Trump says he will not be hosting a party at the Trump Hotel for Election Night, citing D.C.’s pandemic restrictions.

Daniel X. O'Neil / Flickr

Twitter appearances aside, most people in Washington didn’t spend all day poring through the findings of Robert Mueller’s two-year investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election.

But we did. The report’s highlights are all over the internet, so we’ll stick with the background details that piqued our interest: The various D.C.-area locations that put in an appearance. Now, the next time you pass by the Westin in Old Town Alexandria, know that’s where Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort discussed a potential Russia-Ukraine peace deal with foreign officials. And next time you pass the Russian Embassy in Glover Park, remember that Trump national security advisor J.D. Gordon declined a very friendly invitation to tea with the Russian ambassador there.

Here’s a rundown of all the D.C.-area locations explicitly mentioned in the special counsel’s report:

The Trump International Hotel

This might be considered ground zero for the Russia Investigation. It was here that George Papadopoulos, the foreign policy advisor for the Trump Campaign from March 2016 to October 2016, informed the campaign’s foreign policy team that he had been in contact with people who could arrange a meeting between candidate Trump and Putin. According to the report, both then-U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions and candidate Trump were at this meeting. Papadopoulos recalled that Trump was “interested in and receptive to the idea of a meeting with Putin.” Papadopoulos left that meeting in Washington, D.C. and continued to try to build a relationship between Putin and candidate Trump. In September 2018, Papadopoulos was sentenced to 14 days in prison, one year of supervised release, and fined $9,500 after pleading guilty for lying to the FBI.

Westin Hotel, Old Town Alexandria

Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort told investigators that around the time of Trump’s inauguration in January 2017, he met with a Russian partner of his, Konstantin Kilimnik, along with the Ukrainian oligarch Serhiy Lyovochkin here. Manafort said that at the meeting, they discussed a peace plan for Ukraine and Russia, which have been in conflict since 2014. Kilimnik faces charges of obstruction of justice and conspiracy to obstruct, and he has not entered a plea with U.S. officials.

Four Seasons Hotel

In May 2016, the Center for the National Interest held an awards dinner at the Four Seasons Hotel in Georgetown. Then-Senator Jeff Sessions attended. A seating chart placed him next to  Kislyak, but Sessions did not recall seeing Kislyak at the event. Kislyak RSVP’d yes to the event. Of the four additional attendees investigators appear to have spoken with, three don’t remember seeing him there. One person said he may have seen Kislyak there. There are no photos of Kislyak at the event.

Center for National Interest

The Center for National Interest (CNI), which is located on Connecticut Avenue Northwest near the Farragut North metro, comes up numerous times in the report. CNI is a think tank that grew out of a center founded by Richard Nixon. According to the report, it has connections to the Russian government. The report says members of the Trump campaign interacted with CNI and its president and CEO Dimitri Simes several times.

The Mayflower Hotel in 2008 Jacquelyn Martin / AP Photo

The Mayflower Hotel

The Center for National Interest’s publication, the National Interest, hosted an event here in April 2016. Then-candidate Trump gave a speech. Investigators found evidence that Trump was introduced to then-Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak at the event, but there was no evidence that they had a conversation. At the same event, Jared Kushner and Kislyak reportedly “shook hands and chatted for a minute or two.” Kushner remembers Kislyak telling him, “We like what your candidate is saying … it’s refreshing.”

Investigators also found some evidence that Sessions and Kislyak may have met briefly at this same event, but Sessions told investigators he did not remember the conversation.

The Russian Embassy

Trump’s National Security Advisor J.D. Gordon was invited to “breakfast/tea” at the Russian Embassy, which is located on Wisconsin Ave Northwest in Glover Park, back in August 2016. As it turns out, Gordon couldn’t make it: He wrote back saying the campaign was “busily knocking down a constant stream of false media stories while also preparing for the first debate with HRC. Hope to take a raincheck for another time when things quiet down a bit.”

The White House

Of course, this is where President Trump, a key figure in the investigation, lives and works. So it was, for example, the location of an Oval Office meeting in which Trump met one-on-one with former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and criticized Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation. But the location of The White House was also mentioned in the report in a different context: At one point, the Internet Research Agency, often referred to as a Russian “troll farm” that directed the mass distribution of pro-Kremlin propaganda on social media, also hired people in the U.S. in real life. According to the report, “In May 2016, IRA employees, claiming to be U.S. social activists and administrators of Facebook groups, recruited U.S. persons to hold signs (including one in front of the White House).” The signs celebrated the 55th birthday of Russian businessman Yevgeny Viktorovich Prigozhin.

Trump National Golf Club

According to the report, Trump expressed repeated concern to various advisors that the appointment of Mueller as special counsel represented a conflict of interest. Trump said the fact that Mueller had interviewed for the position of FBI Director was a conflict. He also said the fact that Mueller had worked for a law firm that represented people affiliated with him was a conflict. And finally, he cited the fact that Mueller had disputed membership fees of a Trump-owned golf course as a conflict.

The golf course Trump was referring to was the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va. In October 2011, Mueller canceled his family’s membership with the club because his family lived in DC and was “unable to make full use of the club.” Mueller asked about a partial refund to his membership initiation fee and was told by the club that they would be added to a refund waitlist.

This story originally appeared on WAMU.