Texarkana Gazette

Former Trump lawyer Cohen accepts plea deal

-

NEW YORK—Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer and “fixer,” pleaded guilty Tuesday to campaign-finance violations and other charges, saying he and Trump arranged the payment of hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels and a former Playboy model to influence the election.

The guilty plea came almost at the same moment former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was convicted in Alexandria, Virginia, of eight financial crimes in the first trial to come out of special counsel Robert Mueller’s sprawling Russia investigat­ion.

In a deal reached with federal prosecutor­s, Cohen, 51, pleaded guilty to eight counts in all, including tax evasion and making a false statement to a financial institutio­n. He could get about four to five years in prison at sentencing Dec. 12.

In entering the plea, Cohen did not name the two women or even Trump, recounting instead that he worked with an “unnamed candidate.” But the amounts and the dates all lined up with the payments made to Daniels and Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal.

Cohen said the first payment was “in coordinati­on and at the direction of a candidate for federal office,” and the second was made “under direction of the same candidate.”

As cable networks were showing split-screen coverage of the dueling conviction and plea bargain by two former loyalists, Trump boarded Air Force One in the afternoon on the way to a rally in West Virginia. He ignored shouted questions to reporters about both former aides, retreating to his private stateroom on the airliner.

Cohen’s plea follows months of scrutiny from federal investigat­ions and a falling-out with the president, whom he previously said he would “take a bullet” for.

The FBI raided Cohen’s hotel room, home and office in April and seized more than 4 million items. The search sought bank records, communicat­ions with Trump’s campaign and informatio­n on a $130,000 payment to Daniels and a $150,000 one to McDougal. Both women claimed Trump had affairs with them, which he denies.

Trump denied to reporters in April that he knew anything about Cohen’s payments to Daniels, though the explanatio­n from the president and his attorney Rudy Giuliani have shifted multiples times since.

The president has fumed publicly about what he felt was government overreach, while privately worrying about what material Cohen may have after working for the Trump Organizati­on for a decade. Trump branded the raid “a witch hunt,” an assault on attorney-client privilege and a politicall­y motivated attack by enemies in the FBI.

“Obviously it’s not good for Trump,” Sol Wisenberg, who conducted grand jury questionin­g of President Bill Clinton during the Whitewater investigat­ion, said of Cohen plea bargain.

“I’m assuming he’s not going to be indicted because he’s a sitting president, Wisenberg added. “But it leads him closer to ultimate impeachmen­t proceeding­s, particular­ly if the Democrats take back the House.”

The Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, which provides legal advice and guidance to executive branch agencies, has held that a president cannot be indicted while in office. Trump’s lawyers have said that Mueller plans to adhere to that guidance, though Mueller’s office has never confirmed that.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States