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Michael Cohen Calls Trump A 'Racist' And A 'Con Man' In Public Testimony

CHIP SOMODEVILLA / GETTY IMAGES
Michael Cohen, the former personal attorney of President Trump, is escorted by Capitol Hill police officers as he arrives to testify at a House Committee on Oversight and Reform hearing on Wednesday.

Updated at 5:16 p.m. ET

Donald Trump apparently blessed the meeting his son took with the Russian delegation to get dirt on opponents in 2016 and welcomed advance word of efforts by WikiLeaks to disrupt the election, his former lawyer told Congress on Wednesday.

Those were only a few of the politically incendiary allegations Michael Cohen made in a landmark hearing before the House oversight committee, although he stopped short of accusing Trump and his camp of full-on conspiracy with the Russian interference in the election.

Cohen did, however, allege that political consultant Roger Stone phoned Trump to tell him before the fact that WikiLeaks intended to release a batch of emails that would embarrass the Democratic National Committee.

Cohen described being in Trump's office when Stone called to say he had just talked with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange about the release. Stone has denied that, but he too is facing charges about lying to Congress in a federal case in Washington, D.C.

Russian intelligence officers stole emails from the Democrats and others as part of a concerted attack on the U.S. election, although it still isn't clear how much Trump and his camp knew about Russia's efforts, or whether Russia was behind WikiLeaks.

Cohen was asked whether he believed it was possible that Trump and his family might have been compromised, or whether they might have been willing to collude with the Russians. Yes, he said.

Cohen also suggested that Donald Trump Jr. may have told his father about the meeting he scheduled at Trump Tower following an offer of help from Russian government — one Trump has denied he knew about at the time.

But Trump knew about everything, Cohen said.

"There was nothing that happened at the Trump Organization ... that did not go through Mr. Trump for his approval and sign off," he said.

[Read Cohen's Prepared Statement Here]

Laundry list of alleged wrongdoing

Cohen also made a number of other accusations against Trump:

  • Paying him, while in office, to cover the costs associated with buying the silence of a woman who said she'd had a sexual relationship with Trump years earlier.
  • Implicitly instructing him to lie to Congress and the public about the negotiations the Trump business had carried on with powerful Russians about a prospective Trump Tower real estate deal there.
  • Instructing him to lie about the medical deferments that Trump received that excused him from the draft in Vietnam. Cohen said Trump had no medical records to back up his story but said he wasn't "stupid" and had no intention of being drafted.
  • Ordering him to find a fake buyer for a portrait of Trump to make it appear the painting had sold for a lot of money and was therefore valuable; actually, Cohen said, Trump used his own money to inflate the sale.

Cohen also faulted Trump for remarks he called racist and for his years as a "conman," treating nearly everyone as a sucker and using his political aspirations as an "informercial" for himself — not as a way to serve the United States as the holder of its highest office.
Republicans reject out of hand

Republicans and the White House rejected Cohen's allegations before he even made them, pointing out that he has pleaded guilty to federal charges of lying to Congress and has been sentenced to three years in prison.

Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., objected to the proceedings on Wednesday before Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., had even delivered his opening statement, leading to a dispute over whether the hearing could continue.

Ultimately, it went ahead.

Trump said on Twitter that Cohen is only trying to get an easier prison term, although he has already been sentenced.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders slammed the House oversight committee for giving Cohen a venue to air public complaints against the president when Cohen is a "convicted liar."

Schemes within schemes

Cohen's opening statement addressed his history of lying directly — yes, he said, he had lied many times in the past. But that was when he was in Trump's thrall and those days are over.

"For those who question my motives for being here today, I understand," he said. "I have lied, but I am not a liar. I have done bad things, but I am not a bad man. I have fixed things, but I am no longer your 'fixer,' Mr. Trump."

Cohen provided members of Congress what he said were documents that backed up his story, including a check, signed by Trump, that Cohen said was part of the reimbursement for paying off adult film actress Stormy Daniels.

Trump, Cohen and Allen Weisselberg, the CFO of Trump's company, worked out the arrangement under which Cohen would be repaid the $130,000 he gave Daniels to keep her from talking, Cohen said.

