Chicago Sun-Times

Experts say feds unlikely to pursue Stormy Daniels payoff

- Fredreka Schouten

WASHINGTON – A presidenti­al candidate is accused of arranging hush money to conceal amistress in a sensationa­l story ripped straight from the tabloids. Sound familiar? Six years ago, federal prosecutor­s put two- time Democratic presidenti­al contender John Edwards on trial for just that and ended up failing to convict the North Carolina politician. Now, the watchdog group Common Cause wants the Justice Department, the Federal Election Commission and Congress to investigat­e a $ 130,000 payment that President Trump’s lawyer is alleged to have arranged weeks before the 2016 election for a former porn actress in an attempt to cover up her purported affair with Trump.

Campaign finance experts say these cases are tricky, and Washington politics — the Justice Department, the Federal Election Commission and Congress all are controlled by the president’s party— seem likely to doom any inquiry into whether federal laws were violated.

“I have real doubts that the Department of Justice has the independen­ce and the fortitude to go after this,” said Peter Zeidenberg, a prosecutor in the Justice Department under George W. Bush.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ decision to recuse himself froma federal investigat­ion into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government in the 2016 election already has caused a rift in his relationsh­ip with Trump.

“I think Jeff Sessions is scared to death about losing his job,” Zeidenberg said. “He’s trying to curry favor with the president at every turn, and I think that he would think that this a bridge too far” to investigat­e.

In its complaints to the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission ( FEC), Common Cause argues that the alleged payment to Stephanie Clifford, whose stage name is Stormy Daniels, likely violated federal campaign finance laws as an unreported, in- kind donation to Trump’s campaign.

Campaign contributi­on limits in effect during the 2016 election capped direct donations to a candidate at $ 2,700. In addition, corporatio­ns are prohibited from giving campaign donations to congressio­nal and presidenti­al candidates.

On Tuesday, Common Cause also asked the House and Senate Judiciary committees to take up the matter.

Justice Department officials did not immediatel­y respond Tuesday to an inquiry about the Common Cause request. An FEC spokesman said officials cannot comment on complaints.

Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime lawyer identified by The Wall Street

Journal as having arranged the payment to the actress through a limited liability company, said the complaints lack merit.

“The Common Cause complaint is baseless along with the allegation that President Trump filed a false report to the F. E. C.,” Cohen said in an email.

He has said the president “vehemently denies” a relationsh­ip with Daniels. Cohen also released a statement from Daniels denying an affair or the receipt of a payoff from Trump.

The Journal unearthed a corporate document showing that Cohen created a limited liability company, Essential Consultant­s LLC, in Delaware on Oct. 17, 2016, less than amonth before the election. A bank account linked to that company sent the payment to the client- trust account of Daniels’ attorney, the newspaper reported.

Last week, In Touch Weekly ran an interview with Daniels from 2011 that described an affair with Trump that began in 2006. The Wall Street Journal reported that the alleged payment to Daniels came in October 2016.

“The timing of this payment is strong evidence that this was payment for the purpose of influencin­g an election,” said Paul Ryan of Common Cause.

Kenneth Gross, a campaign finance lawyer, said Tuesday: “These are fact sensitive cases that are tough to prove. You have to get to the bottom of where the money came from and what was the intent of the payment.”

 ?? 2008 USA TODAY PHOTO ?? Stormy Daniels is at the center of a formal complaint.
2008 USA TODAY PHOTO Stormy Daniels is at the center of a formal complaint.

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