Raid on Trump’s lawyer sought records of payments to women
WASHINGTON — The FBI agents who raided the office of President Trump’s personal lawyer Monday were looking for records about payments to two women who claim they had affairs with Trump, and information related to the publisher of the National Enquirer’s role in silencing one of the women, several people briefed on the investigation said.
The search warrant carried out by the public corruption unit of the New York City federal attorney’s office seeks information about Karen McDougal, an ex-Playboy model who claims she carried on a nearly yearlong affair with Trump shortly after the birth of his son in 2006. McDougal was paid $150,000 by American Media Inc., the Enquirer’s parent company, whose chief executive is a friend of Trump’s.
Agents were also searching Michael Cohen’s office for information related to Stephanie Clifford, better known as Stormy Daniels, who says she also had sex with Trump while he was married. Cohen has acknowledged that he paid Clifford $130,000 as part of a nondisclosure agreement to secure her silence just days before the 2016 presidential election.
Rod Rosenstein, the veteran Republican prosecutor handpicked by Trump to serve as deputy attorney general, personally signed off on Monday’s FBI decision to raid the office of Cohen, Trump’s personal attorney and longtime confidant, several government officials said.
The early-morning searches enraged Trump, associates said, setting off an angry public tirade Monday evening that continued in private at the White House as the president fumed about whether he should fire Rosenstein. The episode has deeply unsettled White House aides, Justice Department officials and lawmakers from both parties, who believe the president may use it as a pretext to purge the team leading the investigation into Russia meddling in the 2016 election.
Searching a lawyer’s files is among the most sensitive moves federal prosecutors can make as they pursue a criminal investi-
gation. Rosenstein’s personal involvement in the decision signals that the evidence seen by law enforcement officials was significant enough to persuade the Justice Department’s second-in-command that such an aggressive move was necessary.
Trump’s advisers have spent the last 24 hours trying to convince the president not to make an impulsive decision that could put the president in more legal jeopardy and ignite a controversy that could consume his presidency, several people close to Trump said.
Trump has long been mistrustful of Rosenstein, the Jus- tice Department’s No. 2 official, who appointed special counsel Robert Mueller, and now oversees his investigation into Trump’s campaign and possible obstruction of justice by the president. In his remarks Monday night, the president lashed out at Rosenstein for having “signed a FISA warrant,” apparently a reference to the role Rosenstein played in authorizing the wiretap of a Trump associate in the Russia inquiry.