Associated Press/Pavel Golovkin
Carter Page, a former adviser to President Donald Trump's campaign, admitted he had contacts with the Russian ambassador at the center of the firestorm around the Trump administration's ties to Russia, after previously denying the meeting.
"I'm not going to deny that I talked with him," Page told MSNBC's Chris Hayes on Thursday evening, referring to Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. "Although, I will say that I never met him anywhere outside of Cleveland. Let's just say that much."
"I may have met him - possibly - it might have been in Cleveland," Page added, after more prodding from Hayes.
Kislyak was in Cleveland last July for an event pegged to the Republican National Convention, where reports have suggested he met with a host of Trump campaign advisers, including then-Sen. Jeff Sessions.
Page previously denied having any contact with Russian officials during the 2016 campaign in February.
Page, a former naval officer and an investment banker who worked on transactions with Gazprom, a Russian natural-gas company, was an early foreign-policy adviser to the Trump campaign during the presidential election.
"I have no comment about any meetings or discussions that may or may not have occurred at the off-the-record Global Partners in Diplomacy event in Cleveland as alleged by USA Today," Page told Business Insider.
USA Today first reported the meeting between Page and Kislyak on Thursday.
Getty Mario Tama
"I will reiterate that I never did anything improper in my activities related to Russia, both last year and throughout the quarter century that I have been traveling to that country," Page added.
Trump's administration has faced increased scrutiny over its ties to Russia, amid intelligence community conclusions that Russia interfered with the 2016 election.
Sessions, the attorney general, recused himself from Justice Department investigations related to the Trump campaign after reports revealed he did not disclose two meetings he held with Kislyak - the Russian ambassador -over the course of the presidential campaign.
The FBI is reportedly investigating Page's contacts with Russian officials during the 2016 campaign. Page wrote a letter to the Sessions-led Justice Department in February in which he accused the Clinton campaign of "hate crimes" and "human rights abuses" against him during the election, Business Insider's Natasha Bertrand reported.
Here's Page's full statement:
"I have no comment about any meetings or discussions that may or may not have occurred at the off-the-record Global Partners in Diplomacy event in Cleveland as alleged by USA Today. Although people in Washington frequently disregard such confidentiality rules as we have seen throughout recent weeks, these were not the standards and practices I learned while serving as an officer in the U.S. Navy. However, I will reiterate that I never did anything improper in my activities related to Russia, both last year and throughout the quarter century that I have been traveling to that country."
Natasha Bertrand contributed reporting.