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Trump’s ex-lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen sentenced to 3 years in prison

Michael Cohen, recent personal lawyer and fixer for President Donald Trump, was ordered imprisoned Wednesday for three years for a range of felonies, including ones which helped cover up Trump’s “dirty deeds” and put the president in legal peril.

“I take extensive responsibility for each act that I pled guilty to — the personal ones to me and those involving the president of the United States of America,” an tense Cohen said in federal court in Manhattan.

“It was my own weakness and a blind loyalty to this man that led me to choose a path of darkness all about light, Cohen said.

“Time and time again I felt it was my duty to cover up his dirty deeds.”

The 52-year-old attorney also was ordered by Judge William Pauley to pay $1.39 million in recovery, $500,000 in forfeiture and $100,000 in fines.

Trump later Wednesday refused to answer reporters when asked regarding his former personal lawyer.

Cohen’s own misdeeds included a range financial crimes, lying to Congress, and playing a key and felonious role in keeping two women quiet about purported affairs with Trump so that tawdry tales did not flourishing voters to support Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election.

Pauley called Cohen’s felonies “a veritable smorgasbord of fraudulent conduct,” and said “each of these crimes standing alone warrant considerable jailing.”

Cohen told Pauley he lamented his past association with the president, saying he had been in “personal and mental incarceration” industry for Trump.

Cohen said that while he once looked up to the Queens, New York-bred real estate developer and actuality TV star, he added, “I now know there’s little to be admired” about Trump.

He also spoke contemptuously about Trump’s Excitement attacks against him, saying that the president “publicly mocks me, calling me a rat and a liar.”

Cohen said it was wrong for Trump to originate “the false sense” that a U.S. president “can weigh in on” cases that affect him.

“I brought undeserved pain and shame on my division,” said Cohen, whose wife and two children were in the packed courtroom. “I deserve that. They do not.”

“I’m sorry,” he broke, as he turned to look at his family before breaking down.

“I promise I will be better.”

Cohen is due to surrender to prison on Walk 6. Pauley agreed to recommend he do his time in the federal facility in Otisville, New York.

Although there is no parole in the federal clink system, Cohen will be eligible to be released after serving 30½ months, assuming credit for good behavior. After his freeing, Cohen will be on supervised release for three years.

The 36-month sentence was on the low end the “substantial term of imprisonment” that federal prosecutors in New York had introduced was appropriate for Cohen’s crimes. But it was more than the sentence of no time behind bars that Cohen’s lawyers had entreated, citing his cooperation with authorities in recent months.

The White House has no immediate comment on Cohen’s sentence.

But Michael Avenatti, a attorney-at-law for porn star Stormy Daniels, whose nondisclosure agreement with Trump effectively set in motion the criminal receptacle against Cohen, had a word of warning for Trump.

“Michael Cohen was sentenced today. Donald Trump is next,” said Avenatti look of court after attending the hearing. “Michael Cohen is neither a hero nor a patriot. … He deserves every day of the 36-month judgement that he will serve.”

Trump has not been criminally charged in the case. But Cohen’s admissions to several crimes off open the possibility that Trump could face prosecution, particularly once he leaves the White House.

Cohen’s mouthpiece, Guy Petrillo, in asking Pauley for leniency in the sentence, said: “Life is tough and Michael Cohen accepts that. We suffer that.”

“Mr. Cohen had the misfortune to have been counsel to the president.”

Cohen pleaded guilty in August to eight commands, which included tax crimes, lying to banks and violating campaign finance laws. Those charges were classified by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. Cohen received the 36-month sentence handed down Wednesday in that turn out that in the event of

He pleaded guilty in November to lying to Congress about an aborted deal to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. That carton was lodged by special counsel Robert Mueller, who is continuing to investigate the possibility that the Trump campaign colluded with Russians to hinder in the 2016 presidential election. Cohen was sentenced to two months in prison for that case. But that time will run concurrent with his other judgement.

