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		Justice Department appears to be rewarding Trump allies, punishing 
		enemies, legal experts say
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		 [July 22, 2020] 
		By Sarah N. Lynch and Karen Freifeld 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When President 
		Donald Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen sued late on Monday 
		over his return to prison, he said he was facing retribution because he 
		is writing a book critical of his former boss.
 
 The surprise move against Cohen, who had been released to home arrest 
		because of the coronavirus pandemic, has some legal experts and 
		congressional Democrats asking whether Trump and U.S. Attorney General 
		William Barr are manipulating the justice system to reward Trump's 
		allies and punish his enemies.
 
 Trump's decision to spare longtime friend Roger Stone from prison, and 
		the Department of Justice dropping its case against former National 
		Security Adviser Michael Flynn despite his guilty plea have commanded 
		more national attention. But outspoken critics, including Cohen and 
		celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti, may be getting worse treatment, 
		some legal observers said.
 
 Cohen, who once boasted he would "take a bullet" for Trump before 
		turning on him, said a July 9 meeting with probation officials ended 
		with marshals shackling him after he hesitated to sign a gag order 
		banning him from engaging with the media, using social media or writing 
		a book. Days earlier, Cohen hadtweeted that his book was nearly 
		complete.
 
		
		 
		
 "He is being held in retaliation for his protected speech, including 
		drafting a book manuscript that is critical of the President," said the 
		lawsuit against Barr filed in federal court in Manhattan. A hearing has 
		been scheduled for Thursday on an emergency motion seeking Cohen's 
		immediate release.
 
 A Department of Justice spokeswoman declined to comment on the lawsuit. 
		The lawsuit does not accuse the White House of wrongdoing.
 
 "The White House had nothing to do with Mr. Cohen’s re-imprisonment and 
		that decision was made independently by the Bureau of Prisons," a White 
		House official said. The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is an arm of the 
		Justice Department.
 
 In the book, tentatively titled "Disloyal: The True Story of Michael 
		Cohen, Former Personal Attorney to President Donald J. Trump," Cohen 
		said in court papers he will detail alleged racist remarks by Trump 
		about former President Barack Obama and former South African President 
		Nelson Mandela.
 
 A BOP spokesman declined to comment on the lawsuit, but said Cohen 
		refused to consent to the terms of home confinement including electronic 
		monitoring. Cohen denies that.
 
 Cohen's treatment is expected to come up on July 28 when Barr appears 
		before a Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary 
		Committee inquiry into whether the Justice Department has become too 
		politicized.
 
 The scope of the panel's investigation includes whether Trump's 
		Republican friends have received preferential treatment by the 
		department, and whether his enemies have been treated more harshly, a 
		committee aide said.
 
 Criminal defense lawyers say the terms imposed on Cohen - including 
		stopping his family and friends from making public statements on his 
		behalf - are not in line with the conditions most inmates face in home 
		confinement during the pandemic.
 
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			Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, is escorted into court 
			for his arraignment in New York Supreme Court in New York, U.S., 
			June 27, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
 
            "The typical conditions of release do not include internet or 
			social-media restrictions," said San Diego attorney Devin Burstein, 
			who has reviewed more than 50 orders granting release because of 
			COVID-19.
 Cohen served a year of his three-year sentence for crimes including 
			campaign finance violations related to buying silence from women 
			about alleged affairs with Trump.
 
 Trump's former deputy campaign manager Rick Gates, sentenced to 45 
			days for crimes including lying to the FBI, has faced no limitations 
			on social media or internet access on supervised release, according 
			to a source familiar with the matter.
 
 Reuters could not immediately determine what conditions were 
			required when Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort was 
			released to home confinement in May after being sentenced last year 
			to 7-1/2 years on federal bank and tax fraud charges.
 
 A prisons official said politics played no role in the treatment of 
			inmates and declined to say whether other inmates have been asked to 
			sign similar gag orders.
 
 "There is no 'conspiracy' against specific inmates," said BOP 
			spokesman Emery Nelson.
 
 Avenatti represented adult film star Stormy Daniels, who was paid to 
			keep quiet about a sexual encounter she said she had with Trump. 
			Trump's representatives denied the allegations.
 
            
			 
			Avenatti was convicted of trying to extort Nike Inc, but was 
			released due to the pandemic. As a condition of his release while he 
			awaits trial in two other cases, prosecutors demanded that Avenatti 
			be banned from internet access.
 In a June 25 letter from Avenatti sent to lawmakers and seen by 
			Reuters, he said he was temporarily housed in a cell block that has 
			held high-risk detainees including drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" 
			Guzman.
 
 "This is sort of like the Nixon enemies list, where the BOP and 
			senior political appointee DOJ officials put their finger on the 
			pulse and regulate it," said Joel Hirschhorn, a Miami criminal 
			defense attorney. "There is no question that this was driven by 
			political influence."
 
 (Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington and Karen Freifeld in New 
			York; Additional reporting by Alexandra Alper in Washington; Editing 
			by Scott Malone and Grant McCool)
 
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