Houston Chronicle

Trump’s lawyer sold his ‘insight’ about president to corporatio­ns

- By Jeff Horwitz, Catherine Lucey and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — Already under investigat­ion for a payment to a porn star, President Donald Trump’s longtime personal attorney is facing intensifyi­ng legal and ethical scrutiny for selling his Trump World experience and views at a hefty price to companies that sought “insight” into the new president.

One company, pharmaceut­ical giant Novartis, acknowledg­ed Wednesday it paid Michael Cohen $1.2 million for services, though they ended after a single meeting. Others, including some with major regulatory matters before the new administra­tion, acknowledg­ed payments totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars over at least several months.

Financial documents

The corporate ties could suggest Cohen was peddling his influence and profiting from his relationsh­ip with the president. They also raise questions about whether Trump knew about the arrangemen­t.

Cohen’s corporate ties were first revealed in a detailed report released by an attorney for pornograph­ic film actress Stormy Daniels. The report alleged that Cohen used a company he establishe­d weeks before the 2016 election to receive the payments from a variety of businesses — including $500,000 from one associated with a Russian billionair­e. Financial documents reviewed by the Associated Press appear to back up much of attorney Michael Avenatti’s report.

Cohen’s lawyers said late Wednesday that much of the informatio­n released by Avenatti was “completely inaccurate.”

The lawyers wrote that some of the informatio­n Avenatti published Tuesday did appear to come from Cohen’s actual bank records.

Three companies confirmed the payments, including Novartis and AT&T, both saying Cohen’s Essential Consultant­s was hired to help them understand the new president during the early days of the Trump administra­tion. Novartis said in a statement that it paid Cohen $100,000 a month for a yearlong contract, thinking the longtime New York legal “fixer” could advise on health care matters. After a single meeting they decided “not to engage further.”

Some of the companies that engaged Cohen also had contact with Trump personally. AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson met with him during the transition and has visited the White House. The current CEO of Novartis attended a dinner with Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, this year, though the company stressed that the agreement with Cohen’s company predated his time as CEO.

‘Sets off alarm bell’

Just what Cohen was selling was a key question Wednesday, particular­ly given that public records show he is not a registered lobbyist. Cohen could enter these relationsh­ips without violating federal lobbying laws if he did not seek to influence Trump on the companies’ behalf.

Public Citizen President Robert Weissman said that Cohen’s consulting work sounds more like pay-to-play lobbying.

“It stretches the imaginatio­n that the work was just for advice. There is no reason that he would have any blinding insights,” Weissman said. “Sending money to a shell company, instead of his business, that sets off some alarm bell. Nothing of this seems right.”

Some of the dealings have caught the attention of the special counsel investigat­ion into Russian meddling in the 2016 election. A spokesman for Novartis said the company was contacted in November by Robert Mueller’s office regarding the company’s agreement with Essential Consultant­s, which expired this year.

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