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==Personal life==
==Personal life==
While working in Russia in the 1990s, Caputo met a Russian student studying [[astrophysics]] and they were married.<ref name=sandratan /><ref name=dailybeast /> Caputo became a [[Catholic]] in 2000, and this religious change helped him find peace.<ref name=sandratan /> While advising in [[Kiev]], [[Ukraine]] in 2007, Caputo met Maryna Ponomarenko, who became his second wife.<ref name=guardian /><ref name=longman /><ref name=sandratan /> As of 2016, Caputo resided in [[East Aurora, New York]] with her and their three children.<ref name=sandratan />
While working in Russia in the 1990s, Caputo met a Russian student studying [[astrophysics]] and they were married.<ref name=sandratan /><ref name=dailybeast /> Caputo became a [[Catholic]] in 2000, and this religious change helped him find peace.<ref name=sandratan /> While advising in [[Kiev]], [[Ukraine]] in 2007, Caputo met Maryna Ponomarenko, who became his second wife.<ref name=guardian /><ref name=longman /><ref name=sandratan /> As of 2016, Caputo resided in [[East Aurora, New York]] with her and their three children.<ref name=sandratan /> Michael Caputo should go on [[Cum Town]]. />


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 16:28, 2 February 2018

Michael Caputo
Born
Michael R. Caputo

1962 (age 61–62)
NationalityUnited States
Other namesMichael Caputo
Mike Caputo
Occupation(s)Republican political strategist and media consultant
Years active1983–present
Known forReagan Administration adviser
George H.W. Bush campaign adviser
Carl Paladino campaign manager
Boris Yeltsin adviser
Vladimir Putin media consultant
Donald Trump campaign adviser

Michael R. Caputo (born 1962[1]) is a Republican political strategist and media consultant. Caputo grew up in Southtowns, Buffalo, New York, and gained public relations experience with the United States Army. He became enamored of Ronald Reagan while serving in the military and became a Republican, later working for politicians including Jack Kemp. He worked for the Reagan Administration with Oliver North injecting propaganda for Reagan in Central America and South America. Caputo then went to work for the United States House of Representatives as assistant director of the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association. He served as director of media services on the campaign for president George H.W. Bush in the 1992 United States presidential election.

Caputo moved to Russia in 1994 after the fall of the Soviet Union, and was an adviser to Boris Yeltsin and helped elect Yeltsin to a second term as President of Russia. He worked for Gazprom Media in 2000 where he helped improve the image of Vladimir Putin in the U.S. He moved back to the U.S. and founded a public relations company, and then moved to Ukraine to work on a candidate's campaign for parliament.

Caputo worked as the campaign manager for Carl Paladino in his 2010 bid for Governor of New York. He was profiled in a piece by The New York Times where he was credited with Paladino's political success in garnering the Republican nomination in the 2010 New York gubernatorial election. In 2016, Caputo joined the Donald Trump campaign, and was put in charge of communications for New York. He left the campaign after publicly voicing his approval for the replacement of campaign manager Corey Lewandowski with Paul Manafort. Caputo was investigated by the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence as part of their investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election; he denied ties to Russia while working on the Trump campaign.

Early life and education

Caputo was born in 1962 to father Raymon Caputo.[1][2] He spent the bulk of his early years in Buffalo, New York, in the region known as Southtowns.[2][1] Caputo garnered early public relations work situated in Hawaii while with the United States Army, which he joined directly after finishing high school.[2][1] Subsequent to his experiences in the Army, he enrolled at the University at Buffalo in 1983.[2] Caputo gained admiration for Ronald Reagan during his military service after the president signed legislation giving him a pay raise of ten percent on his Army pay, and at that point decided he would side with the Republican party.[2]

He was employed by Republican politicians such as Congressman Jack Kemp.[1] He gained experience in crisis management and working for the insurance company operated by his father.[1] Caputo was mentored by Roger J. Stone Jr. in the ways of political advisement, and became his personal driver.[1][2] He learned from Stone that political campaigns could be turned into wins for candidates if the public found them entertaining.[1] Caputo was influenced by Jerry Garcia and Ronald Reagan, and has written about his views supporting safeguarding the environment.[1][2]

