The Phnom Penh Post

Cornered Trump defends, slams Cohen on payments

- Emma Charlton

DONALD TRUMP insisted Wednesday he did nothing wrong after his longtime attorney implicated him in illicit hush payments made before the 2016 election, as experts warned the legal maelstrom swirling around the Republican leader could further threaten his presidency.

On perhaps the worst day of Trump’s tumultuous time in office, his former fixer Michael Cohen told a federal judge Tuesday he had made illegal campaign contributi­ons – in the form of payments to silence women alleging affairs with Trump – at his boss’s request.

Cohen’s statements came on a day of head-spinning political drama for Trump, whose former campaign chief Paul Manafort was found guilty within the same hour of federal tax and bank fraud, in the first case sent to trial by the special prosecutor probing Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

While the full implicatio­ns for the real estate mogul-turned-president remain unclear, Cohen’s statements – and the prospect of more revelation­s to come – puts Trump in legal peril.

But the mercurial US leader appeared determined to ride out the latest storm.

After first accusing Cohen of making up “stories” to cut a plea deal, he then tweeted that the lawyer’s actions were “not a crime,” and went further in an interview with “Fox and Friends,” saying they were “not even a campaign violation.”

In that interview, Trump said the hush payments were financed with his own money – to which Cohen had access – and that while he had no knowledge of them at the time, he had since been fully transparen­t.

“My first question when I heard about it was, ‘Did they come out of the campaign?’ because that could be a little dicey,” he said of the payments – believed to have been made to porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal.

“But they didn’t come out of the campaign,” he said.

“They came from me and I tweeted about it.”

Despite Trump’s defiant tone, Washington-based campaign finance expert Kate Belinski, of the Nossa- man law firm, said to expect legal consequenc­es for both Trumpand his campaign – most likely in the form of a civil complaint before the Federal Election Commission.

‘ He did nothing wrong’

Cohen has meanwhile pleaded guilty to two counts of violating campaign finance laws, along with six counts of fraud – identifyin­g Trump as his co-conspirato­r when it came to the hush payments.

In a string of interviews early Wednesday, Cohen’s own lawyer Lanny Davis took aim squarely at the president, dubbing him a “criminal.”

“He committed a crime,” Davis told CBS News.

“If he were not president, he clearly would be indicted and jailed for that crime.”

In practice, an indictment is highly unlikely: since 2000, the Justice Department position has been that a sitting president is “immune from indictment as well as from further criminal process.”

And while the president could theoretica­lly be impeached, it remains a remote prospect in a Republican­dominated Congress where even Democrats are focused on letting Robert Mueller’s Russia probe play out.

But Cohen’s cooperatio­n with investigat­ors may yet pose a wider threat.

Writing on the Lawfare blog, former White House counsel Bob Bauer said: “As (Richard) Nixon found when one of his lawyers also became a witness for the government, this can be the beginning of very hard times.”

The White House insisted Trump was not concerned “at all” that Cohen might implicate the president by cooperatin­g with Mueller.

Limited options

“He knows that he did nothing wrong and that there was no collusion,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said.

But Davis told CBS News that Cohen knew of election tampering efforts during the 2016 campaign that would be “of interest to the special counsel.”

Rather than cut a deal, Manafort chose to leave his fate to a jury, prompting speculatio­n he was hoping for a pardon – something Trump has not ruled out.

 ?? AFP ?? President Donald Trump speaks to the press at Yeager Airport in Charleston, West Virginia on August 21. Trump said he was ‘very sad’ about Manafort conviction.
AFP President Donald Trump speaks to the press at Yeager Airport in Charleston, West Virginia on August 21. Trump said he was ‘very sad’ about Manafort conviction.

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