Tag: hush payments
New Documents Indicate Trump Knew About Hush Payments

New Documents Indicate Trump Knew About Hush Payments

Unsealed FBI documents show concrete links between Trump, Michael Cohen, Hope Hicks, and criminal hush money payments to Stormy Daniels.

New documents unsealed on Thursday show Trump and his longtime attorney Michael Cohen exchanging a flurry of phone calls in October 2016, around the time Cohen made criminal hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, one of Trump’s mistresses, NBC News reports.

The phone calls, not all of which involved Trump, also included Trump advisers Hope Hicks and Kellyanne Conway, as well as high-level staff for American Media, the parent company of the National Enquirer.

“Based on the timing of these calls, and the content of the text messages and emails, I believe that at least some of these communications concerned the need to prevent Clifford [Daniels’s legal name] from going public, particularly in the wake of the Access Hollywood story,” one FBI agent wrote.

The “Access Hollywood” tape showed Trump making vulgar comments, including admitting to being a serial sexual predator who would grab women “by the pussy” when he felt like it. In the wake of the scandal, the Trump campaign scrambled to keep at least two of Trump’s mistresses from talking about their affairs with Trump.

Trump has long denied any knowledge of the $130,000 hush money payment Cohen made to purchase Daniels’ silence in the closing weeks of the 2016 campaign. But the new document cast doubt on Trump’s veracity.

In December 2018, Cohen pleaded guilty in federal court to making the illegal hush money payment. In documents from the Southern District of New York, prosecutors disclosed that Trump was an active participant in the crime, identifying him as “Individual 1.”

“Just to make it crystal clear, New York federal prosecutors concluded that the President of the United States committed a felony,” CNN legal analyst Renato Mariotti said at the time.

The unsealed documents provide significant evidence that Trump knew what Cohen was doing.

“It’s impossible to believe, though, that Trump himself was unaware of the Daniels discussion Oct. 8,” the Washington Post‘s Philip Bump wrote Thursday. “The idea that the Daniels issue didn’t come up … defies believability.”

Cohen maintains that he committed criminal acts at the direction of Trump, as he reiterated in a statement he made Thursday from prison.

“As I stated in my open testimony, I and members of the Trump Organization were directed by Mr. Trump to handle the Stormy Daniels’ matter, including making the hush-money payment,” he said.

The unsealed FBI documents seem to give Cohen’s account more credibility than Trump’s denials have.

Published with permission of The American Independent.

Rep. Cummings: New Evidence Shows Trump Lawyers Lied About Hush Money

Rep. Cummings: New Evidence Shows Trump Lawyers Lied About Hush Money

Congress has received new evidence that several of Trump’s lawyers — and not just Michael Cohen— may have lied to federal officials, possibly at Trump’s direction.

House Oversight Chairman Elijah Cummings (D-MD) released the information in a letter sent to White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, referencing new documents that the Oversight Committee received from the Office of Government Ethics (OGE).

The documents, Cummings wrote, indicate that Trump lawyers — both at the White House and in private practice — made repeated “false claims” to OGE officials about Trump’s hush money payments to Stormy Daniels and other women Trump had had extramarital affairs with.

Cummings references false statements made by Sheri Dillon, Trump’s personal attorney, and Stefan Passantino, the former Deputy White House Counsel for Compliance and Ethics.

The lies, or “Evolving Stories” as the OGE documents put it, concern the Trump lawyers’ changing, deceptive explanations for the payments Trump made through his then-attorney and personal fixer, Michael Cohen, to Daniels and other women to make them keep quiet about their affairs with Trump before the 2016 election. Trump repeatedly lied about the affair and the payoffs.

“It now appears that President Trump’s other attorneys — at the White House and in private practice — may have provided false information about these payments to federal officials,” Cummings wrote.

Cohen has already been sentenced to three years in prison for these actions. Cummings noted that Cohen admitted in his guilty plea that he was directed by Trump to make the payments to influence the outcome of the election.

Trump’s other lawyers may have done the same, Cummings noted. “This raises significant questions about why some of the President’s closest advisers made these false claims and the extent to which they too were acting at the direction of, or in coordination with, the President,” he wrote.

Cummings is demanding that the Trump administration provide documents related to the hush money payouts. So far, they have not released the information despite the criminal and ethical implications.

Trump has already been implicated in violating federal campaign finance law, and the subsequent cover-up of that violation — including lying to federal officials — has already led to convictions and guilty pleas of members of Trump’s inner circle.

The new information further implicates Trump as being at the center of a network of criminality that has cast a growing shadow over his unpopular presidency.

Under Republicans, these violations of the public trust and American law were given a complete pass. Under Cummings’ leadership, the truth is coming to light.

Published with permission of The American Independent.