NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - A New Jersey man who pleaded guilty to helping funnel an $80,000 campaign contribution from a foreign source to a fundraising committee for former President Barack Obama was sentenced to a year of probation Thursday.
Bilal Shehu, of Paramus, was sentenced in federal court in Newark. The U.S. citizen of Albanian origin previously admitted sending the money so the person could attend an event in San Francisco in October 2012.
U.S. law prohibits foreign nationals from making contributions to presidential campaigns.
Albania’s main opposition Democratic Party made a criminal complaint in July against Prime Minister Edi Rama, saying he was the source of the money, used to buy two tickets for a $40,000-a-head fundraiser.
Rama’s name was not mentioned in the case, but U.S. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican from California, called for a Justice Department investigation into Rama coming to the event with Shehu.
Rama wasn’t allowed into the event, but he was able to pose with Obama for a photo. Rama proudly used the picture at the time to show his affinity to Obama, only months before the parliamentary elections that brought his Socialist Party to power.
Rama has denied taking part in “any of President Obama’s electoral meetings” or that he paid for tickets to the event, although he acknowledged meeting Shehu as “a member of the Albanian community in New York.”
The New Jersey U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a statement that no one from the fundraising committee is accused of wrongdoing, and the committee has fully cooperated with the investigation.
A Florida man who also pleaded guilty in the scheme will be sentenced Feb. 14.
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