Senior Advisor Jared Kushner( C) arrives with lawyer Abbe Lowell( L) for a meeting with the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill July 25, 2017 in Washington, DC. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP via Getty Images The US Department of Justice analyse an advocate for Jared Kushner in connection with an alleged bribery-for-pardon scheme, The New York Times reported. As Business Insider reported, a US judge liberated reports this week showing that federal examiners expressing concern about an alleged "bribery conspiracy scheme" to obtain a presidential forgivenes. Accordance to The Times' reporting, the suspected scheme involved a billionaire real estate developer, Sanford Diller, who sought to secure clemency for a male named Hugh Baras, who had been convicted of tax evasion. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more narratives. A billionaire real estate developer recruited an attorney for Jared Kushner and a fundraiser for President Donald Trump in a suspected scheme to obtain a presidential pardon via bribery, The New York Times reported under Thursday.Earlier this week, a federal magistrate liberated reports demonstrating that the Department of Justice was investigating a "bribery conspiracy scheme" this past summer. The calls of the suspects were redacted and no one has been charged with a crime.The status of the investigation is unknown.In a statement on Wednesday, a DOJ official told Business Insider that "No government official was or is currently a topic or target of the investigation disclosed in this filing."According to The Times, the investigation began after a billionaire, Sanford Diller, recruited the help of Abbe Lowell, an attorney for the president's son-in-law, and Elliott Broidy, a Trump campaign fundraiser. Diller was seeking clemency for a man, Hugh Baras, who had been convicted of tax evasion and Social Security fraud, the paper reported.Diller died in February 2018, "and there is no evidence that the effort continued after his death, " The Times said.Court documents suggested the effort, which included an appeal to the White House Counsel's Office, included an give of a "substantial political contribution" in exchange for a pardon.An attorney for Lowell, however, told The Times that no bribe was ever paid. Baras has not received clemency, the Times noted. An attorney for Baras told The Times that he was not representing him "for the purposes of a pardon." In 2017, Lowell stimulated headlines after falling for a prankster imitating his patron, Jared Kushner. In an email exchange, Lowell offered the faux-Kushner advice on how to abide by laws governing official correspondence in his role as a White House advisor.Have a report tip-off? Email this reporter: cdavis @insider. comRead the original article on Business Insider Read more: feedproxy.google.com