The Columbus Dispatch

Judge frees Cohen, sees retaliatio­n for book

- Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — A judge ordered the release from prison of President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer on Thursday, saying he believes the government retaliated against him for planning to release a book about Trump before November's election.

Michael Cohen's First Amendment rights were violated when he was ordered back to prison on July 9 after probation authoritie­s said he refused to sign a form banning him from publishing the book or communicat­ing publicly in other manners, U.S. District Judge Alvin K. Hellerstei­n said.

Hellerstei­n ordered Cohen released from prison by 2 p.m. Friday.

“How can I take any other inference than that it’s retaliator­y?” Hellerstei­n asked prosecutor­s, who insisted in court papers and again Thursday that Probation Department officers did not know about the book when they wrote a provision of home confinemen­t that severely restricted Cohen's public communicat­ions.

“I’ve never seen such a clause in 21 years of being a judge and sentencing people and looking at terms of supervised release,” the judge said. “Why would the Bureau of Prisons ask for something like this ... unless there was a retaliator­y purpose?"

Cohen, 53, sued federal prison officials and Attorney General William Barr on Monday, saying he was ordered back to prison because he was writing the book.

He has been in isolation at an Otisville, New York, prison camp, quarantine­d while prison authoritie­s ensure he does not have the coronaviru­s.

His attorney, Danya Perry, called the ruling “a victory for the First Amendment.”

Cohen's book will address “Trump’s personalit­y and procliviti­es, his private and profession­al affairs, and his personal and business ethics," according to the lawsuit. It further stated that the government’s demand that Cohen agree not to speak to or through any media, including by publishing a book, violated his constituti­onal rights.

Cohen had been furloughed in May along with other prisoners as authoritie­s tried to slow the spread of the COVID-19 in federal prisons. He was one year into a three-year prison sentence after pleading guilty to campaign-finance charges and lying to Congress, among other crimes.

The campaign-finance charges related to his efforts to arrange payouts during the 2016 presidenti­al race to keep the porn actress Stormy Daniels and model Karen Mcdougal from making public claims of extramarit­al affairs with Trump. Trump has denied the affairs.

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