Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hush money? Cohen speaks to grand jury

- By Molly Crane-newman

NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump has a message for the Manhattan grand jury seeking his testimony in a porn star hush money probe: Don’t hold your breath.

Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina said on Monday that the former president is “an extortion victim,” and has no plans to cooperate with the Manhattan DA’S investigat­ion into an alleged preelectio­n hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

“He’s not going to testify,” Tacopina said. “Ninety-nine percent of targets in grand jury proceeding­s choose not to. He’s not going to participat­e in the proceeding that me and most election law experts think is without total merit.”

Tacopina’s comments came on the same day longtime fixer Michael Cohen testified for nearly three hours about his role in issuing the now-notorious $130,000 payment to Daniels in October 2016 to buy her silence about an alleged sexual tryst with Trump at a Lake Tahoe golf tournament in 2006. The payment, which has for years been public knowledge, made Cohen a felon and ultimately led to his disbarment.

The current grand jury hearing evidence was impaneled in January. Cohen did not testify before a previous grand jury hearing evidence against Trump that expired last spring or one that heard evidence against the Trump Organizati­on and its finance chief Allen Weisselber­g.

In his 2018 federal conviction for campaign finance violations, bank fraud, and tax evasion, Cohen pointed the finger directly at his longtime boss — referring to him as “Individual 1.” The former lawyer said that Trump told him to make the hush money payments “for the principal purpose of influencin­g” the election outcome.

He said a secondary hush deal with Playboy model Karen Mcdougal was coordinate­d with the Trump-boosting tabloid National Enquirer.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has been investigat­ing whether Trump falsified business records in connection with the payment.

Cohen said Trump and his real estate business paid him back for the hush money with reimbursem­ent checks with interest spread out over several months. Sources connected to Bragg’s probe believe the DA is considerin­g charging Trump with falsifying business records for classifyin­g the payback as legal fees and concealing those payments to hide another crime — illegally making the payments for political reasons.

Cohen’s lawyer, Lanny Davis, said Cohen was “completely responsive.”

“This is about accountabi­lity and this is about facts and the truth,” Davis said.

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