Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Firm offers to drop hush-money deal

Daniels’ lawyer: Move made to keep Trump off stand

- By Michael Balsamo and Catherine Lucey

A company created by Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer has offered to rescind Stormy Daniels’ hushmoney agreement and has scrapped a threatened $20 million lawsuit against the porn actress for allegedly violating the deal.

A lawyer for Essential Consultant­s said the company wants Daniels, who claims a 2006 tryst with Trump, to repay the $130,000 that was part of the nondisclos­ure agreement signed days before the 2016 presidenti­al election, according to a letter included in a court filing late Friday.

The offer would remove any legal risk to Daniels stemming from her public discussion of the alleged affair and the alleged efforts to hide it. But if a court were to find that the proposal resolved the underlying controvers­y in her litigation with extrump lawyer Michael Cohen, the developmen­t could kill efforts by Daniels’ attorney, Michael Avenatti, to try to compel the president to give sworn testimony.

Essential Consultant­s was set up by Cohen, who pleaded guilty in federal court last month to campaign-finance violations and other charges. Though Cohen originally denied having made a hush money payment to Daniels on behalf of Trump, he told the court that he and Trump arranged payments to both Daniels and a former Playboy model to influence the election.

In addition to the offer to quash the agreement, Essential Consultant­s also agreed to back off its plan to fight Daniels in private arbitratio­n and will not pursue a lawsuit against her, Brent Blakely, an attorney for the company, said in a letter to Daniels’ lawyer. Cohen had said that Daniels could owe $20 million for violating the agreement.

Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, told The Associated Press that Friday’s developmen­t is “a stunt by Michael Cohen trying to fix it so that Donald Trump is not deposed.”

Avenatti said he did not have to accept the offer and would not settle the case “without the deposition­s,” which he said would include Trump. He believes the court should invalidate the agreement because it violated campaign finance laws, he said.

Regardless of how a court views the offer by Cohen’s company to drop efforts to enforce the agreement, Avenatti has other possible legal routes to pursue Trump. Daniels is also suing Trump and Cohen for defamation.

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