Thursday, 29 November 2018

Methinks the Yankee Prez Mr Trump and Mikey Cohen's sneaky Yankee lawyer ain't the only dude who knows how to use Twitter N'esy Pas?

https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies


Replying to and  48 others
 "Comment Disabled" Surprise Surprise Surprise
Methinks you may enjoy having a look at when I told the world Cohen was a liar N'esy Pas?





Ya think CBC would act ethically for a change EH?

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/michael-cohen-s-new-guilty-plea-was-a-twist-no-one-saw-coming-national-security-expert-1.4925500




Michael Cohen's new guilty plea was a twist no one saw coming: national security expert


196 Comments

  

pat fisher
pat fisher
What a cartoonish collection of shady characters.


David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@pat fisher Methinks you may enjoy having a look at when I told the world Cohen was a liar N'esy Pas?

http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2017/02/re-fatca-nafta-tpp-etc-attn-president.html





https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies


Replying to and  48 others
Methinks its a telling thing that CBC would block such a simple comment 3 times and the threads they were posted within if there were not much more to the story N'esy Pas?

https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2018/11/methinks-yankee-prez-mr-trump-and-mikey.html




 https://www.cbc.ca/news/thenational/michael-cohen-plea-deal-trump-takeaways-1.4926513




'The noose is tightening': 5 takeaways from Michael Cohen's plea deal — and what it means for Trump



2974 Comments
 Commenting is now closed for this story.




Dionne Albert  
Dionne Albert
Prepare for civil unrest if not war when the real reason this "president" was elected is revealed. His supporters will not handle it well when they realize they may not be able to call people their fun names anymore (under the guise of free speech, of course, where no one is allowed to shout them down). It was good while it lasted, eh?
 

David Amos
David Amos
@Dionne Albert Methinks folks should check out page 25 this file of mine and read a letter one of the Yankee Masters of War sent to me in 2005 after I came screaming out of a Yankee jail and ran for a seat in Parliament again N'esy Pas?

https://www.scribd.com/doc/2718120/integrity-yea-right



Dionne Albert
Dionne Albert
@David Amos

Is there any way you could refrain from starting every statement with "Methinks" and ending it with "N'esy Pas" (whatever that means)? Thanks.







mo bennett 
mo bennett
"we're on to washington." Mueller's playbook is very similar to Belichuck's, use every trick in the book to outsmart yer next opponent and win at all costs. 45 will lose this game big time!


David Amos
David Amos
@mo bennett YO MO Methinks "The Donald" could have stopped Mr Mueller in his tracks a long time ago if he had been clever enough to checkout this old file that I sent him in 2015 and many times since. Page 2 is a dilly and why his lawyers ignore the obvious is a very telling thing indeed N'esy Pas?

https://www.scribd.com/document/2619437/CROSS-BORDER








Kevin Delaney
Content disabled.
Kevin Delaney
Trump knows Mueller is coming for both him and his inner family circle. Republicans know this as well.
Trump & his supporting Republicans could soon be shown to have sold America out. One for profit the other for expediency. Now the question is... will the American people care enough to make it clear to their elected Senators & Congress members... that for the good of America Trump must go... in 2019.


Darren MacDonald
Content disabled.
Darren MacDonald
@Kevin Delaney "Agree that the issue of... Integrity.. is key here. To date Republicans have chosen power over integrity. However when the instrument of their Power... Their American Nation... has lost all face on the world stage then... what power does one really have?"
Is there any political party that doesn't yearn for power?

David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Kevin Delaney Methinks you may enjoy having a look at when I told the world Cohen was a liar N'esy Pas?

http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2017/02/re-fatca-nafta-tpp-etc-attn-president.html

David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Darren MacDonald "Agree that the issue of... Integrity.. is key here. To date Republicans have chosen power over integrity."

Methinks you should understand why I named this file in such a fashion in 2005 N'esy Pas?

https://www.scribd.com/doc/2718120/integrity-yea-right







Dionne Albert 
Content disabled.
Dionne Albert
Goodbye, "genius". So sick of you and your fake presidency. The world will know very soon just how you got there.