Career

Reagan Administration and Bush campaign

During the Reagan Administration, Caputo helped support the president's agenda in Central America.[1] He worked with Oliver North to foment propaganda as part of Reagan's public relations efforts in South America and in Central America.[2] After his work for the Reagan Administration, he worked for President George H.W. Bush for his campaign in the 1992 United States presidential election.[2] His position was director of media services on the 1992 Bush campaign.[3] Prior to his work on the Bush campaign, he served the United States House of Representatives as assistant director of the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association.[3]

Russia media consultant

After the fall of the Soviet Union, Caputo established residence in Russia in 1994.[3][2][4] He served as an adviser to Boris Yeltsin.[1] In his capacity of advising Yeltsin in 1995, he was employed with the United States Agency for International Development.[3][5][1] He served as president of The Florence Group from 1994 to 1999, and stated he "played a pivotal role in electing Boris Yeltsin to his second term as President of the Russian Federation."[6] He was employed by Moscow-headquartered subsidiary of Gazprom, Gazprom-Media.[7][5][4] Caputo was contracted for Gazprom in 2000 to perform employment for Russian leader Vladimir Putin.[3][5] His task was to increase the standing of the public relations value of Putin, specifically with regards to Putin's support level in the U.S.[7][5][4] He moved back from Russia to the U.S. in the year 2000.[2] After returning to the U.S., he was called by his former mentor Roger Stone who convinced him to move to Miami Beach, Florida, and then Caputo founded his media advising company Michael Caputo Public Relations.[2] Caputo moved back to Europe in 2007 while advising a politician's campaign for parliament in Ukraine.[2]

Paladino campaign manager

Caputo worked as the campaign manager for Carl Paladino in his 2010 bid for Governor of New York.[1][8] Caputo was profiled in a subject piece about him during the campaign in The New York Times; the paper said of his campaign strategy: "Michael R. Caputo's impish spirit and no-holds-barred campaign style have helped propel his boss, Carl P. Paladino, a relatively unknown real estate mogul from Buffalo, to the Republican nomination for New York governor".[1] Paladino was supported at the time by the Tea Party movement, and in an interview with The New York Times, his campaign manager embraced the outsider nature of their bid in the 2010 New York gubernatorial election: "This is a campaign of junkyard dogs, not pedigreed poodles. Carl knows the background of everyone who works for him. He knows that each of us comes to the campaign with warts. And he has his own warts. We don't hide anything."[8] Paladino explained his hiring choice of Caputo as campaign manager to The New York Times: "I'm facing some major demons here, and I needed someone who could go right back on top of them in a matter of minutes. You've got to let them know they are going to get punished."[1]

Trump communications adviser

Donald Trump hired Caputo in 2014 to launch an astroturfing campaign in support of his stalking-horse bid for the Buffalo Bills. Caputo established a shell organization named "12th Man Thunder" (later renamed "Bills Fan Thunder" after a trademark dispute with the Texas A&M Aggies football team) and hired a fake leader, amputee Chuck Sonntag, whom Trump and Caputo figured would earn sympathy. When Trump placed his bid and was no longer allowed to have ties to the organization, Caputo went fully rogue and launched a naked smear campaign against one of the other bidders, Jon Bon Jovi and Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment. The group's publicity stunts capitalized on already-simmering anti-Toronto sentiment, but it was ultimately a competitor to both bids, Buffalo Sabres owner and natural gas tycoon Terrence Pegula and his wife Kim Pegula, that bought the Bills franchise, grossly outbidding both Trump and Bon Jovi. Bills Fan Thunder remains in operation as a charity.[9]

In 2016, Caputo had offices of his company Michael Caputo Public Relations located in East Aurora, New York.[2] He additionally had workers in his employ located both in Miami Beach, Florida and Moscow, Russia.[2] During the 2016 New York Republican primary, Caputo became a political adviser to Trump in order to help him win the primary in that state.[4][2] At the time of his hiring he was employed as a commentator on a political talk program on WBEN AM radio.[2] In order to support Trump in New York, he joined forces with his former employer from the 2010 gubernatorial race, Carl Paladino.[2] While working on the Trump campaign, Caputo was placed in charge of communications for the candidate in New York.[5] Caputo resigned from the Trump campaign shortly after Corey Lewandowski was replaced as campaign manager by Paul Manafort.[6] He had tweeted in support of Lewandowski leaving, and in his resignation letter to Manafort said he regretted the statement on Twitter.[7][6] He was a senior adviser to Trump's political efforts November 2015 to June 2016.[10][11][6] After leaving, Caputo later maintained contacts with associates in the Trump Administration.[12] After reporting revealed Donald Trump's disclosure of classified information to Russia, Caputo told the Associated Press about leaks from within the Trump Administration to the media: "This has all the markings of a coordinated, silent coup."[12] Caputo said to USA Today that he attributed the leaks to disaffected members of the Stop Trump movement.[13] He called them "anti-Trump zealots".[13]

