In an
OCCRP investigation, Frohnmaier was listed as a recipient of financial benefits of Russia's International Agency for Current Policy. German journalist introduced Frohnmaier to a Russian government network in 2015, seeing potential in him. By 2016, Frohnmaier was referred to as "our candidate" by Kremlin-linked figures, and he was invited to a public Russian economic forum in
Crimea, which
Russia had occupied in March 2014. A 2019 investigation revealed that Russian state officials considered backing Frohnmaier in the
2017 Bundestag election, with documents suggesting he would push pro-Russian, anti-American policies. The document notes that if he is elected, Russia would have "our own, completely controlled deputy in the Bundestag". One document, written by Ochsenreiter, proposed a campaign strategy centred on "German sovereignty" and "good relations with Russia." Both material and media support was recommended to help him get elected. Frohnmaier, when asked about the documents by
Tagesschau, denied knowing about the documents or who authored them, insisting they did not prove any complicity by him. There was no evidence that the proposed support was put into practice. Frohnmaier later hired Ochsenreiter as a parliamentary assistant in 2018. Following a
false flag arson attack in Ukraine, in January 2019 he dismissed as his employee after accusations that Ochsenreiter was the financier of the arsonists. == Personal life ==