New York Daily News

TRUMP’S LAWYER ADMITS PORN PAYOUT

Don att’y: No help in hushing Stormy

- BY JESSICA CHIA, CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T and JANON FISHER

PRESIDENT TRUMP’S personal lawyer said that he paid porn star Stormy Daniels $130,000 in hush money out of his own pocket claiming no one in the President’s camp was involved.

“Neither the Trump Organizati­on nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transactio­n with (Stormy Daniels), and neither reimbursed me for the payment, either directly or indirectly,” attorney Michael Cohen said.

Despite the claim that he acted independen­tly of the President, good-government group Common Cause contends the payoff still violates federal election law.

The X-rated film star, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, claimed she had sex with Trump in 2006 after meeting him at a celebrity golf tournament, In Touch magazine reported.

Daniels, who first starred in “Big Breasted Goddesses of Las Vegas” and made a cameo in “The 40-Year-Old Virgin,” told In Touch weekly in an interview that “the sex was nothing crazy.” Trump was married to First Lady at the time. A lawyer for Daniels negotiated the payoff a month before the 2016 election in exchange for silence about the affair, according to The Wall Street Journal.

News of the tryst broke, however, in The Journal in January, which reported that Cohen brokered the nondisclos­ure agreement.

He vehemently denied the payment and the affair at the time.

After the report, Common Cause filed complaints with the Federal Election Commission and the Department of Justice alleging that the money constitute­d an illegal in-kind contributi­on because it was designed to influence the election and exceeded the $2,700 donation limit. The group also claimed that the presidenti­al campaign had skirted disclosure laws.

On Tuesday, in response to the group’s claim, Cohen admitted that he had paid Daniels, but stressed that he’d done nothing wrong.

“The payment to Ms. Clifford was lawful, and was not a campaign contributi­on or a campaign expenditur­e by anyone,” he said Tuesday.

Cohen, who has been Trump’s lawyer since 2007, did not elaborate on the details of the payment and whether Trump was made aware of it.

Regardless of the lawyer’s contention, Paul Ryan, an attorney for Common Cause, said Cohen’s admission doesn’t clear him of wrongdoing.

“When a President’s own lawyer is trying to influence the campaign, he’s not acting independen­tly,” he said.

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