 
David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Dionne Albert Methinks the fat lady ain't sung yet N'esy Pas?






mo bennett
Content disabled.
mo bennett
too funny! 45's upcoming demise is really startin' to unravel, just like trickie dickie's did for Watergate. it will, of course, be everyone else's fault but his own.


David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@mo bennett Methinks the Fat Lady ain't sung yet N'esy Pas?








https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies


Replying to and  49 others
Methinks the plot thickens nicely N'esy Pas? Everybody knows I got pissed of when the Yankee lawyer Mikey Cohen lied to me just like the RCMP and the FBI always do 









I called your office in Washington after I read your words in the media and your people dismissed me as a fool Well I have come to understand that you are a lawyer hence you can explain this document to the and Correct?




Replying to and  49 others
Methinks the Fat Lady ain't sung yet All Trump and a legion of Yankees have to do is read my messages in Twitter N'esy Pas?




Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying to Senate about Trump Tower project in Russia



2527 Comments 
Commenting is now closed for this story.



 Heath Tierney 
Content disabled.
Heath Tierney
The noose is getting tighter and tighter around the failed trump administration.

Still waiting for the GOP, the "party of personal responsibility" to hold its president to account.


David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Heath Tierney Methinks the Fat Lady ain't sung yet All Trump and a legion of Yankees have to do is read my messages in Twitter N'esy Pas?





Michael Cohen's new guilty plea was a twist no one saw coming: national security expert

Cohen pleaded guilty Thursday to lying to Senate about Moscow Trump Tower project


At the court hearing on Monday, the former personal attorney to U.S. President Donald Trump pleaded guilty to making false statements to Congress about a Moscow real estate project Trump pursued during the 2016 presidential campaign. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)


Michael Cohen's surprise admission that he was in talks with Russia about building a Trump Tower in Moscow in June 2016 is "politically problematic," says national security law expert Mark Zaid.

Cohen, U.S. President Donald Trump's former lawyer, made a surprise appearance in a New York City court Thursday where he pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about a plan to build the tower in Russia.

Cohen said that among other lies, he told Congress that all discussions of the Moscow Trump Tower project ended by January 2016, when they had actually continued until June of that year, as Trump was securing the Republican nomination for president.
Cohen pleaded guilty in August to eight separate charges, including campaign finance violations that he said he carried out in co-ordination with Trump.

Zaid, a lawyer who specializes in litigation relating to national security and international transactions and crimes, spoke with As It Happens host Carol Off about what Cohen's admission means for Trump.

Here is part of that conversation.

What have you learned in the statement of Mr. Cohen's ... admission, about the Trump Tower Moscow arrangement that?

I think one of the things that's fascinating is that there were apparently substantive conversations about having Donald Trump actually go visit Moscow, including Putin, post-nomination, post-Republican convention.


But Michael Cohen goes beyond that in saying that he had lied previously and … now saying what he says is the truth. It's not just that the arrangement was a business deal of a hotel. It went beyond that. It was political, right?

There was clear insinuation that this was going to possibly go beyond a Trump hotel or a Trump building, Trump Tower in Moscow, and whether or not the Russians could even do anything to help.


There's no specifics that were made privy to as to what those details might be, what kind of help the Russians could provide, what other matters might have been on the table.

But you can certainly insinuate when Donald Trump was about to be the nominee for the Republican presidency that it had something to do with politics well beyond just finances.

Cohen had previously said that he never actually had a conversation with a key member of the Putin administration, a man named Dmitry Peskov. He's now changed that information. What we have now learned about how much contact he had with Mr. Peskov?

Apparently, he had quite a number of contacts.

It further shows not just the depth of contact with Russian government officials in the inner circle of Vladimir Putin, but that it continued most importantly through the political process when Trump was running for the nomination.

So that brings the bar closer to the possibility of any type of collusion.


Trump's former lawyer made a surprise appearance before a federal judge in New York on Thursday. (Elizabeth Williams/Associated Press)
Mr. Trump is saying that that Michael Cohen is lying about all this, but his testimony or the statement he has given indicates he was lying before. Why was he lying before?

