Exclusive: Trump fixer Cohen says he
helped Falwell handle racy photos
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[May 08, 2019]
By Aram Roston
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Months before
evangelical leader Jerry Falwell Jr.’s game-changing presidential
endorsement of Donald Trump in 2016, Falwell asked Trump fixer Michael
Cohen for a personal favor, Cohen said in a recorded conversation
reviewed by Reuters.
Falwell, president of Liberty University, one of the world’s largest
Christian universities, said someone had come into possession of what
Cohen described as racy “personal” photographs -- the sort that would
typically be kept “between husband and wife,” Cohen said in the taped
conversation.
According to a source familiar with Cohen’s thinking, the person who
possessed the photos destroyed them after Cohen intervened on the
Falwells' behalf.
The Falwells, through a lawyer, declined to comment for this article.
Cohen, who began a three-year prison sentence this week for federal
campaign violations and lying to Congress, recounted his involvement in
the matter in a recording made surreptitiously by comedian Tom Arnold on
March 25. Portions of the recording -- in which Cohen appeared to
disavow parts of his guilty plea -- were first reported April 24 by The
Wall Street Journal.
The Falwells enlisted Cohen’s help in 2015, according to the source
familiar with Cohen’s thinking, the year Trump announced his
presidential candidacy. At the time, Cohen was Trump’s confidant and
personal lawyer, and he worked for the Trump Organization.
The Falwells wanted to keep “a bunch of photographs, personal
photographs” from becoming public, Cohen told Arnold. “I actually have
one of the photos,” he said, without going into specifics. “It’s
terrible.”
Cohen would later prove successful in another matter involving Falwell,
two people familiar with the matter told Reuters. Cohen helped persuade
Falwell to issue his endorsement of Trump’s presidential candidacy at a
critical moment, they said: just before the Iowa caucuses. Falwell
subsequently barnstormed with Trump and vouched for the candidate’s
Christian virtues.
Reuters has no evidence that Falwell’s endorsement of Trump was related
to Cohen’s involvement in the photo matter. The source familiar with
Cohen’s thinking insisted the endorsement and the help with the
photographs were separate issues.
Cohen’s connection to the Falwells sheds light on the formidable
alliance between Trump and a man who, through his university, is one of
the most influential evangelical figures in America. Falwell’s backing
helped galvanize evangelicals and persuaded many Christians concerned
about Trump’s past behavior to embrace him as a repentant sinner.
Falwell’s support for Trump has not wavered throughout the New York
celebrity-politician’s own tribulations, including the Access Hollywood
recording of Trump talking about grabbing women’s genitals and payoffs
made by Cohen to hide Trump’s extramarital affairs. This past weekend,
Falwell tweeted that “Trump should have 2 yrs added to his 1st term” to
make up for the two years of the Mueller investigation into Russian
interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
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Michael Cohen, the former personal attorney of U.S. President Donald
Trump, and Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. appear in
a combination of file photos taken in Washington, U.S., February 27,
2019 and March 21, 2019. Pictures taken February 27, 2019 and March
21, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
BLOCKBUSTER ENDORSEMENT
Falwell’s endorsement of Trump, however, did surprise some students
and staff at Liberty University, the school in Lynchburg, Virginia,
founded by Falwell’s father, Jerry. It was at Liberty where fellow
Republican presidential candidate and major Trump rival Ted Cruz had
chosen to launch his campaign the previous year. Cruz’s father was
an evangelical preacher, much like Falwell’s father; Trump has been
married three times and divorced twice. For years, prior to running
for president, Trump boasted of his sexual exploits and supported a
host of social positions, such as abortion rights, that run counter
to beliefs espoused by Falwell.
Although Falwell declined interview requests for this story, he has
said repeatedly that he endorsed Trump because Trump was the
strongest candidate, had significant experience running a business,
and had the right vision for the country.
The connection between Trump and Falwell goes back years. In 2012,
Trump gave the convocation at Liberty University. One link between
Trump and the couple appears to have been Cohen, a now-disbarred New
York lawyer who formed a close bond with the Falwells.
During the campaign, Cohen worked closely with Liberty University to
help promote Trump’s candidacy. It was around that time that Cohen
heard from the Falwells about the photographs, said the source
familiar with Cohen’s thinking.
The Falwells told Cohen that someone had obtained photographs that
were embarrassing to them, and was demanding money, the source said.
Reuters was unable to determine who made the demand. The source said
Cohen flew to Florida and soon met with an attorney for the person
with the photographs. Cohen spoke with the attorney, telling the
lawyer that his client was committing a crime, and that law
enforcement authorities would be called if the demands didn’t stop,
the source said.
The matter was soon resolved, the source said, and the lawyer told
Cohen that all of the photographs were destroyed.
Months later, in early 2016, Trump faced what seemed like an
enormous challenge. The Iowa caucus was coming up, and Cohen -- then
deeply loyal to Trump -- was concerned about how Trump would fare,
the source said. Cohen felt Trump “was being slaughtered in that
community,” and “didn’t want to see him embarrassed or, you know,
without support,” said the source familiar with Cohen’s thinking.
Cohen repeatedly reached out to Jerry Falwell, and pleaded with him
to back Trump, the source said.
Soon after, according to this account, Falwell made his historic
announcement. “I am proud to offer my endorsement of Donald J. Trump
for President of the United States,” Falwell was quoted saying in a
statement issued by the Trump campaign. “He is a successful
executive and entrepreneur, a wonderful father and a man who I
believe can lead our country to greatness again.”
(Reporting by Aram Roston. Edited by Blake Morrison.)
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