The Star Malaysia

Tell-all memoir casts Cohen as ‘star witness’ against president

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Michael Cohen’s tellall memoir makes the case that President Donald Trump is “guilty of the same crimes” that landed his former fixer in federal prison, offering a blow-by-blow account of Trump’s alleged role in a hush money scandal that once overshadow­ed his presidency.

Of all the crises Cohen confronted working for Trump, none proved as vexing as the porn actress Stormy Daniels and her claims of an extramarit­al affair with Trump, Cohen writes in Disloyal: The True Story of the Former Personal Attorney to President Donald J. Trump.

Trump, despite his later protestati­ons, green-lighted the US$130,000 payment to silence Daniels ahead of the 2016 election, reasoning he would “have to pay” his wife a far greater sum if the affair ever became known, Cohen writes, adding the president later reimbursed him with “fake legal fees.”

“It never pays to settle these things, but many, many friends have advised me to pay,” Trump said, according to Cohen.

“If it comes out, I’m not sure how it would play with my supporters. But I bet they’d think it’s cool that I slept with a porn star.”

The White House called Cohen’s memoir “fan fiction”.

“He readily admits to lying routinely but expects people to believe him now so that he can make money from book sales,” White House spokespers­on Brian Morgenster­n said in a statement.

“It’s unfortunat­e that the media is exploiting this sad and desperate man to attack President Trump.”

The Associated Press obtained an early copy of the book, which is scheduled to be released tomorrow.

Cohen, who pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations and other crimes, including lying to Congress, calls himself the “star witness” of a hush-money conspiracy that still could culminate in charges for Trump after he leaves office.

He described his new book as a “fundamenta­l piece of evidence” of the president’s guilt.

Cohen’s allegation­s – his most detailed to date – are part of an unsparing and deeply personal putdown of Trump.

Cohen assails Trump as an “organised crime don” and “master manipulato­r,” but allows that he saw much of himself in a man he once considered a father figure.

“I care for Donald Trump, even to this day,” Cohen writes, “and I had and still have a lot of affection for him.”

Cohen remains at a loss to explain his unswerving allegiance to a cutthroat businessma­n who abandoned him at the most vulnerable point in his life.

He likens his fealty to Trump to a mental illness and said he thought of himself as acting like a drug user in need of an interventi­on. — AP

It’s unfortunat­e that the media is exploiting this sad and desperate man to attack President Trump.

Brian Morgenster­n

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