The Capital

Trump, Cohen lawyers often stumble on facts

- By Michael R. Sisak and Eric Tucker

NEW YORK — They're the ultimate insiders, but the lawyers speaking publicly on behalf of President Donald Trump and his longtime “fixer”-turned-foe Michael Cohen have been fumbling the facts of late.

Cohen's lawyer, Lanny Davis, spent recent days walking back his bombshell assertions that his client could tell the special counsel that Trump had prior knowledge of a meeting with a Russian lawyer to get damaging informatio­n on Hillary Clinton.

“I should have been much clearer that I could not confirm the story,” Davis said Monday, attempting to clean up his comments in interviews last week after Cohen pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations, tax evasion and bank fraud.

Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, caused a stir last week when he told The Washington Post that Trump had sought his advice on the possibilit­y of granting a pardon to former campaign chairman Paul Manafort. He said the discussion happened before Manafort's conviction last week on tax and bank fraud charges.

Giuliani told the Post that he counseled against the move at least until the end of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigat­ion — but Fox News later reported that Giuliani said that Trump had not broached the idea of a pardon for Manafort specifical­ly.

The apparent contradict­ion added to confusion about the president's plans.

Federal ethics rules frown on lawyers making comments intended to prejudice a jury or engaging in fraud or dishonesty, but legal ethics expert Steven Lubet said there's no boundary crossed by an inaccurate public statement.

“This is, I think, what I think some of the ethics opinions would call mere puffery, and typically that is not subject to discipline,” said Lubet, of Northweste­rn University law school.

Davis told The Washington Post over the weekend that he “could not independen­tly confirm” the claims he made on television last week that Cohen witnessed Trump's eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., telling his father about the Trump Tower meeting beforehand.

Davis also is hedging suggestion­s he made on television last week that Cohen could tell special prosecutor Robert Mueller about whether Trump was aware of and encouraged Russian hacking during the 2016 campaign before it became publicly known.

After suggesting to CNN last Wednesday that “Cohen was an observer and was a witness to Mr. Trump's awareness of those emails before they were dropped,” Cohen told the Post, “there's a possibilit­y that is the case. But I am not sure.”

The prospect of Cohen telling Mueller that Trump knew in advance about the June 2016 meeting has hung over the Russia probe since CNN, citing anonymous sources, reported last month that Cohen was willing to share the informatio­n.

Giuliani also has misspoken about the Trump Tower meeting.

He told NBC News on Aug. 19 that he didn't know if participan­ts in the meeting, including Trump Jr. and Manafort, knew that lawyer Natalia Veselnitsk­aya “was Russian at the time.”

In fact, emails released by Trump Jr. himself make clear that he was explicitly told an attendee at the meeting would be a “Russian government attorney” who wanted to provide damaging informatio­n about Clinton. Additional­ly, Trump Jr. has said he didn't have the lawyer's name prior to the meeting.

Trump, who has denied knowing about the meeting, seized on Davis' about-face.

“Michaels Cohen's attorney clarified the record, saying his client does not know if President Trump knew about the Trump Tower meeting (out of which came nothing!),” Trump tweeted on Saturday. “The answer is that I did NOT know about the meeting. Just another phony story by the Fake News Media!”

 ?? MARTIN DIVISEK/BLOOMBERG ?? Lanny Davis is Michael Cohen’s lawyer.
MARTIN DIVISEK/BLOOMBERG Lanny Davis is Michael Cohen’s lawyer.
 ?? JOHN TAGGART/BLOOMBERG ?? Rudy Giuliani is the personal lawyer for President Trump.
JOHN TAGGART/BLOOMBERG Rudy Giuliani is the personal lawyer for President Trump.

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