Calgary Herald

DONALD TRUMP’S FORMER LAWYER WAS IN TOUCH WITH A RUSSIAN IN 2015 WHO OFFERED ‘POLITICAL SYNERGY’ WITH THE CAMPAIGN,

MUELLER ALLEGES IN A COURT FILING SEEKING A SUBSTANTIA­L PRISON TERM FOR COHEN.

- Chad Day, Eric Tucker And Jim Mustian

WASHINGTON • President Donald Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen was in touch as far back as 2015 with a Russian who offered “political synergy” with the Trump election campaign, the federal special counsel said Friday in a court filing.

Filings by prosecutor­s from both New York and the Trump-Russia special counsel’s office laid out for the first time details of the co-operation of Cohen, a vital witness who once said he’d “take a bullet” for the president but who in recent months has become a prime antagonist and pledged to come clean with the government.

Federal prosecutor­s said Friday that Cohen deserves a substantia­l prison sentence despite his co-operation with investigat­ors. He is to be sentenced next week, and may face several years in prison.

In hours of meetings with prosecutor­s, Cohen detailed his intimate involvemen­t in an array of episodes, including some that directly touch the president, that are at the centre of investigat­ions into campaign finance violations and potential collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.

In one of the filings, special counsel Robert Mueller details how Cohen spoke to a Russian who “claimed to be a “trusted person” in the Russian Federation who could offer the campaign “political synergy” and “synergy on a government level.”

Cohen told investigat­ors the person, who was not identified, said that such a meeting could have a “phenomenal” impact, “not only in political but in a business dimension as well,” the special counsel’s office wrote.

The filing says the meeting never happened.

Cohen also discussed a Moscow real estate deal that could have netted Trump’s business hundreds of millions of dollars.

Cohen, dubbed Trump’s “legal fixer” in the past, also described his work in conjunctio­n with Trump in orchestrat­ing hush money payments to two women — a porn star and a Playboy model — who said they had sex with Trump a decade earlier. Prosecutor­s in New York, where Cohen pleaded guilty in August in connection with those payments, said the lawyer “acted in coordinati­on and at the direction” of Trump.

Despite such specific allegation­s of Trump’s actions, the president quickly tweeted after news of the filings: “Totally clears the President. Thank you!”

In addition, the filings reveal that Cohen told prosecutor­s he and Trump discussed a potential meeting with Putin on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in 2015, shortly after Trump announced his candidacy for president.

In a footnote, Mueller’s team writes that Cohen conferred with Trump “about contacting the Russia government before reaching out to gauge Russia’s interest in such a meeting,” though it never took place.

In an additional filing Friday evening, prosecutor­s said former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort lied to them about his contacts with a Russian associate and Trump administra­tion officials.

Manafort, who has pleaded guilty to several counts, violated his plea agreement by then telling “multiple discernibl­e lies” to prosecutor­s, they said.

Manafort misled prosecutor­s in recent debriefing­s about his communicat­ions and a meeting with Konstantin Kilimnik, the associate with ties to Russian intelligen­ce, according to Mueller’s filing Friday.

He also lied to investigat­ors when he told them that he never tried to communicat­e a message to anyone in the Trump administra­tion this year, prosecutor­s wrote. In fact, Manafort authorized someone to speak to an administra­tion official on his behalf on May 26, they wrote.

Trump said last month that he hadn’t ruled out the possibilit­y of a pardon for Manafort.

Prosecutor­s in Cohen’s case said that even though he co-operated in their investigat­ion into the hush money payments to women, he nonetheles­s deserved to spend time in prison. “Cohen did provide informatio­n to law enforcemen­t, including informatio­n that assisted the Special Counsel’s Office,” they said. “But Cohen’s descriptio­n of those efforts is overstated in some respects and incomplete in others.”

Perhaps most striking, prosecutor­s accused Cohen of holding back some of what he knew.

“This office understand­s that the informatio­n provided by Cohen to (Mueller) was ultimately credible and useful to its ongoing investigat­ion,” prosecutor­s wrote, but said they would not give him a legal letter detailing his cooperatio­n because “Cohen repeatedly declined to provide full informatio­n about the scope of any additional criminal conduct in which he may have engaged or had knowledge.”

In meetings with Mueller’s team, Cohen “provided informatio­n about his own contacts with Russian interests during the campaign and discussion­s with others in the course of making those contacts,” the court documents said.

Cohen provided prosecutor­s with a “detailed account” of his involvemen­t, along with the involvemen­t of others, in efforts during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign to complete a deal to build a Trump Tower Moscow, the documents said.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michael Cohen, former lawyer to President Donald Trump, leaves his apartment on New York’s Park Avenue Friday.
RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michael Cohen, former lawyer to President Donald Trump, leaves his apartment on New York’s Park Avenue Friday.

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