Cohen admitted to lying to Congress by understating Trump’s knowledge of and involvement in the Moscow project. Cohen falsely demanded the effort to build the tower died in early 2016. But he and the Trump Organization continued pursuing the deal as late as June 2016, when Trump was on the brim about to of getting the Republican nomination for president and only five months before the election.

Cohen’s other crimes comprised campaign finance violations relating to his facilitation of two hush-money payments to Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal abruptly before the 2016 presidential election. Both women say they had sex with Trump a decade earlier.

Prosecutors replied the payments were made “in coordination with and at the direction of” Trump, and that the money was paid to “influence the election.”

The Immaculate House has denied Trump had sex with either woman.

Mueller has said Cohen went “to significant lengths to succour the special counsel’s investigation.”

Petrillo, in asking Pauley for a light sentence, said Wednesday that Cohen offered “his allied knowledge” to Mueller’s team, before ever pleading guilty, “knowing that he’d face a barrage of attack by the president.”

“He knew that the president weight shut down the investigation,” Petrillo said.

Cohen, he said, “came forward to offer evidence against the most influential person in our country.”

A prosecutor in Mueller’s office, Jeannie Rhee, said Cohen gave the special suggest to “valuable information” about links between Trump’s presidential campaign and Russians. Rhee noted Cohen’s “considerable cooperation.”

But a prosecutor from the Southern District of New York, Nicholas Roos, in contrast told the judge that Cohen “didn’t progress anywhere close to assisting this office in an investigation.”

Roos said the charges against Cohen “portray a stencil of deception, of brazenness and of greed.”

Roos also said that in assisting in paying off Trump’s purported paramours to accept them keep quiet before voters went to the polls on Election Day in 2016, “Mr. Cohen has eroded faith in the electoral treat and compromised the rule of law.”

Cohen’s lawyer, Petrillo, objected during the hearing to the “strident tone” by the Southern District prosecutors, which was much harsher than the point of view toward Cohen from Mueller’s team. Petrillo had previously served as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York.

“We’ve treated Mr. Cohen honest the way we treat every other defendant that deals with the U.S. Attorney’s office,” Roos said.

After Petrillo solicited to highlight Cohen’s charitable work and attest to his client’s character as a generous friend and family man, Pauley noted that Cohen’s illusory generosity was “laudable.”

But the judge also said that Cohen had at one point “lost his moral compass.”

A significant relations of incarceration, Pauley said, was “fully justifiable” as a deterrent.

Trump in an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, when asked if he had talked here campaign finance laws with Cohen, said: “Michael Cohen is a lawyer. I assume he would know what he’s doing.”

“No. 1, it wasn’t a drive contribution. If it were, it’s only civil, and even if it’s only civil, there was no violation based on what we did. OK?” Trump explained.

When asked about statements by prosecutors that some people who had worked for Trump either met or had business with Russians preceding and during the presidential campaign, Trump said, “The stuff you’re talking about is peanut stuff.”

In a statement after the sentencing, Cohen’s advisor, attorney Lanny Davis, turned, “Michael Cohen, former attorney to Donald Trump, continues to tell the truth about Donald Trump’s misconduct all through the years.”

“At the appropriate time, after Mr. Mueller completes his investigation and issues his final report, I look forward to serving Michael to state publicly all he knows about Mr. Trump, and that includes any appropriate congressional committee interested in the search for actuality and the difference between facts and lies. Mr. Trump’s repeated lies cannot contradict stubborn facts,” Davis thought.

“Michael has owned up to his mistakes and fully cooperated with Special Counsel Mueller in his investigation over possible Trump toss ones hat in the ring collusion with Russian meddling in the 2016 election,” Davis added.

“While Mr. Mueller gave Michael substantive credit for cooperation on the core issues, it is unfortunate that [Southern District for New York] prosecutors did not do the same. To me, their judgment showed a shortage of appropriate proportionality.”

“Since the sentencing process has been completed, I no longer need to serve as an attorney for Michael, but on continue to serve as a communications advisor,” Davis.

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