Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cohen confesses he lied to Congress

Says he hid Trump’s real estate dealings with the Russians

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, confessed in a surprise guilty plea Thursday that he lied to Congress about a Moscow real estate deal he pursued on Mr. Trump’s behalf during the heat of the 2016 Republican campaign. He said he lied to be consistent with Mr. Trump’s “political messaging.”

Mr. Cohen’s plea arrangemen­t made clear that prosecutor­s believe that Mr. Trump, who insisted repeatedly throughout the campaign that he had no business dealings in Russia, was continuing to pursue the Trump Tower Moscow project weeks after he had clinched the Republican nomination for president and well after he and his associates have publicly acknowledg­ed.

The negotiatio­ns about building the Moscow tower continued as late as June 2016 — the same month Mr. Trump’s oldest son met in Manhattan with a Kremlin-connected lawyer — even though Mr. Cohen told two congressio­nal committees last year that the talks ended that January.

Mr. Cohen also discussed the proposal with Mr. Trump on multiple occasions and with unidentifi­ed members of the president’s family, according to court papers filed by special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election and possible coordinati­on with the Trump campaign. Mr. Cohen is cooperatin­g with Mr.

Mueller and has met with his team at least seven times, prosecutor­s say.

The Cohen case was filed in New York a week after Mr. Trump and his lawyers provided Mr. Mueller with responses to written questions and is the first new charge filed by the special counsel since the appointmen­t of Matthew Whitaker, who has spoken critically about the investigat­ion, as acting attorney general with oversight of the probe.

Mr. Whitaker was advised of the plea ahead of time.

Mr. Cohen is the first person charged by Mr. Mueller with lying to Congress, an indication the special counsel is prepared to treat that offense as seriously as lying to federal agents and a warning shot to dozens of others who have appeared before Congress.

There is no clear link in the court filings between Mr. Cohen’s lies and Mr. Mueller’s central question of whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia. And nothing said in court, or in associated court filings, addressed whether Mr. Trump or his aides had directed Mr. Cohen to mislead Congress.

Even so, the case underscore­s how Mr. Trump’s business entity, the Trump Organizati­on, was negotiatin­g business in Moscow at the same time when investigat­ors say Russians were meddling on his behalf in the 2016 election, and that associates of the president were mining Russian connection­s during the race.

Mr. Cohen’s court appearance marked the latest step in his evolution from trusted Mr. Trump consiglier­e — he said Thursday he had lied out of “loyalty” — to prime antagonist. It is the second time the lawyer’s legal woes have entangled Mr. Trump, coming months after Mr. Cohen said the president directed him during his campaign to make hush money payments to two women who said they had sex with Mr. Trump.

Mr. Trump on Thursday called Mr. Cohen a “weak person” who was lying to get a lighter sentence and repeatedly stressed that the real estate deal at issue was never a secret and never executed. His lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, said that Mr. Cohen was a “proven liar” and that Mr. Trump’s business organizati­on had voluntaril­y given Mr. Mueller the same documents cited in the guilty plea “because there was nothing to hide.”

“There would be nothing wrong if I did do it,” Mr. Trump said of pursuing the project. “I was running my business while I was campaignin­g. There was a good chance that I wouldn’t have won, in which case I would have gone back into the business, and why should I lose lots of opportunit­ies?”

He said the primary reason he didn’t pursue it was “I was focused on running for president.”

But during the campaign, Mr. Trump was repeatedly dismissive of claims that he had connection­s to the Kremlin, an issue that flared as especially sensitive in the summer of 2016 after the Democratic National Committee and a cybersecur­ity company asserted that Moscow was behind a punishing cyberattac­k on the party’s network.

“I have a great company. I built an unbelievab­le company, but if you look there you’ll see there’s nothing in Russia,” Mr. Trump said at a July 2016 news conference.

The guilty plea comes as Mr. Mueller’s team has accused Mr. Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, of lying after his own guilty plea and continues to investigat­e whether campaign associates had advance knowledge of hacked emails becoming public. Another potential target, Jerome Corsi, has rejected a plea offer and faces a possible indictment.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether questions about the Russian real estate deal were among those answered by Mr. Trump and his lawyers last week. But a prior list of queries that Mr. Mueller’s team presented to Trump lawyers this year did include a question about it, and Mr. Mueller’s team is known to have asked about Mr. Trump’s business dealings over the years.

 ?? Julie Jacobson/Associated Press ?? Michael Cohen walks out of federal court Thursday in New York. Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about work he did on an aborted project to build a Trump Tower in Russia. He told the judge he lied about the negotiatio­ns to be consistent with Trump’s “political message.”
Julie Jacobson/Associated Press Michael Cohen walks out of federal court Thursday in New York. Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about work he did on an aborted project to build a Trump Tower in Russia. He told the judge he lied about the negotiatio­ns to be consistent with Trump’s “political message.”

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