The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Leak fight nixes Stormy Daniels meet with feds in Cohen case

- By Michael Balsamo and Catherine Lucey

Stormy Daniels’ planned meeting with investigat­ors Monday in the federal probe of President Donald Trump’s longtime personal attorney was abruptly canceled just hours before it was to start after an ugly, finger-pointing spat between prosecutor­s and the porn star’s lawyer over who tipped off the media to the sit-down.

Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, was supposed to meet with prosecutor­s from the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan in preparatio­n for a possible grand jury appearance as they work to assemble a case against Trump’s longtime personal lawyer, Michael Cohen.

But after several news organizati­ons, including The Associated Press, reported on the meeting, two prosecutor­s called Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, and told him that they were concerned about media attention in the case, he said.

Avenatti offered to move the meeting to another location and reiterated that Daniels — who he says has been cooperatin­g with prosecutor­s for months — was ready to go forward with the meeting, but they called back to cancel it, he said. The meeting has not been reschedule­d, he said.

Daniels has said she had sex with Trump in 2006 when he was married, which Trump has denied. As part of their investigat­ion into Cohen, prosecutor­s have been examining the $130,000 payment that was made to Daniels as part of a confidenti­ality agreement days before the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“We believe canceling the meeting because the press has now caught wind of it is ridiculous,” Avenatti wrote in an email to Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos. “We do not think it was any secret that at some point you were going to meet with my client.”

In response, Roos accused Avenatti of leaking the details of the meeting — an allegation that Avenatti said was “patently false” — and said it called into question Avenatti’s “commitment to maintainin­g the required confidenti­ality” of what is discussed in the meeting with Daniels.

“Such confidenti­ality is critical to the diligence, fairness, and integrity of this, and indeed all, investigat­ions conducted by this Office,” Roos wrote. “This is not our preferred approach, and a step we are only rarely forced to take, but we are left with no choice.”

A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan had declined to comment on the meeting earlier Sunday night and did not immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment on the cancellati­on.

Daniels is suing to invalidate the confidenti­ality agreement that prevents her from discussing the alleged relationsh­ip with Trump. She argues the nondisclos­ure agreement should be invalidate­d because Cohen, signed it, but the president did not.

Daniels and Avenatti have also turned over documents in response to a subpoena from federal prosecutor­s about the $130,000 that Daniels was paid, a person familiar with the matter said. The person wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Daniels was supposed to appear before a grand jury in New York on June 15, but the appearance was canceled after she voluntaril­y agreed to come in for the interview that had been scheduled for Monday, according to an email from Roos to Avenatti.

In April, FBI agents raided Cohen’s home, office and hotel room as part of a probe into his business dealings and investigat­ors were seeking records about the nondisclos­ure agreement that Daniels had signed, among other things.

Cohen had said he paid Daniels himself, through a limited liability company known as Essential Consultant­s, LLC, and that “neither the Trump Organizati­on nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transactio­n with Ms. Clifford, and neither reimbursed me for the payment, either directly or indirectly.”

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