Supposedly, at least from what we have seen from the documents that have been released by the special counsel's office, it was done in order to protect the president.

And I should say, at least in looking through the information that was released, it doesn't look on its face that any of these negotiations with Russia about possible business dealings that anything around those were illegal or problematic.

It was politically problematic and the illegality of the conduct arose from Michael Cohen lying about it before Congress, which is a federal offence.
All of this is damning, except where's the connection between this and Mr. Trump? How do we know that Donald Trump actually knew about any of this?

We've not seen any documents yet that have Trump himself on them. It may come through other testimony that comes about from other people, whether through other plea arrangements, if that's how it goes, or trials or testimony that's already been given.

But right now we have, at least from today, an indication that when Michael Cohen said he had only spoken to individual one — who is clearly Donald Trump in this charging document — that he'd only spoken to him on three occasions, that that was a lie.


In these 2018 file photos, former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort leaves federal court in Washington, left, and Cohen leaves federal court in New York. (The Associated Press)
Just finally, if this is a puzzle that Special Counsel Robert Mueller is slowly putting together piece by piece, how significant are the pieces of puzzle that we've seen today?

I think one of the things that today's plea signified is that anyone who keeps saying we're at the end or there's nothing new to be found or will be revealed ... doesn't really know what they're talking about.

Who thought that Michael Cohen was going to have another guilty plea in connection to this investigation?

It's yet to be seen, frankly, what the final picture will be. The picture can be legal. It can be political. It could become both.


Written by Sarah Jackson with files from Associated Press. Produced by Ashley Mak. Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.




'The noose is tightening': 5 takeaways from Michael Cohen's plea deal — and what it means for Trump

Timing of the plea agreement was 'linked to Trump's answers' to Robert Mueller, legal expert says


U.S. President Donald Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, exits Federal Court in Manhattan on Thursday after pleading guilty to lying to Congress. (Andrew Kelly/Reuters)


There is perhaps no witness more threatening to Donald Trump right now in the Russia collusion probe than the man who once claimed he would "take a bullet" for the celebrity billionaire-turned-president of the United States.

Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty in a U.S. Federal Court on Thursday, admitting to lying to Congress last year about a Trump Tower real estate deal in Moscow that was in the works in 2016.
Cohen testified before the Senate intelligence committee in August 2017 that he broke off talks on the so-called Russia project in January of 2016, months before the Iowa caucuses and the first Republican presidential primary. But prosecutors discovered the business project was actually discussed well into June of that year.



Trump's former right-hand man now admits the Trump-Russia business talks continued through that summer, and he says Trump and some of his family members knew about it.

Cohen's new statement came as part of a plea deal he cut with special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating possible Trump campaign involvement with Russia's meddling in the 2016 presidential election. The deal is a coup for Mueller's team — and not just because of Cohen's 10 years of service as Trump's fixer.

Here are a few key takeaways:

1) This is now a Mueller case

 


Robert Mueller, seen in this 2008 file photo, has been investigating allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election, including possible collusion with the Trump campaign. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Remember, this is Cohen's second time pleading guilty. Back in August, he pleaded guilty to federal charges involving his campaign work.

Those earlier charges, which would ultimately appear to implicate Trump in campaign finance violations over payouts to adult-film star Stormy Daniels and ex-Playmate Karen McDougal, had been handed off to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. That's because they didn't directly pertain to Mueller's investigation into Trump-Russia matters

This time is different. Thursday's development brings Cohen into Mueller's fold.
"The other thing this tells us is that Mueller believes that lies to Congress concerning Russia-related matters are within the scope of his inquiries," said Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor. "You can imagine that poses a problem for other people who potentially lied to Congress about this sort of stuff."

2) Trump's family is implicated

 


Donald Trump Jr. arrives at Trump Tower in New York City on Jan. 18, 2017. The president's son has yet to be interviewed by Mueller. (Stephanie Keith/Reuters)
Cohen informed the court he "briefed family members of Individual 1 within the Company about the project" in Moscow. In the court documents, "Individual 1" is understood to mean Trump and "the Company" is an apparent reference to The Trump Organization. The president's children are a sensitive area for him, and he is fiercely protective.

