Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime lawyer, sentenced to 3 years in prison
NEW YORK – A federal judge sentenced Michael Cohen, the president’s longtime lawyer and self-described fixer, to three years in prison on Wednesday for his role in a series of criminal schemes, some of which Cohen tearfully blamed on “blind loyalty to Donald Trump.”
“Mr. Cohen pleaded guilty to a veritable smorgasbord of illegal conduct,” U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III said. “Each of the crimes involved deception, and each appears to have been motivated by personal gain and ambition.”
Cohen, once among Trump’s most aggressive and loyal acolytes, had asked to be spared prison time, and he told the judge that he’s tried to make amends by cooperating with law enforcement.
“My departure as a loyal soldier for the president bears a very hefty price,” he said in a tearful speech. “My weakness can be characterized as a blind loyalty to Donald Trump.”
The sentence fell short of the four years recommended by prosecutors in New York, but it still shook Cohen and members of his family who crowded into the packed courtroom. While Pauley read the sentence, Cohen shook his head, his wife clutched their son, and their daughter trembled with violent sobs. Cohen is scheduled to report to federal prison in upstate New York on March 6.
Cohen pleaded guilty to eight criminal charges in August, including two violations of campaign finance law that involved arranging hush money payments shortly before the 2016 presidential election – at Trump’s behest, prosecutors and Cohen said – to two women who had claimed they had affairs with Trump years ago. The president has denied having the affairs.
Cohen later pleaded guilty to a ninth charge, in a separate case, for lying to two congressional committees last year about a proposed Moscow hotel and condominium project that Trump had pursued during the campaign. It is one of several episodes that special counsel Robert S. Mueller III is scrutinizing in his investigation into possible conspiracy between Trump’s team and Russian authorities.
In a sentencing memo last week, Mueller said Cohen has provided “useful information concerning certain discrete Russia-related matters core to (the special counsel) investigation.”
Cohen’s sentence is significantly harsher than most others who have become ensnared in the Russia investigation. George Papadopoulos, a former campaign foreign policy adviser, served less than two weeks behind bars for lying about his overseas contacts, and prosecutors have not recommended any prison time for Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser who lied about his conversations with the Russian ambassador during the presidential transition.
Unlike those two men, Cohen admitted to a wide array of crimes. Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, could also face a long prison term when he’s sentenced early next year. He’s been convicted on eight counts of tax evasion and bank fraud related to his previous work as a political consultant in Ukraine, and a plea deal with Mueller’s office collapsed when prosecutors accused him of continuing to lie to them.
Cohen was once among Trump’s closest aides, working directly for him and serving as an executive vice president of the Trump Organization, the family’s private holding company for business ventures around the globe.
The ambitious, unscrupulous 52-year-old lawyer and businessman expected to cash in on the unexpected election of his longtime client. In the months after Trump’s victory in the 2016 election, Cohen earned millions of dollars by pitching himself as an adviser to blue-chip companies looking for connections to the new president.
But Cohen’s high-flying life unraveled after FBI agents in April searched his home, office, hotel room and safety deposit box, seizing computers, records and other evidence.
In addition to the two campaign finance violations, Cohen pleaded guilty in August to six counts of tax evasion and bank fraud involving his New York taxi business and real estate. The U.S. attorney in Manhattan brought the charges.
Cohen returned to federal court in November to plead guilty to lying to Congress, admitting that he had pursued the Trump Tower Moscow deal until after Trump had clinched the Republican nomination, far longer that he had previously admitted.