Monterey Herald

NY prosecutor­s interview Cohen about Trump finances

- By Jim Mustian and Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK >> New York prosecutor­s conducted an hourslong interview Thursday of Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney, asking a range of questions about Trump’s business dealings, according to three people familiar with the meeting.

The interview focused in part on Trump’s relationsh­ip with Deutsche Bank, his biggest and longest standing creditor, according to the three people, who weren’t authorized to discuss the investigat­ion and spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity.

The interview, at least the second of Cohen by the Manhattan district attorney’s office, comes amid a long-running grand jury

investigat­ion into Trump’s business dealings. District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. has been waging a protracted legal battle to get access to the president’s tax records.

The U.S. Supreme Court expected to rule on is

Trump’s request for a stay and a further appeal after he leaves office Jan. 20.

The New York investigat­ion is one of several legal entangleme­nts that are likely to intensify as Trump loses power — and any immunity from prosecutio­n he might have as a sitting president — as he departs the White House.

The Manhattan-based grand jury has been continuing its work despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has curtailed many court operations.

The Republican president also faces a civil investigat­ion, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James into whether Trump’s company lied about the value of its assets to get loans or tax benefits. Cohen also is cooperatin­g with that inquiry.

He previously told Congress that Trump often inflated the value of his assets when dealing with lenders or potential business partners, but deflated them when it benefited him for tax purposes.

The White House declined to comment. A message seeking comment was sent to Cohen’s attorney.

Trump has repeatedly called the investigat­ions by Vance and James, both Democrats, a baseless political “witch hunt.”

Vance has declined to provide specific details about the investigat­ion, but pointed to news reports of what prosecutor­s described as “extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organizati­on” in court filings.

Among the reports Vance’s office referenced in court filings was a 2017 article about Ladder Capital, a commercial mortgage lender that made more than $250 million in loans to the Trump Organizati­on that were secured by Trump properties. Jack Weisselber­g, the son of Trump Organizati­on Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselber­g, is a director of Ladder Capital.

Subpoenas issued in the investigat­ion cover 11 entities engaged in business dealings as far away as Europe and Dubai, according to an appeals court judge speaking at a hearing on the matter.

Cohen, who is serving the remainder of a federal prison sentence on home confinemen­t, has been asked by investigat­ors to examine certain Trump Organizati­on documents and to provide other details about its corporate structure, the people familiar with the matter said. Cohen pleaded guilty to evading taxes, lying to Congress and facilitati­ng campaign finance crimes.

Germany-based Deutsche Bank continued to do business with Trump even after he defaulted in 2008 on a loan for his Chicago hotel and condo developmen­t. Trump sued the bank and others whom he blamed for his inability to repay.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On May 21, Michael Cohen arrives at his Manhattan apartment in New York after being furloughed from prison because of concerns over the coronaviru­s.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On May 21, Michael Cohen arrives at his Manhattan apartment in New York after being furloughed from prison because of concerns over the coronaviru­s.

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