Legal experts say Trump's eldest son, Donald Jr., might have particular cause for concern given Mueller's obvious interest in the veracity of testimony before Congress.

Asked by the Senate judiciary committee in May about conversations regarding a potential Moscow deal, Donald Trump Jr. said he knew "very little" about the negotiations, though he did state his belief that Cohen was negotiating with Felix Sater, a Russian-born convicted felon and Trump associate, "in 2015."

"I wasn't involved," he insisted at one point. Democrats accused him of making false statements.
Several close associates of the president's, including Cohen, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and author and birther conspiracist Jerome Corsi, have already talked to Mueller.

"The fact that so many people around Don Jr. have talked to Mueller except for Don Jr., that sort of leaves him hanging on the branch," said Julie Grohovsky, a former prosecutor who worked in Mueller's office at the U.S. Attorney's Office in D.C.

"I would be very, very worried if I were Don Jr."

3) Cohen is a 'big get' as a co-operating witness


Donald Trump listens as Cohen delivers remarks on his behalf during a campaign stop in in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, back in September 2016. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
Over the summer, Cohen was said to be in talks with Mueller. At the time, he was not named as a co-operating witness. Now the former Trump loyalist has pleaded guilty as a co-operator.
Page 4 of the plea agreement says it is conditional on Cohen continuing "to respond and provide truthful information."

Given Cohen's years of service with Trump, Grohovsky believes few witnesses would be more crucial to Mueller's investigation than Cohen, and few people could put the president in greater peril as a witness to how Trump has done business over the last decade.

Cohen has reportedly spent more than 70 hours speaking with Mueller's team.
"He's huge. He's a big get. He was in the room for many things that happened," Grohovsky said of Trump's former personal attorney. "If it's true that some of the things he taped, or had documents to reference, obviously his testimony is important. He can point the Mueller team to other people in the room. He can prove a meeting occurred and produce an airline ticket or a hotel reservation."

If Cohen manages to co-operate — unlike Manafort, who allegedly breached his plea deal — he might be able to avoid a prison sentence.

As for President Trump, Grohovksy took his attack on Cohen as a "liar" to be evidence of "full-blown panic mode" over news that one of his closest associates has flipped.

"What we're seeing is somebody who is seeing the noose is tightening," she said.

4) The timing might not be a coincidence


Mueller played this out well, legal experts say. Just last week, President Trump submitted written responses to the special counsel's queries related to his dealings with Russians and possible Kremlin interference with the election.

"It seems the timing of this was linked to Trump's answers to the questions, just because the two things happened so close in time," said Harry Sandick, a former assistant U.S. attorney with the Southern District of New York.

The timeline means Mueller never had to tip his hand to Trump's legal team or signal what information he'd already gathered.



Friends, no coincidence that the Cohen deal implicating Trump personally in Russia contacts during campaign is announced just AFTER Mueller locked Trump in on collusion in writing--& just BEFORE Trump will be face to face with Putin. As I have said all along: Bob loves surprises



Not only did the special counsel likely wait until after the midterm elections to announce the plea deal with Cohen — thereby avoiding any possibility he could be accused of interfering with the outcome of the election — Mueller also appears to have waited until after Trump's answers could be reviewed by his team.

And those answers were submitted under penalty of perjury.

5) Another Kremlin brick in the wall


Trump ally and published conspiracy theorist Jerome Corsi has been interviewed by Mueller. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)
Cohen's latest statement about pursuing a real estate project with the Russians adds another brick to Mueller's foundation as he builds a case about Russian interference in the election and possible collusion between the Kremlin and the Trump campaign. There was already the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting in New York City, which established that Donald Trump Jr. willingly sat with a Kremlin-linked lawyer who had promised dirt on Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
More recently, court documents revealed that Mueller's team believes Corsi tipped off Trump adviser Roger Stone in August 2016 about WikiLeaks planning to dump "very damaging" material about Clinton that was stolen in a Russia hack.

