Junkermann is also associated with Michael Cohen
The Ties That Bind: Ehud Barak’s Business Network
An Israeli emergency response startup chaired by the former Israeli prime minister links U.S.-based businessman Andrew Intrater, one of the suspects of the Mueller investigation, and American multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein, currently at the center of an underage sex trafficking scandal
U.S.-based businessman Andrew Intrater is a business partner and backer of former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s emergency response startup Carbyne Ltd. Intrater is also one of the key figures questioned by Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his team in connection to the alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Intrater, who is related to Russian businessman Viktor Vekselberg (a man who has been designated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury as suspected of supporting "malign activity” perpetrated by the Russian government), was questioned due to conspicuous money transfers to—and close ties with—Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's former lawyer and confidant, who is currently serving a sentence for fraud and violation of campaign finance laws.
According to the allegations, Intrater has transferred $583,000 to Cohen through his investment firm Columbus Nova Technology Partners (CNTP), designated by the Mueller investigative team as an affiliate of Moscow-based asset management company Renova Group, which is owned by Vekselberg.
According to findings by Mueller’s investigative team, CNTP has made seven payments to Cohen, each of $83,000, between January and August of 2017. During that time, Cohen and Intrater had maintained close contact, exchanging 320 phone calls and 920 text messages between election day in November 2016 and July 2017.
Carbyne was incorporated in 2014 as Reporty Homeland Security Ltd., before rebranding in early 2018. Barak, who invested $1 million in the company in 2015, serves as its chairman. Carbyne develops a cloud-based platform that allows emergency dispatchers to receive GPS data, video and audio transmission, and to use texting services to supplement voice-in distress calls. The Tel Aviv-based company has raised nearly $22 million to date according to Pitchbook data, from backers including Peter Thiel’s venture capital firm Founders Fund.
Carbyne company documents reviewed by Calcalist show that Intrater entered as an investor in September 2017, having bought 24% of Carbyne’s series A-1 preferred stock.
To facilitate his own investment in Carbyne (then still named Reporty), Barak formed a limited partnership that he incorporated as Sum (E.B.) 2015. Sum owns 100% of Carbyne’s series A preferred stock. Jeffrey Epstein, the American multimillionaire businessman now at the center of an underage sex trafficking scandal, is another partner at Sum, having invested money into the venture as early as 2015, as first reported last week by Haaretz.
rest at
https://www.calcalistech.com/ctech/articles/0,7340,L-3766639,00.html
http://archive.is/D6gFU
posted at https://voat.co/v/QRV/3357249