The Daily Courier

Trump tape a turning point in legal game of cat-and-mouse

- By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The sudden public airing of Donald Trump talking about paying for a Playboy model’s silence marks a turning point in the legal game of cat-and-mouse between the president and the lawyer who once promised to take a bullet for Trump but now seems out to save himself.

The feud between Trump and his onetime legal “fixer,” Michael Cohen, escalated when an audio recording of their 2016 pre-election conversati­on was released Tuesday by Cohen, prompting Trump to tweet Wednesday: “What kind of a lawyer would tape a client? So sad!”

As the two sides battled over the exact meaning of the sometimes-garbled words on the recording, it was clear that the tape could be just an opening volley. At least a dozen more recordings were seized from Cohen’s office as well as hundreds of thousands of documents.

The tape, made just weeks before the 2016 election, appears to undermine Trump’s contention that he was not aware of a payment to former Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal, who has alleged she had an affair with the married future president.

That raises questions about possible campaign finance violations. It shows Cohen advising Trump on campaign matters, and that could be of interest to investigat­ors looking into whether the lawyer violated election laws by orchestrat­ing hush money payouts.

Cohen says on the tape he’s already spoken with the Trump Organizati­on’s finance chief, Allen Weisselber­g, on “how to set the whole thing up.” Weisselber­g’s involvemen­t has led to speculatio­n about whether Trump’s private business tried to protect his campaign.

Trump’s lawyers say the payments were never made.

The tape’s revelation­s also mark a new chapter for Cohen, who, as he mulls co-operating with federal prosecutor­s and perhaps special counsel Robert Mueller, is viewed by many in Trump’s orbit as the greatest threat to the former businessma­n’s presidency.

Cohen rose through the ranks of the Trump Organizati­on by mimicking his boss’ style in handling his personal and political problems. Now he and his own attorney, former Clinton lawyer Lanny Davis, are taking another page from the Trump playbook — fighting a legal battle in the court of public opinion.

With his apartment under constructi­on after a pipe burst, Cohen has been holed up in a Midtown Manhattan hotel. From that luxurious bunker, Cohen has grown increasing­ly concerned that his relationsh­ip with the president has fractured beyond repair, according to two people familiar with his views but not authorized to discuss them publicly.

Cohen, who would make bad stories disappear and travel the globe to make deals for the Trump Organizati­on, now feels increasing­ly isolated and burned by the attacks against him by Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and by the president’s efforts to play down his former fixer’s role.

And when the president’s legal team waived attorney-client privilege, prompting Giuliani to declare that the tape was “exculpator­y” for Trump, Cohen’s team moved to release it, believing it backed up his own version of events, the people said. The attorney told confidants that he was tired of being a punching bag and wanted to try to seize control of the story. The meaning of the tape is up for debate. Days before the recording, American Media Inc., which owns the National Enquirer, paid $150,000 to McDougal for the rights to her story about the alleged 2006 affair. She later sued, claiming that AMI paid for the story with the intention of burying it to protect Trump. AMI president David Pecker is a close friend of the president.

Cohen is heard on the tape discussing AMI’s payment, and says of “David” that “I’ll have to pay him something.”

The audio is muffled but Trump can be heard saying something about “cash,” and then something about paying by cheque. Giuliani insists Trump says, “Don’t pay with cash.”

But Davis, Cohen’s attorney, maintains that Trump’s reference to “cash” is damaging. “The only people who use cash are drug dealers and mobsters,” he told CNN. In another twist in a tale full of them, Davis himself had previously worked with AMI and moved to squash unflatteri­ng stories about the company. He did not return calls for comment Wednesday.

Whichever account is accurate, the tape appears to bring limited additional legal exposure to the president himself. But the revelation of the audio on prime-time television, complete with exaggerate­d appeals by Davis to Trump’s supporters to listen to the president’s comments, was designed to impeach the credibilit­y of the president and his leading lawyer.

Trump, for his part, weighed in on Twitter. “Why was the tape so abruptly terminated (cut) while I was presumably saying positive things?” he tweeted. “I hear there are other clients and many reporters that are taped — can this be so? Too bad!”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Michael Cohen walks down the sidewalk in New York. Two months before the 2016 election, Donald Trump and his former lawyer Cohen discussed plans to pay for a former Playboy model’s story of an alleged affair, according to a secretly recorded tape of...
The Associated Press Michael Cohen walks down the sidewalk in New York. Two months before the 2016 election, Donald Trump and his former lawyer Cohen discussed plans to pay for a former Playboy model’s story of an alleged affair, according to a secretly recorded tape of...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada