Weekend Herald

Top lawman’s role in high-profile cases

Manhattan office’s probes have angered Trump

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Shortly after he became attorney general last year, William Barr set out to challenge a signature criminal case that touched President Donald Trump’s inner circle directly and even the president’s own actions: the prosecutio­n of Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime fixer.

The debate between Barr and the federal prosecutor­s who brought the case against Cohen was one of the first signs of a tense relationsh­ip that culminated last weekend in the abrupt ouster of Geoffrey Berman, the US attorney in Manhattan. It also foreshadow­ed Barr’s interventi­on in the prosecutio­ns of other associates of Trump.

By the time Barr was sworn into office in February, Cohen, who had paid hush money to an adult film star who said she had had an affair with Trump, had already pleaded guilty and was set to begin a three-year prison sentence, all of which embarrasse­d and angered the president.

But Barr spent weeks in the spring of 2019 questionin­g the prosecutor­s over their decision to charge Cohen with violating campaign finance laws, according to people briefed on the matter.

At one point during the discussion­s, Barr instructed Justice Department officials in Washington to draft a memo outlining legal arguments that could have raised questions about Cohen’s conviction and undercut similar prosecutio­ns in the future, according to the people briefed on the matter.

The prosecutor­s in New York resisted the effort, the people said, and a Justice Department official said Barr did not instruct them to withdraw the case. The department official, who was not authorised to speak publicly about the matter, noted that Cohen was convicted and sentenced in December 2018, before Barr was sworn in, so there was little he could do to change the outcome of the case.

Still, Barr’s unexpected involvemen­t in such a politicall­y sensitive case suggested that he planned to exert influence over prosecutor­s in the US attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York, long known for operating independen­tly of Washington. Barr and other officials have told aides and other US attorneys that the Southern District needs to be reined in.

Ultimately, Berman was ousted in a dizzying series of events, heightenin­g criticism that Trump and Barr were purging the government of people perceived as disloyal to the White House.

In an interview with NPR on Thursday, Barr said Berman was “living on borrowed

[Geoffrey Berman] was living on borrowed time from the beginning. William Barr

time from the beginning” because the president had not appointed him.

And when Jay Clayton, the Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, indicated an interest in running the Manhattan office, Barr said, it created “an opportunit­y to put in a very strong person as a presidenti­al appointmen­t to that office”.

“I certainly was aware that given the current environmen­t, anytime you make a personnel move, conspiracy theorists will suggest that there’s some ulterior motive involved,” Barr said.

More than any other federal prosecutor’s office, the Manhattan office had pursued investigat­ions that angered Trump. During the case against Cohen, for instance, prosecutor­s had indicated that Trump directed the hush money payments, although the office was not seeking charges against the president.

In addition to prosecutin­g Cohen, the president’s former personal lawyer, the office has been investigat­ing his current one, Rudy Giuliani, over his actions in Ukraine.

Other points of contention included how to proceed against a stateowned Turkish bank that was eventually indicted in an alleged scheme to avoid US sanctions on Iran, and the Justice Department’s decision to assign the US attorney in Brooklyn to oversee all investigat­ions into matters related to Ukraine. Berman’s office successful­ly fended off that oversight.

The conflict erupted publicly last Friday, when Barr announced that Berman was stepping down and would be replaced temporaril­y by an ally of the administra­tion. Berman then issued his own statement saying he had no intention of resigning. By Saturday afternoon, amid the unusual standoff, Barr informed Berman that Trump had fired him and that he would be replaced temporaril­y with Berman’s own deputy.

Barr’s role in the Cohen case also presaged his involvemen­t in two other high-profile prosecutio­ns of Trump associates: Michael Flynn, the president’s former national security adviser, and Roger Stone, a political operative close to Trump who was convicted of lying to Congress and other crimes. Last month, Barr ordered that prosecutor­s in Washington drop the case against Flynn, who had twice pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about phone calls with the Russian ambassador. Barr also overruled a sentencing recommenda­tion from career prosecutor­s in Washington for Stone, which he viewed as excessive, prompting the office to backtrack.

Even before he became the attorney general, Barr had criticised the special counsel’s inquiry into whether Trump had obstructed justice, submitting an unsolicite­d memo to the Justice Department attacking what he called a “novel and legally insupporta­ble reading of the law”.

In August 2018, facing the threat of an indictment, Cohen pleaded guilty to personal financial crimes and campaign finance violations, one of which stemmed from a $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

In pleading guilty, Cohen pointed the finger at the president, saying he had acted at Trump’s direction.

The New York Times reported previously that Barr had questioned the legal theory of the campaign finance charges against Cohen, but it was not known that the attorney general went so far as to ask for the draft memo or had raised his concerns more than once.

The memo, written by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, addressed the Southern District’s somewhat novel use of campaign finance laws to charge Cohen. Before Cohen’s guilty plea, the only person known to face criminal charges for payments meant to keep negative informatio­n buried during a political campaign was Democratic presidenti­al candidate John Edwards, who was not convicted.

Barr argued, among other things, that such cases might be better suited to civil resolution­s by the Federal Election Commission than to criminal prosecutio­ns, according to people with knowledge of the discussion­s.

Cohen, who reported to prison in May 2019, was recently released on furlough and is serving his sentence at his Manhattan home after citing health concerns related to the coronaviru­s.

There is no indication the Justice Department planned to issue a formal opinion on the campaign finances charges. Such a step, if taken, might have raised questions about the validity of the case against Cohen and affected any future effort to investigat­e Trump or others in his circle.

 ??  ?? William Barr.
William Barr.

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