Ex-US Envoy to Pakistan Gets Probation for Ethics Violations
A former US ambassador to Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates, Richard Olson, was sentenced to three years of probation on Friday for violating federal ethics laws.
The 63-year-old Olson was also fined $93,400 after pleading guilty to charges he misused his official position for personal gain.
Olson, who served as the US envoy to Pakistan from 2012 to 2015, pleaded guilty in June of last year to making a false statement and violating laws governing lobbying for a foreign government.
Olson was accused of helping the government of Qatar influence US policymakers shortly after retiring from the State Department in 2016.
βUS law prohibits senior officials β like the defendant β from representing a foreign government before any federal agency or from aiding or advising a foreign entity with the intent to influence the US government for one year after leaving their positions,β the US Attorneyβs Office for Washington said in a statement.
βThe defendant took numerous steps to conceal these illegal activities, including deleting incriminating emails and lying to the FBI during a recorded interview,β it said.
According to the US Attorneyβs Office, Olson, while serving as the US envoy to Pakistan, also received favors and benefits from a Pakistani-American businessman identified in court documents only as βPerson 1.β
They included $25,000 paid to Olsonβs then-girlfriend to help pay her tuition at Columbia University in New York and $18,000 in first class travel for the ambassador to attend a job interview in London.
βOne major favor was that the defendant agreed to lobby members of Congress on Person 1βs behalf with respect to weapon sales to Pakistan and Middle Eastern countries that Person 1 was trying to broker,β the US Attorneyβs office said.
According to The Washington Post, βPerson 1β was Imaad Zuberi, who was sentenced to 12 years in prison in 2021 for making illegal campaign contributions and other offenses.
AFP
