Albuquerque Journal

Cohen’s latest confession just tip of lying iceberg

- KATHLEEN PARKER Columnist

WASHINGTON — Michael Cohen’s guilty plea Nov. 29 that he lied to Congress about Donald Trump’s interests in building a Moscow tower comes as little surprise — everyone attached to this administra­tion seems to lie with ease. And yet it’s explosive news in the carnival-kingdom of liars, crooks and thieves.

Cohen, who probably knows more than anyone about Trump’s business dealings — excepting, perhaps, special counsel Robert Mueller — admitted falsely claiming efforts to build Trump Tower Moscow ended in January 2016 ... negotiatio­ns continued through mid-June . ...

What’s a few months, you say? But, of course, Trump would want to expand his real estate empire to Russia, as he reportedly has been trying to do for 30 years. As for Trump’s lying to the American people, we all know how little this matters to the Republican Party base. Simply put, they don’t care. The Don’s a tycoon, after all — a mogul, a celebrity, a really big deal, let me tell you. Besides, they would contend, little white lies never hurt anybody. Impervious as Trump loyalists are to the behavior of sewer rats, nothing Trump does — including, theoretica­lly, shooting someone on Fifth Avenue ... — seems to threaten the moral fibers of the Republican tapestry.

But the littlest of lies can wreak havoc. Just ask Bill Clinton. And Richard Nixon. And Cohen and Paul Manafort, former Trump campaign chairman, who recently ended his plea relationsh­ip with Mueller. Trump’s lies — in the thousands according to The Washington Post’s Fact Checker — haven’t hurt him enough to perp-walk him out of the White House, but the night is young. Indeed, the president’s tangerine-colored, Teflon-coated, trickydick­y, slick-willie ways just might be running out of legs.

With Cohen’s plea, the president secured a position heretofore reserved for others: He’s now officially a person of interest and even has a legal code name — Individual 1. Suffice to say, it could have been much worse. But what a lovely gesture from the FBI — providing a moniker better suited to the subject than “president.”

Needless to say, Individual 1, or I-1 for short, has accused Cohen of lying to spare himself. So many pants; so many fires. So grows the nose once the first lie is told. When everybody’s a liar, is Lady Justice left to weigh whose lies are most credible? Perhaps this is what’s taking Mueller so long to create a report. But the number of Trump associates who’ve left the swamp to sing for Mueller seems by now to outnumber those left for Trump to fire. Surely, a prepondera­nce of evidence can’t be far off.

In the meantime, Trump has created a path through this byzantine labyrinth of deceit and betrayal by dropping crumbs of doubt to show the way. Each crumb correspond­s to what and whom he considers a threat. For example, Trump detested and, ultimately, fired Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from overseeing the Russia investigat­ion. Obviously, he had wanted Sessions to serve as soldier, spy, tinker — and to tailor things to suit the president. Forgive me if this is too easy.

For nearly two years, Trump has attacked the FBI and the special counsel. An innocent man need attack no one. From early in his campaign, while privy to ongoing business negotiatio­ns with Russia, he was touting Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russia generally. Just hours after Cohen’s plea, Trump canceled his meeting with Putin at the G-20 in Argentina.

One may read the crumbs as one wishes, but facts don’t lie — and them’s the facts. Even though most legal experts see no grounds for criminal charges — yet, it’s clear that Trump — again — lied to the American people and pursued a course he hoped would benefit him personally, contra his America-first trope. Emails from this same period show Cohen sought a financial endorsemen­t from Russia for a Trump Tower project. Meanwhile, Putin was saying flattering things about Trump.

Perhaps most telling, I-1 has strategica­lly sown seeds of doubt in American institutio­ns, especially the justice system, while making himself potentiall­y vulnerable with our chief geopolitic­al foe H/T Sen. Mitt Romney. Apparently, Trump would rather supporters lose faith in their country than in the man they elected to disrupt it. If that’s not technicall­y a crime, it is surely criminal.

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