBI's New York Field Office. Deripaska has been sanctioned by the U.S. since 2018, making it illegal to do any business with him.
After McGonigal retired from the FBI, prosecutors alleged he and a former Russian diplomat-turned-interpreter for U.S. courts worked unsuccessfully on Deripaska's behalf to get sanctions against him lifted. The pair also investigated a rival Russian oligarch for Deripaska and hid the source of Deripaska's payments.
McGonigal is scheduled to be sentenced in the New York case on Dec. 14.
veryGood! (88)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Been putting off Social Security? 3 signs it's time to apply.
- Stock market today: Asian markets mixed, with most closed for holidays, after S&P 500 tops 5,000
- If a Sports Bra and a Tank Top Had a Baby It Would Be This Ultra-Stretchy Cami- Get 3 for $29
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Review: Justin Hartley makes a handsome network heartthrob in 'Tracker'
- North Carolina voter ID trial rescheduled again for spring in federal court
- Waymo driverless car set ablaze in San Francisco: 'Putting out some rage'
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Retired AP photographer Lou Krasky, who captured hurricanes, golf stars and presidents, has died
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- 49ers' Dre Greenlaw knocked out of Super Bowl with Achilles injury after going back onto field
- California Isn’t Ready for a Megaflood. Or the Loss of Daniel Swain.
- What It's Really Like to Travel from Tokyo to Las Vegas Like Taylor Swift
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Patrick Mahomes rallies the Chiefs to second straight Super Bowl title, 25-22 over 49ers in overtime
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Bask in Afterglow of Chiefs' Super Bowl Win With On-Field Kiss
- White House to require assurances from countries receiving weapons that they're abiding by U.S. law
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Molly Ringwald breaks free from 'mom purgatory' in 'Feud: Capote vs. The Swans'
'Has anyone seen my wife?': Ryan Reynolds searches for Blake Lively during Super Bowl 58
Super Bowl 58 winners and losers: Patrick Mahomes sparks dynasty, 49ers falter late
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Why Taylor Swift Has Never Headlined the Super Bowl Halftime Show
Republican effort to restore abortion rights in Missouri folds
If a Sports Bra and a Tank Top Had a Baby It Would Be This Ultra-Stretchy Cami- Get 3 for $29