Due to his time working on the Trump campaign and the fact that he previously worked for politicians in Russia, Caputo was contacted by the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence on May 9, 2017, as part of their investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election.[10][6][11] The House Intelligence Committee requested Caputo come in and be interviewed voluntarily and submit to the Committee relevant documents associated with their investigation.[10][6][11] During a March 20, 2017 hearing, Representative Jackie Speier questioned FBI Director James Comey about Caputo, and cited employment with Gazprom and history in Ukraine.[10][6][11] Caputo worked with the House Intelligence Committee in order to acquiesce to their queries.[7][11] Posting to social media, Caputo denied ties to Russia while on the Trump campaign.[11] Caputo told the House Intelligence Committee: "The only time the President and I talked about Russia was in 2013, when he simply asked me in passing what it was like to live there in the context of a dinner conversation."[7][11] Caputo hired attorney Dennis Vacco to represent him during the investigation, and subsequently stated that he had liquidated his children's college funds to pay Vacco.[14]

Personal life

While working in Russia in the 1990s, Caputo met a Russian student studying astrophysics and they were married.[2][3] Caputo became a Catholic in 2000, and this religious change helped him find peace.[2] While advising in Kiev, Ukraine in 2007, Caputo met Maryna Ponomarenko, who became his second wife.[10][6][2] As of 2016, Caputo resided in East Aurora, New York with her and their three children.[2] Michael Caputo should go on Cum Town. />

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hernandez, Javier C. (September 24, 2010), "The Provocateur Loading Paladino's Slingshot", The New York Times, retrieved June 7, 2017
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Tan, Sandra (March 5, 2016), "The radical adventures of conservative radio host Mike Caputo", The Buffalo News, retrieved June 8, 2017
  3. ^ a b c d e f Miller, James (November 7, 2016), "Follow the Money: Trump and Russia: All the Mogul's Men", The Daily Beast, retrieved June 8, 2017
  4. ^ a b c d Nance, Malcolm (October 10, 2016), "4. Trump's Agents, Putin's Assets; The Kremlin Crew; The Americans in the Pocket", The Plot to Hack America: How Putin's Cyberspies and WikiLeaks Tried to Steal the 2016 Election, Skyhorse Publishing, ISBN 978-1-5107-2332-0
  5. ^ a b c d e Levintova, Hannah; Vicens, AJ; Dejeanjun, Ashley (June 1, 2017), "Hacker, Banker, Soldier, Spy: A Guide to the Key Players in the Trump-Russia Scandal", Mother Jones, retrieved June 8, 2017
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Longman, Martin (May 21, 2017), "Who is Michael Caputo and What Can He Tell Us? - The Russian connections keep piling up", Washington Monthly, retrieved June 8, 2017
  7. ^ a b c d e Stevenson, Peter W. (June 1, 2017), "Which Trump associates are being investigated by Congress? A running list.", The Washington Post, retrieved June 7, 2017
  8. ^ a b Barbaro, Michael (September 28, 2010), "Paladino Has Aides With Tainted Pasts", The New York Times, retrieved June 8, 2017
  9. ^ Schreckinger, Ben (October 26, 2017). Inside Donald Trump's Shady Scheme to Keep Jon Bon Jovi from Buying the Buffalo Bills. GQ. Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e Jacobs, Ben (May 21, 2017), "Former Trump adviser asked to testify to House committee on Russia", The Guardian, retrieved June 7, 2017
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Treyz, Catherine; Acosta, Jim (May 21, 2017), "House panel looks at Trump campaign communications adviser for Russia ties", CNN, retrieved June 7, 2017
  12. ^ a b "To Trump supporters, the real story is sabotage -- not Russian interference", CBS News, Associated Press, May 19, 2017, retrieved June 7, 2017
  13. ^ a b Johnson, Kevin; Jackson, David (May 17, 2017), "Analysis: 'You're fired' may backfire. Untethered James Comey now Trump's greatest threat", USA Today, retrieved June 7, 2017
  14. ^ Graham, Tim (July 16, 2017), "Michael Caputo emerges from high-stakes testimony on Capitol Hill", The Buffalo News, retrieved July 18, 2017

Further reading