Mueller witness George Nader pleads guilty to child porn, sex trafficking

political hobnobber who featured prominently as a key witness in former Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation faces at least a decade in prison after pleading guilty to charges of child sex trafficking and possessing child pornography.

Lebanese-American businessman George Nader, 60, entered a plea deal Monday in federal court in Alexandria, Va., admitting to transporting a 14-year-old boy from the Czech Republic to Washington, D.C., in 2000 to engage in sexual activity with him. He also admitted to possessing child pornography depicting infants or toddlers.

Nader is still separately under indictment in Washington along with seven others on charges of conspiring to conceal the source of more than $3.5 million in political donations to Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign. Nader allegedly was reporting to an unnamed Middle Eastern government on that operation, which was intended to curry favor with Clinton, prosecutors in that case said.

NADER INDICTED FOR ALLEGEDLY ILLEGALLY FUNNELLING MONEY TO CLINTON

In the meantime, the pornography charge itself carries a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence. Prosecutors agreed as part of the plea bargain to recommend a 10-year sentence when Nader is sentenced April 10, although the judge will be free to impose a significantly longer sentence of up to 30 years if she chooses.

This 1998 file frame from video provided by C-SPAN shows George Nader, then the president and editor of Middle East Insight. Nader, a key witness in former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation, pleaded guilty to charges of child sex trafficking and possessing child pornography. (C-SPAN via AP, File)

This 1998 file frame from video provided by C-SPAN shows George Nader, then the president and editor of Middle East Insight. Nader, a key witness in former Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, pleaded guilty to charges of child sex trafficking and possessing child pornography. (C-SPAN via AP, File)

Nader’s name appears more than 100 times in Mueller’s report. It details Nader’s efforts to serve as a liaison for a January 2017 meeting between a Russian banker with ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and members of President Trump’s transition team.

Nader previously served as an adviser to the United Arab Emirates, a close Saudi ally, and in 2017 he wired $2.5 million to a top Trump fundraiser, Elliott Broidy, through a company in Canada. The goal was to persuade the U.S. to take a hard line against Qatar, a longtime American ally but now an adversary of the UAE.

FLASHBACK: NADER IN THE SPOTLIGHT IN MUELLER PROBE

Nader was previously convicted in the Czech Republic of 10 cases of sexually abusing minors and sentenced to a one-year prison term in 2003. In that case, according to Czech court documents, Nader found a boy by crusing an arcade in Prague and lured them in with “money, jewelry, mobile telephones, clothing, care and housing.”

The 14-year-old boy who was the victim in Monday’s guilty plea is a different victim than the ones identified in the Czech case.

Nader also pleaded guilty to a charge of transporting child-pornography images in Virginia in 1991.

The current investigation of Nader began in 2018 when images depicting child pornography and bestiality were found on his phone after it was confiscated under a search warrant connected to the Mueller probe.

The images found in Nader’s phones at Dulles International Airport ended up not being the basis for Monday’s child-pornography conviction. Instead, prosecutors relied on images and videos he received via email in 2012 that in some cases involved sadistic depictions of infants or toddlers, according to disclosures at Monday’s hearing.

In court papers filed Monday, Nader admitted that he discussed child pornography online over the years with an unidentified associated, using the word “wine” as a substitute for child pornography to conceal the nature of the conversations. The two had also worked out a code to add 10 years to the age of persons they referred to in their conversations.

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While Nader admitted to transporting the Czech boy to the U.S. for the purpose of engaging in sexual activity, he argues that it happened too long ago to be prosecuted under the statute of limitations, and his plea deal preserves his right to appeal his conviction on that count on those grounds. Even if such an appeal were granted, he would still be subject to a mandatory 10 years on the pornography charge.

Fox News’ Vandana Rambaran and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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