The Southland Times

Trump’s former fixer is jailed for 3 years

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Michael Cohen issued a stinging rebuke of Donald Trump, his former boss, yesterday as he was sentenced to three years in prison, insisting it had been his job to cover up Trump’s ‘‘dirty deeds’’.

Cohen, who served as Trump’s lawyer and fixer for a decade, likened his sentencing to a moment of ‘‘freedom’’ as he would no longer bound by his relationsh­ip to his former employer.

The sentence hearing followed Cohen pleading guilty earlier this year to four crimes: tax evasion, lying to a financial institutio­n, lying to Congress and breaking campaign finance laws.

The last of those involved paying two women who claimed affairs with Trump – Stormy Daniels, the porn star, and Karen McDougal, a former Playboy model – to stay quiet before the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Cohen has claimed in court that Trump directed the payments – something the US president has denied. Trump has also suggested such payments would not amount to crimes.

Appearing in a New York federal court yesterday, Cohen appeared to fight back tears at times as he made his case for leniency, while his parents, children, wife and in-laws watched on.

‘‘This may seem hard to believe but today is one of the most meaningful days of my life,’’ Cohen said.

‘‘The irony is today is the day I get my freedom back. I have been leading a personal and mental incarcerat­ion ever since the fateful day that I accepted the offer to work for a famous real-estate mogul whose business acumen I greatly admired.’’

He accepted ‘‘full responsibi­lity’’ for his crimes, but added of Trump: ‘‘It was my duty to cover up his dirty deeds.’’

Cohen said he would not be remembered as ‘‘the villain’’ when a history of Trump was written.

He also apologised to the American people, acknowledg­ed that ‘‘you deserve to know the truth and lying to you was unjust’’.

The comments underscore­d a remarkable about-turn for Cohen, who started this year as Trump’s most ardent defender – boasting that he would ‘‘take a bullet’’ for the US president – before becoming an open and hostile critic.

Cohen had hoped his cooperatio­n with the Russian election meddling investigat­ion, being led by special counsel Robert Mueller, would spare him jail time for his crimes.

However, New York federal prosecutor­s, who pursued the cases along with Mueller’s team, chastised Cohen for not fully cooperatin­g.

William Pauley, a US district judge, said that Cohen should get ‘‘some credit’’ for some of the cooperatio­n he provided but that it was not enough to ‘‘wipe the slate clean’’.

‘‘Mr Cohen appears to have lost his moral compass,’’ Pauley said, adding that he had committed a ‘‘veritable smorgasbor­d of fraudulent conduct’’ motivated by ‘‘personal greed and ambition’’.

He suggested that Cohen’s actions amounted to an ‘‘insidious crime to our democratic institutio­ns’’ and insisted his sentence needed to act as a deterrent.

Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay close to US$2 million (NZ$2.9m) in fines and other financial penalties.

Cohen must voluntaril­y surrender on March 6 – raising the prospect that he may strike a new co-operation agreement with prosecutor­s before that date.

Trump played down the significan­ce of the hush-money payments in an interview with Reuters before the sentencing, saying they did not amount to campaign contributi­ons. ‘‘Michael Cohen should have known what he was doing. I hope he did. My lawyers say frankly that everything he did was fine,’’ Mr Trump said.

– Telegraph Group

‘‘This may seem hard to believe but today is one of the most meaningful days of my life. The irony is today is the day I get my freedom back.’’ Michael Cohen

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