Ex-lawyer Cohen says Trump knew hush
payments were wrong: ABC
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[December 14, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump directed hush payments to two women during the
2016 presidential campaign and knew the actions were wrong, his former
personal lawyer Michael Cohen said in a television interview that aired
on Friday.
"He directed me to make the payments. He directed me to become involved
in these matters," Cohen, who was sentenced to prison this week over
campaign finance and other charges, told ABC News. Trump has denied
alleged affairs with the women years ago and offered a shifting defense
about the payments. On Thursday tweeted that he never directed Cohen to
break the law.
Cohen, speaking in his first interview since he was sentenced on
Wednesday, said Trump at the time "was very concerned about how this
would affect the election" if voters knew about the alleged affairs and
told him to pay off the two women -- a former Playboy model and an adult
film star.
The payments aimed to "help (Trump) and his campaign," he added.
Federal law requires contributions of "anything of value" to a campaign
be disclosed, and an individual donation cannot exceed $2,700.
Asked if then-candidate Trump knew the payments were wrong, Cohen told
ABC's "Good Morning America" program: "Of course."
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Michael Cohen, U.S. President Donald Trump's former personal
attorney, exits the United States Courthouse after sentencing at the
Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., December 12,
2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Cohen on Wednesday was sentenced to three years in prison for the
payments as well as unrelated crimes of tax evasion and misleading
banks, and two months for lying to Congress about a proposed Trump
Tower project in Russia.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Chizu
Nomiyama)
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