They agreed on a year's worth of periodic smaller payments that would make it look like Cohen was getting a retainer as Trump's lawyer, he said. Trump signed some of the checks, one of which Cohen gave to the committee. At least one was signed by Trump Jr. and Weisselberg, which Cohen also gave committee members.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., emphasized that the check was drawn on the trust that Trump created to give up control of his business after he was elected. That indicated that he stayed involved, despite his claims, and interacted with Trump Jr. and Weisselberg to make the payments to Cohen.

"That's garden variety financial fraud," Khanna.

The payment to another woman, former Playboy model Karen McDougal, was made on behalf of Trump by the publisher of the National Enquirer, American Media, Inc., run by Trump's friend David Pecker.

That arrangement had been used before, Cohen said, although he didn't detail every other instance in which Pecker had helped Trump "catch and kill" damaging stories, as the practice was called.

AMI reached an agreement with prosecutors in New York City in which it was not charged with a crime because it cooperated with investigators in Cohen's case.

The chicanery that Cohen described included nearly every aspect of Trump's public life and career, according to the allegations.

Trump, for example, was in the practice of falsifying the value of his assets so that he would rank higher in listings of wealthy people, Cohen said.

Cohen told Rep. William Lacy Clay, D-Mo., about the practices used within the Trump Organization to take the real value of a building and make it appear greater, which would, in turn, make Trump appear to be richer.

Cohen also described Trump telling him to call a reporter for Forbes magazine to litigate his wealth on its ranking one year. Trump worked with Cohen to rig online polls to make his political aspirations seem more plausible.

Trump's sensitivities, according to Cohen, even allegedly included his grades and SAT scores.

Cohen told members of Congress that Trump told him to threaten his former schools with lawsuits if they released records about him to reporters.

A spokesman for Fordham University tells NPR that the school received an initial phone call from the Trump campaign and a follow-up letter from a Trump attorney "reminding us that they would take action against the university if we did, in fact, release Mr. Trump's records."

Fordham also said it was a moot point because it was "bound by federal law, and that we could/would not reveal/share any records (as we would not reveal any student records) with anyone except Mr. Trump himself, or any recipient he designated, in writing."

Trump, meanwhile, was preoccupied with the release of President Barack Obama's college transcripts.

A contentious hearing

Trump's allies called the hearing a political circus.

"This might be the first time someone convicted of lying to Congress has appeared again so quickly in front of Congress," said the oversight committee's ranking member, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. "Certainly it's the first time a convicted perjurer has been brought back to be a star witness."

Cohen even reportedly lied about delivering his own son in the hospital, Jordan said.

And Cohen didn't only lie to Congress, observed Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn. He also lied on his tax forms for the Internal Revenue Service, transgressions that were part of his guilty plea in New York City.

Meadows also invited an official from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Lynne Patton, who was a former Trump employee. She stood up at the hearing. If Trump is a racist as Cohen charged, Meadows asked, why did he hire Patton, a black woman?

Cohen asked in response why there aren't any black executives within the Trump Organization. Rep. Brenda Lawrence, D-Mich., called Meadows' showcasing of Patton insensitive.

Republicans said Cummings and Democrats had become so deranged by their animus toward Trump that they were willing to risk his negotiations in Vietnam.

The president is meeting with the leader of North Korea, Kim Jong Un, but his supporters complained about what they called an inappropriate focus away from those high-stakes negotiations and onto Cohen's accounts.

Cummings called the nature of Cohen's statement too important not to hear and he said that Americans listening to the hearing should judge for themselves.

Philip Ewing is an election security editor with NPR's Washington Desk. He helps oversee coverage of election security, voting, disinformation, active measures and other issues. Ewing joined the Washington Desk from his previous role as NPR's national security editor, in which he helped direct coverage of the military, intelligence community, counterterrorism, veterans and more. He came to NPR in 2015 from Politico, where he was a Pentagon correspondent and defense editor. Previously, he served as managing editor of Military.com, and before that he covered the U.S. Navy for the Military Times newspapers.