Lethbridge Herald

Trumpfires­back atformerla­wyer

- Zeke Miller, Catherine Lucey and Ken Thomas THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

President Donald Trump accused his former lawyer Michael Cohen of lying under pressure of prosecutio­n Wednesday as his White House grappled with allegation­s that the president had orchestrat­ed a campaign coverup to buy the silence of two women who claimed he had affairs with them.

Confrontin­g mounting legal and political threats, Trump took to Twitter to accuse Cohen of making up “stories in order to get a ‘deal’” from federal prosecutor­s. Cohen pleaded guilty Tuesday to eight charges, including campaign finance violations that he said he carried out in co-ordination with Trump. Behind closed doors, Trump expressed worry and frustratio­n that a man intimately familiar with his political, personal and business dealings for more than a decade had turned on him.

Yet his White House signalled no clear strategy for managing the fallout. At a White House briefing, press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders insisted at least seven times that Trump had done nothing wrong and was not the subject of criminal charges. She referred substantiv­e questions to the president’s personal counsel Rudy Giuliani, who was at a golf course in Scotland. Outside allies of the White House said they had received little guidance on how to respond to the events in their appearance­s on cable news. And it was not clear the West Wing was assembling any kind of co-ordinated response.

Trump himself publicly denied wrongdoing, sitting down with his favoured program “Fox & Friends” for an interview set to air today. In the interview, he argued, incorrectl­y, that the hush-money payouts weren’t “even a campaign violation” because he subsequent­ly reimbursed Cohen for the payments personally instead of with campaign funds. Federal law restricts how much individual­s can donate to a campaign, bars corporatio­ns from making direct contributi­ons and requires the disclosure of transactio­ns.

Cohen had said Tuesday he secretly used shell companies to make payments used to silence former Playboy model Karen McDougal and adult-film actress Stormy Daniels for the purpose of influencin­g the 2016 election.

Trump has insisted that he only found out about the payments after they were made, despite the release of a September 2016 taped conversati­on in which Trump and Cohen can be heard discussing a deal to pay McDougal for her story of a 2006 affair she says she had with Trump.

The White House denied the president had lied, with Sanders calling the assertion “ridiculous.” Yet she offered no explanatio­n for Trump’s shifting accounts.

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