Manawatu Standard

Royal wedding will be official-free zone

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UNITED STATES: Federal prosecutor­s investigat­ing President Donald Trump’s personal attorney, Michael Cohen, are seeking records related to two women who received payments in 2016 after alleging affairs with Trump years ago – adult film star Stormy Daniels and ex-playboy model Karen Mcdougal, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The interest in both Daniels and Mcdougal indicates that federal investigat­ors are trying to determine whether there was a broader pattern or strategy among Trump associates to buy the silence of women whose accounts could harm the president’s electoral chances, and whether any crimes were committed in doing so, one of those people said.

Investigat­ors are also seeking all communicat­ions about Daniels and Mcdougal between Cohen, David Pecker – a personal friend of Trump and chief executive of American Media Inc, which publishes the National Enquirer – and Dylan Howard, the chief content officer of American Media.

Daniels is co-operating with federal prosecutor­s, according to a source familiar with the investigat­ion.

The high stakes of the case were underscore­d by the involvemen­t of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who approved the move to seek a search warrant for Cohen’s records, which included raids on Tuesday on his home and office, according to two people with knowledge of the investigat­ion.

The raids infuriated Trump, who was left ‘‘stunned’’ and ‘‘livid’’, according to an outside adviser in frequent touch with the White House.

Trump privately continued to gripe yesterday about Rosenstein, who is also overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, according to people familiar with the situation.

Mcdougal has said she had a 10-month relationsh­ip with Trump beginning in 2006 and then sold her story to American Media for US$150,000 about three months before the 2016 election. No story on Mcdougal appeared.

Several legal experts noted that public statements by Cohen and Trump that the president was unaware of the payment may have significan­tly aided federal prosecutor­s’ legal arguments to justify searching the lawyer’s office, home and hotel room. If both the lawyer and the client insisted Trump had no idea that Cohen had made the payment, they could not assert that those activities were protected by attorney-client privilege, they said.

On Capitol Hill, Republican­s were divided over Trump’s implicit threats to possibly fire Mueller, while legislatio­n to protect the prosecutor remained stalled.

Senate judiciary committee chairman Charles Grassley, of Iowa, said it would be ‘‘suicide’’ for the president to move to remove Mueller as special counsel.

– Washington Post BRITAIN: US President Donald Trump will not be attending Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s wedding. But neither, for that matter, will Barack Obama, or even Theresa May.

The couple have decided to make next month’s wedding a politician-free zone, with no official guests invited at all. Instead, they have opted for a low-key approach, only inviting people they have a direct relationsh­ip with. That means no first ministers, no ambassador­s, and no foreign leaders.

Their decision is based partly on the fact that Harry is not in the direct line of succession to the British throne – he will be sixth in line after the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s third child.

Their wedding will also be much smaller than the Cambridges’. Only 600 guests are being invited to St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle on May 19, whereas 1900 people were invited to the Cambridges’ wedding at Westminste­r Abbey in 2011.

A Kensington Palace spokesman said: ‘‘It has been decided that an official list of political leaders – both UK and internatio­nal – is not required for Prince Harry and Ms Markle’s wedding. Her Majesty’s government was consulted on this decision, which was taken by the royal household.’’

The Obamas have become friends of Harry, but a decision to invite them and not Trump could have gone down badly.

If any foreign royals are invited, it will be limited to those who are friends of Harry.

Kensington Palace officials yesterday named some of the 1200 members of the public who have been told they will be among the 2640 people invited to the grounds of Windsor Castle for the big event.

The list includes Phillip Gillespie, a soldier from Northern Ireland who lost his leg in combat in Afghanista­n, where Harry also served, and several people who have founded charities.

Also on the list is Amelia Thompson, 12, who was caught up in the suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester that killed 22 people last year. She will be taking the grandmothe­r of a 15-year-old who died in the attack as her guest.

– The Times, AP

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Michael Cohen

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