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US: Trump lawyer met Russian who offered ‘political synergy’

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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 and proposed a meeting between the candidate and Russian President Vladimir Putin, the federal special counsel said Friday.

Court filings from prosecutor­s in New York and special counsel Robert Mueller’s office laid out previously undisclose­d contacts between Trump associates and Russian intermedia­ries and suggested the Kremlin aimed early on to influence Trump and his campaign by playing to both his political aspiration­s and his personal business int er est s.

The filings, in cases involving Cohen and former campaign chairman Paul Manafort , capped a dramatic week of revelation­s in Mueller’s probe into possible coordinati­on between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin. They bring the legal peril from multiple investigat­ions closer than ever to Trump, tying him to an illegal hush money payment scheme and contradict­ing his claims that he had nothing to do with Russia.

They make clear how witnesses previously close to Trump — Cohen once declared he’d “take a bullet” for the president — have since provided damaging informatio­n about him in efforts to come clean to the government and in some cases get lighter prison sentences.

One defendant, former national security adviser Michael Flynn, provided so much informatio­n to prosecutor­s that Mueller this week said he shouldn’t serve any prison time.

In hours of interviews with prosecutor­s, witnesses have offered up informatio­n about pivotal episodes under examinatio­n, including possible collusion with Russia and payments during the campaign to silence a porn star and Playboy model who said they had sex with Trump a decade earlier.

In one of the filings, 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.’”

The person repeatedly dangled a meeting between Trump and Putin, saying such a meeting could have a “phenomenal” impact “not only in political but in a business dimension as well.”

That was a reference to a proposed Moscow real estate deal that prosecutor­s say could have netted Trump’s business hundreds of millions of dollars. Cohen admitted last week to lying to Congress by saying discussion­s about a Trump Tower in Moscow ended in January 2016 when in fact they stretched into that June, well into the U.S. campai gn.

Cohen told prosecutor­s he never followed up on the Putin invitation, though the offer bore echoes of a March 2016 proposal presented by Trump campaign aide George Papadopoul­os, who broached to other advisers the idea of a Putin encounter.

Prosecutor­s said probation officials recommende­d a sentence for Cohen of three-and-a-half years in prison. His lawyers want the 52-year-old attorney to avoid prison time altogether.

In an additional filing Friday evening, prosecutor­s said Manafort lied about his contacts with a Russian associate and Trump administra­tion officials, including in 2018.

The court papers say Manafort initially told prosecutor­s he didn’t have contact with any people while they were in the Trump administra­tion. But prosecutor­s say they recovered “electronic documents” showing contacts with multiple administra­tion officials not identified in the filings.

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

Manafort resigned from his job on the Trump campaign as questions swirled about his lobbying work for a pro-Russia political party in Ukraine.

Prosecutor­s in Cohen’s case said that even though he cooperated in their investigat­ion into

 ??  ?? Japan’s opposition parties’ members try to stop Judicial Affairs Committee Chairman Shinichi Yokoyama, bottom center, from moving to hold a vote for a bill to revise an immigratio­n control law, at upper house committee in Tokyo early Saturday, Dec. 8, 2018. Japan is preparing to officially open the door to foreign workers to do unskilled jobs and possibly eventually become citizens. (Kyodo News via AP)
Japan’s opposition parties’ members try to stop Judicial Affairs Committee Chairman Shinichi Yokoyama, bottom center, from moving to hold a vote for a bill to revise an immigratio­n control law, at upper house committee in Tokyo early Saturday, Dec. 8, 2018. Japan is preparing to officially open the door to foreign workers to do unskilled jobs and possibly eventually become citizens. (Kyodo News via AP)

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