"Now we're seeing there were just so many different connections between Russia and the Trump campaign," Sandick said. "It's not just one link, it's multiple links, and it's becoming harder for someone who looks at this with an open mind to say there's nothing going on here."

About the Author


Matt Kwong
Reporter
Matt Kwong is a Washington-based correspondent for CBC News. He previously reported for CBC News as an online journalist in New York and Toronto. You can follow him on Twitter at: @matt_kwong


Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying to Senate about Trump Tower project in Russia

President says Trump Tower project in Moscow not a secret, rules out Putin sideline meeting at G20

U.S. President Donald Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, exits Federal Court after entering a guilty plea in Manhattan on Thursday. Cohen said he lied about the timeline of a Trump Organization project in Moscow that never came to fruition. (Andrew Kelly/Reuters)


Michael Cohen, U.S. President Donald Trump's former lawyer, pleaded guilty early Thursday to lying to Congress about work he did on a Trump real estate deal in Russia.

Cohen made a surprise appearance Thursday in a New York courtroom at around 9 a.m. ET and began entering the plea.

He admitted to making false statements in 2017 to the Senate intelligence committee about a plan to build a Trump Tower in Moscow.
Cohen said he lied about the timing of the tower negotiations and other details to be consistent with Trump's "political message."

Cohen said that among other lies, he told Congress that all discussions of the Moscow Trump Tower project ended by January 2016, when they had actually continued until June of that year, as Trump was securing the Republican nomination for president.

Putin aware of project: Cohen


Cohen also said he sent an email to the spokesperson for Russian President Vladimir Putin as part of the potential deal.

In his statement, Cohen said he worked on the real estate proposal with Felix Sater, a Russia-born associate who he said claimed to have deep connections in Moscow.


CBC News
Trump slams Cohen, says Moscow project wasn't secret

 'Michael Cohen is lying and he's trying to get a reduced sentence for things that have nothing to do with me,' says U.S. President Donald Trump. 0:52



The discussions about the potential development began after Trump had declared his candidacy. Cohen had said the talks ended when he determined that the project was not feasible.

Cohen had also disclosed that Trump was personally aware of the deal, signing a letter of intent and discussing it with Cohen on two other occasions.
Even if he was right, it doesn't matter because I was allowed to do whatever I wanted during the campaign.- Donald Trump
Speaking to reporters at the White House before departing for the G20 summit in Argentina, Trump called Cohen "a weak person" and said his former lawyer was just trying to finagle a more lenient sentence from prosecutors.

"When I'm running for president, that doesn't mean I'm not allowed to do business," said Trump.
"Even if [Cohen] was right, it doesn't matter because I was allowed to do whatever I wanted during the campaign," he claimed at another point.

Kremlin now says they contacted Cohen


Trump said the potential project was well documented, and he emphasized that the plan was abandoned.

"There was a good chance that I wouldn't have won, in which case I would have gone back into the business and why should I lose lots of opportunities?" Trump said.

Based on the fact that the ships and sailors have not been returned to Ukraine from Russia, I have decided it would be best for all parties concerned to cancel my previously scheduled meeting....

The Kremlin had indicated early Thursday Trump would meet with Putin on the sidelines of the G20.
Soon after speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump said on Twitter he would not meet Putin separately at the summit, citing Russia's seizure of Ukrainian vessels on Nov. 25.
In a statement, Putin's spokesperson Dmitry Peskov confirmed that Cohen had made contact with the administration about a Trump building project but was told in response, "we have nothing to do with construction issues in the city of Moscow."

Peskov downplayed the Cohen request as one of dozens of emails from around the world we receive every week."


U.S. President Donald Trump and Russia's President Vladimir Putin shake hands as they meet in Helsinki on July 16. Cohen's new plea concerning a Russian project for the Trump project comes with the president and Putin both set to attend the G20 summit in Buenos Aires. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

The statement marked a shift compared to what Peskov said in August 2017, in which he indicated the message was unreturned.

"Because we do not react to such [questions about] business themes, and this is not our job, we left this matter without a response," Peskov said then.
Cohen's prosecution in New York arose from the work of Robert Mueller, who as special counsel was given the job of probing "any links and/or co-ordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the campaign of President Donald Trump; and any matters that arose or may arise directly from the investigation."

