The Day

Filings lay out Cohen details

Mueller, prosecutor­s reveal more on Russia contacts, hush money

- By CHAD DAY, ERIC TUCKER and JIM MUSTIAN

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 interests.

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. campaign.

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-anda-half years in prison. His lawyers are seeking probation for the 52-year-old attorney.

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 potential campaign finance violations, he nonetheles­s deserved prison time. Though he has portrayed himself as cooperativ­e, “his descriptio­n of those efforts is overstated in some respects and incomplete in others,” prosecutor­s said.

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