
Lobbyist tied to pardon from Trump charged with attempted extortion
Key Takeaways
- Federal prosecutors charge lobbyist Joshua Nass with attempted extortion over $500,000 debt.
- Nass helped obtain a pardon for a client from Trump.
- He was arrested Friday outside his New York hotel.
Charge and arrest
Federal prosecutors charged a lobbyist with trying to extort a former client and his son to recover half a million dollars in debt, according to court filings.
“Federal prosecutors charged a lobbyist with trying to extort a former client and his son to recover half a million dollars in debt, according to court filings”
Joshua Nass, a lobbyist who worked to obtain a client’s pardon from President Donald Trump, was arrested Friday outside his hotel in New York on charges of attempted extortion.

Court appearance and bond
Nass, of South Carolina, appeared before a judge in federal court in Brooklyn on Saturday and was released on a $5 million bond.
He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Neither Nass nor his attorney could immediately be reached for comment.
Unknown victim; extortion plan
The FBI affidavit and court filings do not identify the name of the former client Nass allegedly tried to extort.
“Federal prosecutors charged a lobbyist with trying to extort a former client and his son to recover half a million dollars in debt, according to court filings”
According to an FBI affidavit, in January, Nass contacted an individual, who is cooperating with federal authorities, to threaten and physically harm a former client and the client’s son to recover $500,000 in owed fees.
Financial ties and extortion planning
Nass’ former client agreed to pay $600,000 for lobbying services.
The former client’s son transferred $100,000 but said he was unable to come up with the rest of the money.

According to reports filed under the Lobbying Disclosure Act, the only payment Nass received as a lobbyist in 2025 for $100,000 was from Joseph Schwartz, a former nursing home executive who was convicted of tax crimes and later pardoned by Trump.
Nass had been paid $100,000 to pursue clemency for Schwartz, who began serving his sentence in August before being pardoned by Trump in November.
Court filings, however, do not name Nass’ alleged victims.
In late January, Nass and the informant, who communicated in English and Russian, discussed approaching the former client’s son, according to text messages included in court filings.
Initially they discussed having the informant approach the former client’s son at his home to intimidate him into paying the debt.
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