One of the prosecutors working with Mueller was in the courtroom Thursday.

Before Cohen's appearance Thursday, Trump continued his verbal attacks on the legitimacy of Mueller's investigation on social media, calling it a Joseph McCarthy-style witch hunt," in reference to the senator who rooted out Communists in the 1950s.

Democrats want to protect Mueller


On Capitol Hill, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia called it "remarkable that you had the president's personal lawyer still dealing on a Trump Tower project through the whole [presidential] campaign."

Cohen is among a number of people in Trump's orbit who have pleaded guilty to criminal charges. The list also includes his former presidential campaign chair, Paul Manafort, and Manafort's colleague, Rick Gates, former national security adviser Michael Flynn and campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos, who began serving a short prison sentence this week.

"There seems to be a trend here amongst so many of the president's closest allies, that they don't tell the truth, although we've also got a White House that seems on a daily basis not to have its facts straight," said Warner, a member of the Senate intelligence committee.
Warner stressed that the Mueller investigation must be allowed to proceed to its completion and strongly suggested that Matthew Whitaker, the interim attorney general who was accused of having prejudged the Mueller probe, should recuse himself from any Russia inquiries.

So far, Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has resisted calls from colleagues to use legislation to theoretically protect Mueller from firing.

"This is a solution in search of a problem," McConnell said on Tuesday. "The president is not going to fire Robert Mueller."

Earlier plea involved payments to women


Cohen pleaded guilty in August to eight separate charges, including campaign finance violations that he said he carried out in co-ordination with Trump.

At that time, Cohen said he secretly used shell companies to make payments used to silence former Playboy model Karen McDougal and adult-film actress Stormy Daniels for the purpose of influencing the 2016 election. The women have claimed they had affairs with Trump after the real estate mogul married his third wife, Melania.

Trump has insisted he only found out about the payments after they were made, despite the release of a September 2016 recorded conversation in which Trump and Cohen can be heard discussing a deal to pay McDougal for her story of a 2006 affair.


Earlier this year, Cohen said he arranged hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, left, and Karen McDougal, former Playboy Playmate of the Year, who have both alleged they had sexual encounters with Trump. (Matt Sayles/Associated Press, Evan Vucci/Associated Press, Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty for Playboy)

He derided Cohen at that time for co-operating with prosecutors and turning state's evidence, which is a staple of the criminal justice system.

"It's called flipping and it almost should be illegal," Trump said. "In all fairness to him, most people are going to do that."

The president, in a Fox & Friends interview, downplayed his involvement with Cohen, who worked for him for a decade, saying he was just a "part-time attorney" who had many other clients.
On Thursday, he was asked why he retained Cohen for so long.

"Because a long time ago he did me a favour," Trump said, without offering specifics.

While Trump has mused about not being opposed to offering a presidential pardon to Manafort, Cohen's prosecution at the state level would make him ineligible for a pardon.


1) @MichaelCohen212 this morning reaffirmed what he said last July 2 and told me many times since — that he decided to put his wife, daughter, son and country first. Today he again told the truth and nothing but the truth. @realDonaldTrump called him a liar. Who do you believe?


The latest development comes with the Democrats set to take control of the House in January. The party's leadership has promised to vigorously pursue areas of investigation into Trump's finances and Trump team contacts with foreign actors, having accused the Republicans of choosing party loyalty over proper oversight the past two years.

Reacting to the plea to the new charges, outgoing House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, said Cohen "should be prosecuted to the extent of the law. That's why we put people under oath."

Back in Manhattan, Cohen's lawyer, Guy Petrillo, noted that a letter from federal prosecutors showed that Cohen's co-operation with Mueller will be described to Cohen's sentencing judge. However, the letter makes clear that Cohen, 52, is not receiving the kind of "5K1.1" letter written on behalf of formal government co-operators.

Another Cohen lawyer, Lanny Davis, said on Twitter that Cohen "told the truth and nothing but the truth."

With files from CBC News










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